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Throughout China, cylindrical briquettes, called 'feng wo mei' (beehive coal) are used in purpose-built cookers.<br/><br/>

These briquettes were invented in Japan in the 19th century, and spread to Manchukuo, Korea and China in the first half of the 20th century. Although they went out of use in Japan after the 1970s, they are  still popular in China, Korea and Vietnam.<br/><br/>

Each cylinder lasts for over an hour. The cylinders are delivered, usually by cart, to businesses, and are very inexpensive.
The old silversmiths’ quarter centred on Baan Wua Lai (Spotted Cow Village) stretches along both sides of Wua Lai Road, to the south of Chiang Mai's old city. This long-established, prosperous community of artisans maintains a tradition that stretches back more than two centuries, to the time of Chao Kawila’s re-establishment of Chiang Mai in the years after 1797.<br/><br/>

Silversmiths have long been valued and held in high esteem by Southeast Asian royal courts from Burma to Java, and in times past the Lan Na Kingdom was no exception.