This week’s tapestry of stories and images moves between sacred stone and everyday tables, from Sanskrit echoes in modern Khmer to the living flavors of Cambodian and diasporic cuisine. Together, these pieces offer a window into how language, legend, art, and food continue to shape Cambodia’s heritage and contemporary life across temples, museums, restaurants, and city streets.
We invite you to explore these carefully curated highlights and experience Cambodia from multiple perspectives – historical, cultural, culinary, and deeply human.
– Picture of the day: Tunisian Brik with Egg & Tuna, Kilimandjaro, Siem Reap
– Language: Sanskrit in Cambodia: How an Ancient Language Still Shapes Modern Khmer
– Picture of the day: Yama at the Terrace of the Leper King
– Khmer story: The Worm and the Crow
– Picture of the day: Na Taing at Kraya Angkor, A Phnom Penh Classic
– Tourism: Prasat Chom (Preah Pithu Group, Angkor), A Quiet Temple Reborn Through Restoration
– Picture of the day: Bayon-Style Prajnaparamita at Phnom Penh’s National Museum
– Video: Angkor Database Documentation Center
– Khmer Proverb: Why Every Endeavor Needs Its Proper Means
– Picture of the day: Bitter Melon Salad in Phnom Penh
– Food ingredients: Rice Paper, Cambodia’s Delicate Culinary Treasure
– Picture of the day: Golden Apsara – René Piot’s Cambodian Dancer (1922)
– Tourism: Memoire Siem Reap Hotel, Artistic Khmer Comfort Near Angkor
– 视频:金边Fun Planet餐厅换了牛排!
– Picture of the day: Nom Cheung Chrouk – Cambodian Pork Trotter Cake with Teochew Roots
– Article du Petit Journal du Cambodge à propos de Wonders of Cambodia
– Khmer dishes: Cambodian Stir-Fried Eggplant with Pork, A Simple Weeknight Star


















