Khow Suey is a vegetarian Indian subcontinental variation of the original Burmese Ohn No Khao Swè, a warming garnished broth had in every home in Myanmar, as comforting as a dal or a rasam.
Available in India in many restaurants serving far eastern food, and sometimes at buffets at hotels and weddings, Khow Suey is the Indian meatless take on the coconut milk curry soup that uses chicken, sliced hard-boiled eggs and fish sauce.

The best version I recently had at the wedding reception of a friend and former colleague George Iype's daughter Hridya at NESCO, north west Mumbai. Creamy, piping hot, the Khow Suey was served with umpteen toppings/condiments that ensured each spoon delivered an enticing range of flavours (umami, sour, spicy, mildly sweet).
It was a wedding reception to remember, with beautiful singing (by the pretty bride in a rich red Kanjeevaram), dancing, Bollywood numbers and western songs, speeches, a boisterous master of ceremonies, prayers and excellent food.
First was a starter round of three types of chaat, various hot snacks, wine, cake and more.
The buffet tables for dinner groaned under the weight of 5 to 8 types of cuisine, with hot counters too. Japanese food. Lebanese starters. Benne Dosas and regular dosas off the tava. Panyarams stuffed with olives. A soup station. Pastas of your choice. Chinese. Indian. And there must have been 24 types of yummy desserts.
George was once Rediff's New Delhi bureau chief, interviewing national leaders at a time when they were more accessible.
Gung ho, full of energy+drive and extremely hardworking, he broke important news stories, interviewed a whole slew of neta bigwigs during his lengthy stint and was totally on top of his game. He had astute political insights too.
George subsequently left journalism to try his hand at commodity trading and was very good at it. But he always remained in touch, the same lovable, affectionate, super-cheerful George of his Delhi days.
Attending his daughter's wedding reception was the foremost engagement of 2026 by all of us former Rediff colleagues and probably the most important one of the year and so memorable too.

After returning from the shaadi, I decided to try out making the Khow Suey I had there.
The basic broth or soup base is easy to make. The many toppings take a little bit of time to prepare, but are what gives the soup its zing and mazaa. The soup is a meal in itself.
Here's how I went about it:

Iype-Samuel Wedding Khow Suey
Serves: 2-3
Ingredients
For the soup:
For the paste:
For the toppings/garnish:
Method
For the garnish:
For the paste:
For the soup:
Zelda's Note: The Khow Suey at Hridya and Joel's wedding reception had Thai accents making it akin to a Thai curry which tasted very good neveretheless.
To reduce the Thai flavours, opt to not use the Thai basil, pandanus leaves, lemon grass.
Meat lovers can add chopped pieces of boiled chicken and a few tsp fish sauce, along with sliced boiled eggs.
The mixture of vegetables used for the toppings is per preference. Bean sprouts, chopped steamed zucchini, baby pearl onions, tiny Thai eggplant, will do well too. Spice it up further with chilly flakes and roasted roughly pounded peanuts, sliced raw onions (while serving).