Khanon dok (Burmese: ခနုံထုပ်; pronounced [kʰənòʊɴdoʊʔ]; also spelt khanon htok) is a traditional Burmese snack or mont. The word khanon htok is a portmanteau of Thai khanom (lit.'dessert') and Burmese htok (lit.'parcel'). The snack is essentially a stuffed crepe-like omelette filled with sautéed chicken or shrimp, and rolled like an eggroll.

Khanon htok
TypeSnack (mont)
Place of originMyanmar (Burma)
Region or stateSoutheast Asia
Associated cuisineBurmese
Main ingredientsegg, flour, onions, chicken, shrimp

Khanon dok is a popular delicacy in Mandalay, where it was considered a favorite snack of the Mandalay Palace royals during tea time or supper.[1][2] A series of Burmese–Siamese wars beginning with Hsinbyushin's reign resulted in the emergence of Thai-inspired delicacies, including khanon dok, shwe yin aye, mont let hsaung, and mont di.[3]

References

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  1. ^ ဘိုဘို (2019-06-17). "မန္တလေး အကြောင်း လူသိနည်းတဲ့ ၅ ချက်". BBC (in Burmese). Retrieved 2019-11-15.
  2. ^ Thaw Kaung (2014-05-08). "Myanmar Food: Traditional and Change". TODAY. Archived from the original on 2019-05-19. Retrieved 2019-11-15.
  3. ^ "မန္တလေးက ခနုံထုပ်". The Voice (in Burmese). Archived from the original on 2019-11-18. Retrieved 2019-11-15.