Why It Works

  • Using fresh bamboo as a cooking vessel adds a unique vegetal flavor to the as-sam.
  • The chicken juices infuse the rice in a sealed environment with minimal evaporation, maintaining a moistness that is redolent with the essence of chicken.

When open flames hit fresh, green bamboo, a distinct grassy fragrance emerges—one that reminds me of Borneo, an island in the southwestern Pacific Ocean that is split into Malaysian and Indonesian territories and home to the Bidayuh people, one of many indigenous groups in Borneo that are collective referred to as Dayak. Cooking in bamboo is the key to as-sam, a rustic, hearty Bidayuh dish made of rice and chicken, and spiced with garlic, ginger, lemongrass, and black pepper. The whole mixture is packed into a tube of bamboo, sealed with pandan leaves, and slowly roasted over open flames. The chicken juice infuses the rice, making them plump, moist, and fragrant, and the open flames lends each bite a hint of smokiness. 

Serious Eats / Michelle Yip


As-sam is above all else sustaining, filling the belly and warming the heart with simple flavors and ingredients from the land. My grandmother, a no-nonsense personality quick with a sharp word yet soft with her hands, would stuff the chicken and rice mixture deftly into the bamboo and loudly clamor for someone to light the fire. In the traditional rural household of my mother’s childhood, there was always something to do, and my mother was often saddled with the task of assisting my grandmother with making as-sam.

Dayak Cuisine

Traditionally, Dayak communities—the indigenous inhabitants of Borneo—depend heavily on foraging and farming. In many rural villages, it is still a very big part of life in a land that, while fertile, can be merciless. Carbohydrates like rice, cassava, and sago, along with proteins like freshwater fish, feature heavily in Dayak cuisine, while meat like chicken and pork is considered a luxury reserved for special occasions and festivals.

Serious Eats / Michelle Yip


Because meat is seldom used and highly valued, starches and vegetables often help to stretch meaty dishes further. As-sam is very much an example of this: Hearty bits of savory chicken meat and pungent spices enrich plain rice, and it’s all packed in bamboo, a convenient receptacle that doubles as both cooking vessel and storage container. It can be carried on long treks, for example, then split open and the food within served when desired.

Getting Bamboo-zled

For first timers, it may be—might I say—bamboozling to find that you can cook with bamboo, but nothing says indigenous Bornean cooking like it. Bamboo is a grass that grows like giant weeds all across the island. For as long as fire has been used to cook food here, the bamboo has been its partner, and over time, has become ubiquitous with so much of Dayak cooking, culture, architecture, and history.

If you’ve ever seen bamboo, you may have noticed that the hollow stalk—or “culm” in botanical terminology—is divided into segments by solid joints called nodes, each of which seals one segment from another. To harvest a bamboo culm for cooking, one cuts out a section with only one node still attached on one end to yield a tube that is closed on one end (where the node is) and open on the other. The result is a ready-made vessel that’s green and cylindrical.

Serious Eats / Michelle Yip


In Borneo, a type of bamboo called buru’ is used for cooking, though many kinds of bamboo can work. Different dimensions and sizes of bamboo are selected depending on the type of food being cooked. What makes buru perfect for cooking is its relatively thin walls, which allow heat to penetrate quickly. The perfect buru is neither too young nor too old, fresh enough not to burn when it is licked by flames, and mature enough not to rupture when heated. If seeking bamboo to try this cooking method on your own, look for plants that are a dark green shade with about a half-centimeter wall thickness and seven-centimeter diameter.

Serious Eats / Michelle Yip


Beware though, some bamboo is covered in fine white hairs that will cause you to itch like crazy if they come into contact with your skin. To remove the hairs, vigorously wipe the culm with the bamboo’s own leaves. It’s also important to rinse the inside of the culm to remove any dust. If not used immediately, fill the culms with water up to the rim to keep them fresh for about five days.

Alia Ali

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