Sounds Excessive.
I've prepared more than a few Burmese dishes (truly one of THE MOST under appreciated Cuisines of the world IMHO- a fine,
hybrid of Thai and Indian, with some British Colonial influences tossed into the mix) from Copeland Marks book,
The Burmese Kitchen (ISBN 0-87131-524-6) and never had encountered a savory dish with that amount of sugar.
Perhaps a typo.
As an example, the Burmese dish called "
Wetthani Hin" /
Red Pork Pot Roast is described as being called "red" from the caramelized sugar turning the pork
a reddish brown.
For 2lbs of boneless Pork, cut into 2" pieces
2 tbsp soy sauce
.5 tsp salt
2 tbsp corn or peanut oil
1 tbsp. brown or white sugar
2 garlic cloves,sliced
1" fresh ginger,chopped
2 cups of water (says that beer or firewater are substituted for more flavor)
Marinate the pork in salt and soy sauce for an hour. Heat oil, add sugar stir until carmelized. Add the garlic and ginger,
stirfrying over medium heat until brown (appx 2minutes). Add the pork ,mix well.Cover the pan and cook for 15 minutes ,stirring every now and then.
Add the water (or 12 oz. beer) cover and continue to cook for 45 minutes, or untill the pork is tender and/or the liquid has
mostly evaporated.
Serves 6.
Another recipe for a pork called "Wetta Apo-Dthatsa" /Diet Pork- uses one lb of pork and water and jaggery or sugar (only 2 TEASPOONS), with tamarind paste salt and fish sauce.
Again- no CUPS of SUGAR!
If you can find an out of print version of this seminal book on Burmese Cuisine- I'd highly reccomend it. He's a fantastic author and
cultural historian. His other book on Sephardic Cooking is one of my favorites as well!
Cheers,
Hombre de Acero.