When in Myanmar, smoke a cheroot 
News

When in Myanmar, smoke a cheroot

No trip to Myanmar is complete without a taste of this all-important part of life, cheroot, even if you--re a non-smoker.

Author : Mitali Saran

One of the joys of travelling in Myanmar is that you get to smoke many of their lovely green cheroots without being made to feel guilty, or making unseemly dents in your wallet. All public places are thick with smoke curling up from such unlikely sources as little old ladies and children. Everybody, and I mean everybody, smokes cheroots in Myanmar. Cheroots are made of dried thanat leaves, rolled around various proportions of crushed tobacco and dried wood. One end is open for lighting, the other rolled shut around a filter of dry corn husks. Women sit cross-legged in thatch roofed, open-walled shelters, gossiping as their fingers fly, making cheroots out of a mess of leaves and crumbly tobacco. They cut the leaf to size, roll in the tobacco and filter, and bind it with thread or brand labels all in a few seconds. The late Burmese writer Daw Khin Myo Chit describes the ritualistic cheroot-making of her grandmother&rsquos day women rolled their own cheroots with thanat leaves, soft dried wood seasoned with tamarind pulp, crushed tobacco, and a skein of silk or cotton thread from the family loom. Today, it&rsquos a labour-intensive, low yield, cottage industry. One woman makes 1000 cheroots a day, for which she will earn 200 kyat (US$ 0.70 or Rs 46.42). Two cheroots sell on the market for under 5 kyat (under two US cents, or Rs1.33). Cheroots come in all shapes and sizes, from rolls only slightly bigger than a cigarette, to elegant long white cheroots favoured by the old aristocracy. They have various potencies and colours.

Air India Launches Non-Stop Delhi–Manila Flights

ITC Unveils Welcomhotel In Bodh Gaya: A 98-Room Luxury Hotel & Convention Centre In Bihar

From Rann Utsav To Surajkund Mela: 10 Must-Visit Winter Festivals In India

Top Things To Do In Delhi This Weekend

New Bajrang Setu: The Glass Bridge To Replace Lakshman Jhula, Transforming Rishikesh Tourism

SCROLL FOR NEXT