For Centuries, These Asian Recipes Have Helped New Moms Recover From Childbirth (2024)

Dr. Marilyn Wong serves green papaya and pigs' feet soup, a Vietnamese dish believed to fortify new mothers. Grace Hwang Lynch for NPR hide caption

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Grace Hwang Lynch for NPR

For Centuries, These Asian Recipes Have Helped New Moms Recover From Childbirth (2)

Dr. Marilyn Wong serves green papaya and pigs' feet soup, a Vietnamese dish believed to fortify new mothers.

Grace Hwang Lynch for NPR

Khanh-Hoa Nguyen stirs a pot of green papaya and pigs' feet soup. The clear broth and pale green chunks of unripe melon are redolent with fish sauce, the way her own mother prepared the soup after Nguyen's sister gave birth.

After her second year at the University of California at Berkeley, Nguyen was spending the summer at her parents' home in Los Angeles, watching her mother prepare big pots of Vietnamese postpartum foods for her sister.

For Centuries, These Asian Recipes Have Helped New Moms Recover From Childbirth (3)

From Mothers to Mothers: A Collection of Traditional Asian Postpartum Recipes will be released in April by Eastwind Books of Berkeley. Khanh-Hoa Nguyen hide caption

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Khanh-Hoa Nguyen

"I don't think I would have known if I didn't go home that summer," says Nguyen, who is now co-editing one of the most comprehensive English language cookbooks featuring traditional Asian foods for new mothers.

For generations, new Vietnamese mothers have eaten this stew, just as Korean mothers have downed bowls of seaweed soup and Chinese women have simmered pigs' feet with ginger and vinegar. The food traditions stretch back for centuries, part of the practice of resting for the first 30 days after giving birth that is common throughout Asia.

In Chinese, it's called zuo yuezi, or "sitting the month." Vietnamese refer to it as nằm ổ, literally "lying in a nest." The recipes for these foods are unlikely to be found in any cookbook. These postpartum tonics have traditionally been prepared by grandmothers and aunts; the ingredients and techniques passed down orally.

When Nguyen returned to Berkeley that fall, she took a course in Asian American and Pacific Islander community health. In that class, Dr. Marilyn Wong put out a call for students who were interested in documenting Asian postpartum traditions. Nguyen not only volunteered to do research, but led a group of 13 undergraduate students who spent the past two years interviewing relatives and collecting recipes spanning six Asian ethnicities: Vietnamese, Chinese, Korean, Hmong, Cambodian and Filipino. Together with Wong, Nguyen edited the cookbook From Mothers to Mother: A Collection of Traditional Asian Postpartum Recipes, which will be released this month.

Khanh-Hoa Nguyen cooks caramelized pork belly with ginger, a Cambodian dish served to women who have just given birth. Grace Hwang Lynch for NPR hide caption

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Grace Hwang Lynch for NPR

For Centuries, These Asian Recipes Have Helped New Moms Recover From Childbirth (5)

Khanh-Hoa Nguyen cooks caramelized pork belly with ginger, a Cambodian dish served to women who have just given birth.

Grace Hwang Lynch for NPR

Wong, a retired physician, says that in her 30 years of working in public health clinics in San Francisco and Oakland, Calif., she saw a lack of nutritional guidance for low-income immigrants and refugees, who may be living far from their grandmothers and aunts and their native foods. Doctors would simply tell a breastfeeding woman to drink plenty fluids and eat more calories, Wong says. Even with her degrees in medicine and public health, Wong doesn't dismiss the value of Asian folk remedies.

"In Western medicine, we don't pay enough attention to tradition. We just dismiss all that and start from scratch, because now we know what minerals and vitamins and molecules are," muses Wong.

She points out that the Chinese technique of braising pigs' feet with ginger and vinegar makes them especially nutritious. "The vinegar probably leeches out the calcium from the bones. That's what you need, the calcium. Women will have loss of bone mass from breastfeeding. In the old times, they could not verbalize it that way, but they knew that women who did this did better than women who didn't."

For Chinese Moms, Birth Means 30 Days In Pajamas

These traditional soups can be hard for younger or more assimilated women to swallow. Even though she spent her childhood in Vietnam, Nguyen's sister initially dismissed these stews. But worried that she might not produce enough milk, she gave them a try. "And it really helped my sister with breastfeeding," says Nguyen.

Soups play a big role in all six cultures represented in From Mothers to Mothers, although the recipes also include dishes such as Cambodian caramelized pork belly and Tulia clams with tomatoes and ginger. Nguyen and the other students interviewed family members to learn the cooking methods, and then practiced making them at Wong's home in the Berkeley Hills and at their own apartments.

"Sometimes we'd have to call mom," Nguyen laughs.

"When you say a 'pinch,' what is that?" Wong interjects.

Across the range of cultures and geography, some trends emerged. "Papaya is also used in Chinese postpartum recipes and Cambodian postpartum recipes," notes Nguyen. "Pork belly is also used in Vietnamese, Cambodian and Chinese cultures. Ginger is a very common postpartum ingredient."

And perhaps there is another ingredient in these stews which helps new mothers to recuperate: community. "The whole village would be there and people would be cooking and taking care of your baby," says Wong of the postpartum practices in pre-industrial China. "The mothers were really pampered."

After three semesters of research, the students recorded 30 recipes, each of them printed in English and in its native language. Students have also crowdfunded more than $7,300 to donate nearly 500 copies of the book to Bay Area clinics and nonprofit groups serving low-income Asian Americans.

From Mothers to Mothers will be sold at Eastwind Books in Berkeley and online. Wong hopes there will be a second phase to this project, perhaps to study postpartum food traditions of South Asia or the Middle East.

Grace Hwang Lynch is a multimedia journalist based in the San Francisco Bay Area. She is currently working on a memoir about food, identity and caretaking. Follow her blog HapaMama.com or on Twitter at @GraceHwangLynch.

For Centuries, These Asian Recipes Have Helped New Moms Recover From Childbirth (2024)

FAQs

What are postpartum practices in Asia? ›

The concept of Chinese confinement — “zuo yue zi,” or “sitting the month”— is when a new mother stays at home for one month to allow her body to rest after giving birth. During that time, the pui yuet makes dishes catering to the mother's physical needs and helps her with milk production and other concerns.

What foods are good for postpartum healing? ›

8 Best Foods for Postpartum - Our Top Picks
  • Water. Water is essential for all bodily functions, including healing after childbirth. ...
  • Protein-Rich Foods. Protein is essential for the healing and repair of tissues. ...
  • Iron-Rich Foods. ...
  • Vegetables. ...
  • Soup. ...
  • Peanut Butter Toast. ...
  • Nuts and Seeds. ...
  • Fruit.

What do Japanese eat after giving birth? ›

Warm soups and hot drinks are often part of a postpartum tradition. Mochi (pounded brown rice) dumplings in miso soup is a traditional Japanese food given to mothers after birth. Some herbs may help boost a low milk supply: fenugreek, thyme and Goats Rue.

What is the Chinese postpartum recovery? ›

The Significance of Chinese Postpartum Recovery

The idea behind it is to give new mothers the time they need to recover from the physical and emotional toll of labor, as well as to nurture their bond with their newborn. During this period, new mothers are pampered by family and exempt from household duties or work.

What cultures eat after birth? ›

Preparing the placenta for consumption by mothers is considered traditional among Vietnamese and Chinese people. The Chinese believe a nursing mother should boil the placenta, make a broth, then drink it to improve her milk.

What do Koreans do after giving birth? ›

Sanhujori (Korean: 산후조리) is the Korean culturally specific form of postpartum care. It includes consuming healthy foods, doing exercise and warming up the body. The sanhujori period typically lasts approximately from one week to one month.

What foods to avoid after postpartum? ›

Some citrus fruits like oranges and lemons: May cause rashes, itching, and discomfort for the baby. Foods like soy milk, brown rice, corn, and beans: May increase the risk of allergies in the baby. Drinks and snacks containing caffeine: Can lead to restlessness, runny nose, and difficulty sleeping.

Which fruit is best after delivery? ›

Share on Pinterest Grapefruits and oranges are good souces of essential nutrients. Fruits are a rich source of many nutrients. They may also help relieve constipation, which some people experience after giving birth. Aim for about 2 cups of fruit per day, which should include a wide variety of different fruits.

What foods are good for new mothers? ›

Include protein foods 2-3 times per day such as meat, poultry, fish, eggs, dairy, beans, nuts and seeds. Eat three servings of vegetables, including dark green and yellow vegetables per day. Eat two servings of fruit per day. Include whole grains such as whole wheat breads, pasta, cereal and oatmeal in your daily diet.

What do Mexicans eat after giving birth? ›

And in Mexico, moms consume lots of soups, including caldo de pollo, a traditional chicken soup. Wearing a postpartum faja. A common cuarentena ritual involves wrapping the abdomen in a postpartum faja (a girdle) in order to help it return to its original size quicker.

Why does Japan not do epidurals? ›

Pain. Painkillers are thought to complicate deliveries and women are discouraged by ob-gyns from taking them during childbirth. Therefore, Japanese births tend to be without pain medication. Furthermore, there is a more positive image of a woman capable of natural birth.

Are husbands allowed during delivery in Japan? ›

Dad in Delivery Room Traditionally, fathers are not permitted to be in attendance at birth. Some facilities will allow the father in the delivery room and some may expect him to have a seat in the waiting room and then take a peak through the nursery room glass.

How long does it take for a woman's body to fully recover after giving birth? ›

How long it takes for your body to go back to normal may take 6 months to a year, or even longer depending on your health and whether there were any complications during delivery.

How long does it take to fully recover from childbirth? ›

Fully recovering from pregnancy and childbirth can take months. Although many women feel mostly recovered by 6-8 weeks, it may take longer than this to feel like yourself again. During this time, you may feel as though your body has turned against you. Try not to get frustrated.

What is a Korean post partum nanny? ›

A caption shared with the post reads: "In Korea, families have the possibility to hire a postpartum nanny at a very affordable price. They are subsidized by the government, so the price depends on where you live, income and how many kids you have. But everyone is able to get one."

What are Vietnamese postpartum traditions? ›

Vietnamese women will use a damp cloth or towel to clean their body for the first week of their postpartum period. One month after birth, Vietnamese women are permitted to take a bath with cooled boiled water. If the mother washed their hair, they'd then dry it thoroughly with a hair drier.

What are the cultural postpartum practices of doing the month in China? ›

Doing the month involves a series of practices related to the maternal role, physical activity, maintenance of body warmth, and food consumption that are believed to restore maternal postpartum health and prevent future disease.

What are the practices of childbirth in China? ›

Birth. Often, the labouring woman's mother or mother-in-law attends childbirth, rather than the father of the child, as it is sometimes acceptable in Western practices. Infants may be separated from their mother for at least the first 24 hours. This tradition is practiced to allow the postpartum woman to rest.

What is traditional Korean postpartum care? ›

Confinement Practices in Korean Postpartum Care

This practice, deeply ingrained in Korean culture, typically lasts for about three to four weeks. It's a time for the mother to stay indoors, avoid physical strain, and receive specialized care to recuperate from the rigors of childbirth.

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