24 November 2009

Lihing




While I've never been a good drinker, nor I will ever be one, I have an appreciation for all things traditional. Lihing is one of them. Although I don't drink lihing as a beverage, I do love its flavor in chicken soup. To the Dusuns, lihing is an essential confinement food. (In fact my mom-in-law and my mom conspired to make me have lihing soup with 'kampung chicken' (uncaged chicken) every day for two weeks on my confinements, even though they know I am not a 'kampung chicken' eater! )

Anyway, back to lihing. This particular one in the picture above is my family's small business venture (again described in the other pic). My mom is the producer, of course. From making the sasad (yeast), to cooking the pulut (glutinous rice), to bottling the wine, she does everything the traditional way. (My aunts lend a hand too of course- I've never seen such united female siblings as my mom and her sisters :-)).

I'd have preferred the lihing to be bottled in glass bottles instead of the plastic bottles that they use. It's not good for the environment. But I guess it is easier and cheaper for my mom to get plastic bottles supply.

My mom's lihing has a special bittersweet flavour. We use vinometer to test the alcohol content, and it is approximately 23%. (that's my tentative finding, which will be tested further the first chance I have next). Basically lihing is produced this way: cook some glutinous rice, scoop it out and spread to cool on a clean plastic cover on top of a clean table, pound some yeast, and when the rice is cooled off, spread the yeast all over it. Store in jars or big buckets with tight lids. Leave to ferment for at least a week, but of course the longer you leave it, the better. My mom's rule of thumb is a month. After a month, tip out the wine into a water container, and transfer to bottles, ready for consumption.

I grew up seeing the process that I think I can actually do it blindfolded. It was a mixed feeling when I was growing up. At one point I felt like my mom's business is offensive, since ...come on, this is Malaysia, people shouldn't consume alcohol. Then I realized that just because some people can't consume, it doesn't mean that it is wrong to have this business. After all, Dusuns still need lihing at least for confinement. And we keep it within the consumer circle anyway. Now I am at peace with lihing and fully intend to pass on the lihing making knowledge to the future generation. Teach them culture and teach them the sense of responsibility, and our world will continue to be a happy little place.

5 comments:

smallkucing said...

I heard this wine is very strong.

Wel^Beiolman said...

wah..promosi...i've tasted panther's product and found it 'pasti nak lagi'..haha...

azamain said...

Vinometer ? now I know. How does it work?

Verone said...

smallkucing- it depends. Lihing is quite ok, but there's another one called 'Montoku', produced by distilling process that is very strong. And it is useless in cooking so I'd pass that one :-)

Wel- ketagih ka? It should be consumed in little amount buddy.

A- it is a small 'test tube-like' instrument with a little 'tail'. You put some lihing in the tail, tip it out on a flat surface (plate works best)and the residue will indicate the alcohol content. For the lihing, it stays around the 23% pointer. It is advisable to do 3 tests to get the average...

Wel^Beiolman said...

inda la ketagih tp sadap ba kalu campur d masakan...ginger lihing pun sadap..haha...tp lihing inda buli minum byk la..haha...inda macam beer..haha...siok sup lihing jd pusas..haha..