Miang Kham

Miang Kham

July 17, 2026 1 Comment

Miang Kham

 I come from north-east Thailand, a region also known as Issan. Every year there is a festival called Bun Bang Fai  which is held to celebrate the coming of the rainy season so essential to our rice crops. It takes place over three days starting with Buddhist ceremonies and traditional dancing, by the second day events become far more raucous thanks to the liberal use of alcohol and the Thai desire for “sanook” which means “fun” in English. This means by the third day most of those taking part awake with huge hangovers for which the most popular cure is usually more beer or rice whisky. It is at that stage that they stuff huge tubes with around 100 kg of gunpowder which they then haul up rickety wooden scaffolds and launch their rockets into the sky. Or not:-)

Miang Kham originates from this region and I think of it as the culinary equivalent of the Bun Bang Fai festival, starting off serenely and ending up in explosions. However in this case it is literally a taste explosion; that might be an overused phrase but not when it comes to Miang Kham. In any sane, sensible, country a festival like Bun Bang Fai  would have been banned on public safety grounds about 100 years ago. A dish like Miang Kham could never have originated in a sane and sensible country. However we are talking about Thailand and the words sane and sensible are simply not part of our vocabulary. That would be "mai sanook” no fun!

And if you're thinking that this dish might be a little bit “too” Thai then take a look at the picture below. I prepared that for a friend’s birthday party and I should have done "before and after” pictures because there were just a few lonely looking peanuts left sitting on the banana leaf a few hours later! Another great thing about this dish is that you can't go wrong with it (well, provided you lay off the wine until after you chop the ingredients!) as there is no cooking involved.

Miang Kham Thailand serving suggestion banana leaf

Talking of the ingredients, as you can see below I've substituted lettuce leaves (Little Gem) for the Cha Plu or La Lot leaves as they would be the most difficult ingredient to source. The dried shrimp can usually be obtained from a Chinese or Southeast Asian grocery store; however this can also be substituted with anything from salted anchovies to small prawns. I know I said there was no cooking involved; well this hardly counts as cooking but you have to cook the coconut flakes (you can also use desiccated coconut) in a pan or wok without any oil over medium heat stirring often for about 5-10 minutes until nicely browned. If using dried shrimp it also helps to dry fry these for a minute or two and they will become a little crispy when cooled.

Miang Kham ingredients labeled

 

Miang Kham sauce packet


Apart from that you simply have to dice the ingredients as in the above picture, serve the sauce straight from the packet without heating. As far as quantities are concerned, one onion or a few shallots, a bulb of garlic, a lime etc with the rest of the ingredients in proportion will easily suffice for four people.

The chillies; this where we get the explosions! In the video you will have seen me just put one small piece of chopped chilli into my Miang Kham “parcel”, that might seem a little bit wimpish for a Thai person I know, but ,in my defense they were Cambodian bird chillies and ferociously hot!. The bird or finger chillies you see in supermarkets will generally be far less spicy, it’s up to you which chillies you use.....make sure they have at least some kick though!




1 Response

Terence Holden
Terence Holden

January 13, 2018

I did this using spinach leaves as I can’t buy betel leaves in the UK and it’s amazing as a bbq starter while the meats cooking. Can’t wait to try it again.

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