Mizoram Bai
Mizoram, Northeast India — Mizo tribal daily staple
Bai is the staple one-pot stew of Mizoram in Northeast India — a dish that defines the daily eating of the Mizo people as much as idli-sambar defines Tamil Nadu. Simple in composition (greens, pork, and fermented pork fat), it is complex in character and deeply tied to the geography of a hilly, forested state where vegetables, bamboo shoots, and pigs have been central to survival for generations.
Traditional Bai combines whatever leafy greens are available — mustard leaves, pumpkin tendrils, wild spinach, yam leaves — with pork (often fatty cuts) and sa-um (fermented pork fat, the Mizo equivalent of lard but with a richer, more complex flavour from fermentation). The whole pot is cooked with water, salt, and sometimes a small quantity of dried fish, until everything melds.
What distinguishes Mizo cooking from the spiced curries of mainland India is its complete absence of most spices. Bai relies entirely on the umami of fermented pork fat, the bitterness of greens, and the clean salinity of salt for its flavour — no chilli paste, no turmeric, no dry-roasted spice blends. Soda or baking soda is often added to help the greens soften faster.
Bamboo shoots — fresh in season, fermented year-round — appear in many versions, adding a distinctive sour crunch. The fermented bamboo shoot (mesuang) has an acidic sharpness that functions similarly to tamarind in other Indian cuisines.
Bai is eaten daily with rice, and its simplicity speaks to a food culture shaped by the forest and the seasons rather than the spice trade.