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File:Naem khluk.jpg - Wikimedia Commons
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Naem (Thai: ????, pronounced [n??:m], also referred to as nham, naem moo, naem maw, and chin som) is a pork sausage in Thai cuisine. It is a fermented food that has a sour flavor. It typically has a short shelf life, and is often eaten in raw form after the fermentation process has occurred. It is a popular Thai food, and different regions of Thailand have various preferred flavors, including variations of sour and spicy. Naem is used as an ingredient in various dishes and is also served as a side dish. Naem has its origin in Vietnam. Naem was originally a Vietnamese type of sour sausage called Nem Chua (sour sausage) that Vietnamese eat during drinking beers. Vietnamese immigrants came to Thailand and brought over this sausage and are now making them in Thailand.

Naem contains 185 kilocalories per a serving size of 100 grams (3.5 oz) and contains a significant amount of protein, has a moderate amount of fat and minor carbohydrate content. Parasites and enteropathogenic bacteria have been found in samples of naem. Lactic acid formed during its fermentation inhibits the growth of Salmonella. Lactobacillus curvatus use in the product has been proven to prevent the growth of pathogenic bacteria in naem. It is sometimes treated with irradiation. The bacterial content in Thai sour pork products is regulated.


Video Naem



Overview

Naem is a red-colored, semi-dry lactic-fermented pork sausage in Thai cuisine prepared using minced raw pork and pork skin, significant amounts of cooked sticky rice, chili peppers, garlic, sugar, salt and potassium nitrate. Minced beef is sometimes used in its preparation. After the mix is prepared, it is encased in banana leaves, synthetic sausage casings or tubular plastic bags and left to ferment for three to five days. Naem has a sour quality to it due to the fermentation, in which lactic acid bacteria and yeasts grow within the sausage. The lactic acid bacteria and yeasts expand by feeding upon the rice and sugar, and the use of salt prevents the meat from rotting.

Naem typically has a short shelf life, which can be extended through refrigeration. The sausage can be time-consuming and labor-intensive to prepare. In Thailand, it is typically stored at room temperature, which gives it a shelf life of around one week. It is also produced in areas of Southeast Asia near Thailand.

Naem is often consumed raw, (after fermentation has occurred), and is often accompanied with shallot, ginger, bird's eye chili peppers and spring onions. It is used as an ingredient in various dishes such as naem fried with eggs, Naem khao and Naem phat wun sen sai khai, and is also consumed as a side dish and as a condiment. The cooking of naem significantly changes its flavor.


Maps Naem



Prominence

Naem has been described as "one of the popular meat products of the country prepared from ground pork" and as "one of the most popular traditional Thai fermented meat products".


NAEM on FeedYeti.com
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Varieties

Naem mo in northern Thailand may be fermented in a clay pot. Different regions of Thailand have different preferred flavors: northern and northeastern pork is a little bit sour, central is sour, and southern is spicy.


Naem Khao Tod - Crispy Rice Salad with Soured Pork
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Use in dishes

Dishes prepared with naem include naem fried with eggs, and naem fried rice. Naem phat wun sen sai khai is a dish prepared with naem, glass noodles and eggs, among other ingredients such as spring onions and red pepper. Naem khao is a salad dish in Lao cuisine prepared using Lao fermented pork sausage, rice, coconut, peanuts, mint, cilantro, fish sauce, and lemon juice. Naem and rice are formed into balls, deep-fried, and then served broken atop the various ingredients. Serenade, a restaurant in Bangkok, makes a dish called the "McNaem", which consists of a duck egg wrapped in naem that is fried and then served with risotto, slaw, shiitake mushrooms, herbs, and cooked sea scallops atop crushed garlic.

There are many applications of sour pork with different flavors such as phat phet naem (Thai: ???????????), tom kha naem (Thai: ??????????), ho mok naem (Thai: ??????????), and naem priao wan (Thai: ???????????????).


Naem - Wikipedia
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Nutritional content

A serving size of 100 grams (3.5 oz) of naem has 185 kilocalories, 20.2 grams (0.71 oz) protein, 9.9 grams (0.35 oz) fat, and 3.6 grams (0.13 oz) carbohydrate. According to the "Industrialization of Thai Nham" by Warawut Krusong of the King Mongkut's Institute of Technology Ladkrabang vitamins B1 and B2, ferric iron, and phosphorus were present in naem, quantities unspecified.


Naem Het â€
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Microbiology

Naem has on occasion been contaminated with parasites such as Taenia solium, Trichinella spiralis, and enteropathogenic bacteria such as coliform bacteria and Salmonella. It has been demonstrated that Salmonella growth is inhibited by the formation of lactic acid during the fermentation process. Use of the starter culture Lactobacillus curvatus has been shown to prevent "the outgrowth of pathogenic bacteria" in naem. Naem is sometimes irradiated.

Regulations on bacterial content

The bacterial content in Thai sour pork products is regulated. There should not be more than 0.1 grams (0.0035 oz) of Escherichia coli O157:H7, Staphylococcus aureus not more than 0.1 grams (0.0035 oz), Yersinia enterocolitica not more than 0.1 grams (0.0035 oz), Listeria monocytogenes not more than 0.1 grams (0.0035 oz), Clostridium perfringens not more than 0.1 grams (0.0035 oz), Fungi less than 10colony per gram, Trichinellaspiralis less than 100 grams (3.5 oz). Bacteria at higher levels may cause sickness.


Yam naem - Wikipedia
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See also

  • List of fermented foods
  • List of sausages
  • Sai krok Isan - a fermented sausage originating in the northeastern provinces of Thailand
  • Sai ua - a grilled pork sausage from northern Thailand and northeastern Burma
  • Nem chua

Naem (cerdo Amargo Tailandés) - Comida Tailandesa Preferida Con La ...
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References


File:Naem khluk.jpg - Wikimedia Commons
src: upload.wikimedia.org


Bibliography

  • Steinkraus, K. (2004). Industrialization of Indigenous Fermented Foods, Revised and Expanded. Food Science and Technology. Taylor & Francis. pp. 721-736. ISBN 978-0-8247-5094-7. 

Yum Naem Khao Tod - Instastory (recipe) - YouTube
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Further reading

  • Acton, Q.A. (2013). Lactobacillus--Advances in Research and Application: 2013 Edition. Scholarly Editions. p. 90. ISBN 978-1-4816-8929-8. 

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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