Manipuri Eromba
Manipur, Northeast India — Meitei tribal culinary tradition
Eromba is Manipur's most beloved side dish — a dish that has no real equivalent elsewhere in Indian cooking. It is made from boiled vegetables (often potato, colocasia, or raw banana) mashed together with dried or fermented fish (ngari), dried red chillies, and fermented fish sauce. The result is simultaneously a vegetable mash, a chutney, and a condiment — eaten in small quantities alongside rice as part of a Mizo or Meitei thali.
The key ingredient is ngari — fermented whole fish (typically snakehead fish) packed in earthen pots and left to ferment for months or even years. Ngari has an intense, barnyard-pungent aroma that shocks unfamiliar palates but delivers profound umami depth in cooking. It is to Manipuri cooking what fish sauce is to Thai cooking — not a flavouring but the fundamental taste backbone.
The preparation is simple: vegetables are boiled until very soft, then hand-mashed with roasted ngari (briefly toasted to reduce its rawness) and dried red chillies. The mixture should be rough-textured — not a smooth purée. Some versions include mustard leaves or local greens. The final dish should be pungent, savoury, and hot.
Eromba is never eaten alone — it is always part of a meal, functioning as an intensely flavourful small portion against the neutral background of rice. A spoon of eromba against a mound of plain boiled rice is one of the most satisfying flavour contrasts in all of Northeast Indian eating.