Hot and sour soup

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Fish heads in hot & sour soup
Fish heads in hot & sour soup

Hot and sour soup can refer to soups from three Asian culinary traditions. In all cases the soup contains ingredients to make it both spicy hot, and sour.

Contents

[edit] East Asia

[edit] China

"Hot and sour soup" (Simplified Chinese: ; Traditional Chinese: ; pinyin: suān là tāng), a Chinese soup claimed variously by Mandarin and Sichuan cuisines as a regional dish. The Chinese hot and sour soup can be either vegetarian or meat-based, and often contains ingredients such as day lily buds, wood ear fungus, bamboo shoots, and tofu. It is typically made hot (spicy) by red peppers or white pepper, and sour by vinegar.

[edit] Southeast Asia

[edit] Cambodia

Samlor machu pacong, a Cambodian sour soup flavored with lemon, chilis, prawns and/or shrimp. One of the most popular sour soups in Cambodia, it is eaten largely on special occasions. It is similar to the Thai soup tom yum (see below).

[edit] Thailand

Tom yum, a Thai soup flavored with lemon grass and chilis

[edit] See also

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