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THE STORY OF KHMER PRAHOK
Ly Dara watches the catch he has just bought
grind its way through the crushing machines
at a little shop in Kilometer 11, north of
Phnom Penh.
Once a soldier, Ly Dara's whole business
centers on this time of year from December
or early January until the last full moon in
February-or early March when fish migrate up
the Tonle Sap and Mekong rivers and provide
the raw material he needs to create the
Cambodian staple, prahok. All along the
river banks at several spots like this
around Phnom Penh, and thousands more around
the country, women especially are washing
and crushing small fish with their feet in
bamboo stalls, chatting and laughing as they
take time away from the rice fields to make
enough prahok. for their amities to see them
through until next year.
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Prahok, or fish cheese as foreigners
sometimes know it, is a crushed
brown paste of fish, salted and
fermented to preserve it. It is an
acquired taste, with a strong aroma
that permeates everything it
touches. Ly Dara is a prahok
wholesaler, and he has made this
annual journey especially from his
home in Bati district, Takeo
province.
"I've already processed 10 tons of
prahok this season. Last year it
took me four days to get enough fish
for this amount. This year, it took
me just one night," he said. |

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This is a species called
Riel fish and is highly
prized as prime prahok
fish. |
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"I'm getting it crushed here and loading it
into taxis to transport it back to my
place."
Across the way, members of 20 neighboring
families from his home in Poun Phnom
village, Trapaing Sam commune, are gutting,
scaling and cleaning their fish by hand
before trampling them underfoot. The sheer
volume Ly Dara must process makes the
machines set up near the road here a good
option. But this is only the first step in a
long preparation process.
"We use 150 kilos of salt per ton of fish.
Last year, fish cost 250 to 300 riel per
kilo and salt cost five to six hundred riel
a kilo. This year, fish is cheap. I've been
buying fish from the riverside for just 130
to 180 riel a kilo and salt at 140 riel a
kilo," he said.
The best catches are made during the full
moon.
"After we crush them, we leave them in the
sun for a full day, then salt them and seal
them in jars full of salt," he explained.
Prahok can then be eaten after just 20 days
of maturation, but the better prahok has
been left to ferment for one to three years.
"A lot of Chinese and other foreigners don't
like prahok, but my father was Sino-Khmer.
He told me that the first time he tasted
prahok, he loved it and he wished he had
eaten it sooner," Ly Dara said. From that
moment, his father’s passion meant his own
course in life was set out.
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| One way to make prahok
is to crush the fish
underfoot like wine grapes.
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There are Khmers who don't like the
strong taste and smell of prahok,
but most have been brought up on
this very Cambodian delicacy.
The larger the fish used to make it,
the better the quality of the prahok
is generally considered to be. Some
regions, such as Siem Reap, are
particularly famous for their prahok
and can demand higher prices from
connoisseurs of the product. Prahok
originated as a way of preserving
fresh fish during the long months
when this other basic Cambodian food
is not in abundant supply. The high
salt content made it an ideal
flavoring ingredient in the days
before MSG and seasoning powder
arrived in the Kingdom.
In the countryside, prahok is often eaten
simply with rice.
But a typical Cambodian meal will often
include prahok as an ingredient in samlor,
or soup, or as a dipping sauce, such as teuk
kroeung, which is eaten as an accompaniment
to grilled freshwater fish wrapped in
lettuce or spinach leaves.
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Khem Kan is 70 now, and retired from his
position as an official in the Ministry of
Commerce. He comes to the river to buy fish
to make his own prahok.
During the waning moon, the catch decreases
and the price rises to as much as 800 riel a
kilo, but he isn't worried. That is still
cheaper than at the same time last year.
"The only time you should not eat prahok is
if you have a cold, a cough, or a skin
condition like acne. Prahok can make these
things more serious," he said.
"Singers often boycott prahok before a big
performance to help their voices."
Director general of the Fisheries Department
of the Ministry of Agriculture, Nao Thuork,
estimates about 500 species of fish migrate
up the Mekong in preparation for spawning in
the wet season.
"About 350,000 tons of fish were caught this
season just past, and about one tenth of
that will be processed into prahok," he
said.
All freshwater fishing is now banned between
May and September to give fish a chance to
lay their eggs, so people make the most of
this season.
"Many of the larger species are no longer
found here in Cambodia. Once, we used to
catch only large fish and let small ones go.
That was when we had just six million people
to feed. Now we have 12 million, and people
keep everything they catch, large or small,"
he said.
In Samrong Yong market, Bati district,
prahok seller Mr Chreb is gearing up for a
big year.
"It is easy to make money with prahok. About
95 per cent of the population eat it.
Charities and non-government organizations
have been known to buy it to donate to flood
and drought victims, and I like this idea. I
know most Khmers would be much more grateful
for a couple of kilos of prahok than tins of
sardines or dried noodles," he said.
Sourced Leisure Cambodia
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