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				kanom saneh jan (ขนมเสน่ห์จันทน์) 
				Thai. Name for an old kind of sweet, which loosely translates as ‘charming
				
			      sandalwood candy’. 
				In appearance, it is somewhat similar to
			the Japanese-style sweet 
                
                																								
              	kanom moji (fig.). Kanom saneh jan is yellowish brown with a brownish top and has a rounded shape. It is fashioned to resemble 
				
				look chan, the fragrant 
			
				
				Gold Apple, sometimes referred 
				to as the  fruit of the 
				Sandalwood Tree, 
				which in turn is very similar in appearance to its cousin, the
			
				
			      persimmon 
				(fig.). Besides
			
			      rice flour, 
			      																								
			sticky rice powder,
			
		      
              																									
              coconut milk, brown sugar and egg yolk, ingredients also include some yellow food colouring, as well as a little sandalwood powder, an ingredient also used in the manufacturing of
			
		      
		      																									
		      incense sticks. The sweets are typically topped with a brown paste made from beans. Kanom saneh jan 
				(fig.) is traditionally served as the dessert in wedding ceremonies. According to legend, some day a boy picked a bright yellow sandalwood fruit for his mother to eat at dinner. However, on his way home, he lost the fruit, yet the fruit's delightful scent still remained. Hence, since at that night there was a full moon, the boy went back to the tree to pick another fruit and met a girl there, who was also picking fruits of this tree for her father, which she did on every full moon night. The boy liked the girl and thus returned there each full moon to pick fruits together, until they fell in love and eventually got married. Since the fruits are believed to bring happiness, the couple took the seeds of this fruit and added the other ingredients to form the dessert for the wedding, and so it is that kanom saneh jan became a popular wedding dessert up to now. 
				In English sometimes referred to as 
				 
				sweet egg yolk charms.
			
				See also POSTAGE STAMPS 
				(1) and
				
				(2).
			
			
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