Khanon i

Khanon i

archive citation

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'''Khanon i''' ({{langx|my|{{linktext|ခနုံအီ}}}}; {{IPA|my|kʰənòʊɴʔì|pron}}; also spelt '''khanon e''') is a traditional Burmese [[snack]] or ''[[Mont (food)|mont]]''. The word ''khanon'' comes from [[Thai language|Thai]] ''[[Khanom (food)|khanom]]'' (lit. 'dessert'). The snack is essentially a patty of steamed [[glutinous rice]] and [[peanut oil]], garnished with [[coconut]] shavings.
'''Khanon i''' ({{langx|my|{{linktext|ခနုံအီ}}}}; {{IPA|my|kʰənòʊɴʔì|pron}}; also spelt '''khanon e''') is a traditional Burmese [[snack]] or ''[[Mont (food)|mont]]''. The word ''khanon'' comes from [[Thai language|Thai]] ''[[Khanom (food)|khanom]]'' (lit. 'dessert'). The snack is essentially a patty of steamed [[glutinous rice]] and [[peanut oil]], garnished with [[coconut]] shavings.


Khanon i originates in [[Upper Myanmar]], where it is considered a royal delicacy, along with [[khanon htok]].{{Cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/burmese/in-depth-48624224|title=မန္တလေး အကြောင်း လူသိနည်းတဲ့ ၅ ချက်|last=ဘိုဘို|date=2019-06-17|work=BBC|access-date=2019-11-15|language=my}} A series of [[Burmese–Siamese wars]] beginning with [[Hsinbyushin]]'s reign resulted in the emergence of Thai-inspired delicacies, including khanon htok, [[shwe yin aye]], and [[cendol|mont let hsaung]].{{Cite web|url=http://thevoicemyanmar.com/article/5570-mdl|title=မန္တလေးက ခနုံထုပ်|website=The Voice|language=my|access-date=2019-11-15|archive-date=2019-11-18|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191118023111/http://thevoicemyanmar.com/article/5570-mdl|url-status=usurped}}
Khanon i originates in [[Upper Myanmar]], where it is considered a royal delicacy, along with [[khanon htok]].{{Cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/burmese/in-depth-48624224|title=မန္တလေး အကြောင်း လူသိနည်းတဲ့ ၅ ချက်|last=ဘိုဘို|date=2019-06-17|work=BBC|access-date=2019-11-15|language=my|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190630011435/https://www.bbc.com/burmese/in-depth-48624224|archive-date=30 June 2019}} A series of [[Burmese–Siamese wars]] beginning with [[Hsinbyushin]]'s reign resulted in the emergence of Thai-inspired delicacies, including khanon htok, [[shwe yin aye]], and [[cendol|mont let hsaung]].{{Cite web|url=http://thevoicemyanmar.com/article/5570-mdl|title=မန္တလေးက ခနုံထုပ်|website=The Voice|language=my|access-date=2019-11-15|archive-date=2019-11-18|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191118023111/http://thevoicemyanmar.com/article/5570-mdl|url-status=usurped}}


==References==
==References==