Archive for the Category »Vietnam Food «

Try grilled ca ba trau when in Danang

Apart from its charming landscapes, Danang is also famous for seafood dishes, including goi ca Nam O (raw Nam O fish), mi Quang (Quang noodles), banh dap Hoi An (Hoi An cake) and especially ca ba trau nuong muoi ot (grilled ca ba trau with chili salt).

0ea26 75e11 ca ba trau nuong.anh internet 200 Try grilled ca ba trau when in DanangUnlike the smaller species with the same name living in fresh water, ba trau living in seas or rivers is larger, around 150 to 200 grams. To make the dish, you should choose fish weighing about 200 grams each and clean the fish out with vinegar or ginger water after cutting feelers and fins and taking the entrails out.

Next, you will soak ba trau with salt, sugar, monosodium glutamate, cooking oil and mashed green pepper. It takes about 15 minutes for the fish to absorb the mixture of spices.

Put the fish on the grill, wait until the fish turns yellow and turn them over.

Now you prepare raw vegetables such as fennel, tomatoes, sliced green bananas and cucumbers on the plate. Of course, you cannot forget to make a small plate of salt or fish sauce added with mashed green pepper, some drops of lemon juices and some garlic.

Sitting at a small stand along the riverside dining on this dish with some buddies makes for an enjoyable evening. Put a piece of rice-paper in you palm, pick up a piece of grilled ba trau with some raw vegetables and soft noodles and you have an unforgettable taste with a bowl of chili salt.

The delicacy is attractive due to its sweetness, crunchy taste and specific smell of the fish dissolving into the salty and hot flavor.

(Source: SGTO)

Saigon bread – a local piece of heaven

Saigon is a city where many cultures converge and there is food on offer from all over the world but the locals’ love of Saigon bread is undiminished.

68e71 img 0191  200 Saigon bread   a local piece of heavenTo distinguish it from the many different kinds of bread, Saigon bread is normally long-shaped with a crunchy crust, soft and solid crumb. Different from many other kinds of bread, in that lightly salted butter is an important part of the cooking process, so Saigon bread has a very sweet smell and taste.

Centuries ago, when the French invaded Saigon, they brought with them their love of bread. Western food, in turn, soon invaded a rice-dominated society and has ever since become an integral part of the local lifestyle. Pork pie, pate, grilled pork, a few slices of cucumber, onion and coriander

are arranged inside the bread to make ‘banh mi thit’ (meat bread). Finally, the seller adds sauce and chili. It’s time to eat and it only costs VND10,000-20,000.

There are many ways to eat Saigonese bread. Instead of pork and the other ingredients some people prefer dipping it in milk, covering it with butter or eating with fried eggs.

As a popular fast food, Saigon bread can be eaten everywhere and often for breakfast, students eat it in their classroom, workers in construction site, clerical officers munch in their offices, some young people also eat it while walking on the street.

It is not only for breakfast, though, as Saigon bread is also a great snack for lunch, dinner or supper. Some people also keep bread in their bag in case they feel peckish during the day, especially students. Saigon bread is also a popular choice for a picnic or trips to rural areas or a trek to the mountains.

It’s easy to buy bread. You can find it in every street corner where women with a pedaled glass sideboard have tons of bread and cucumber, potatoes, pork pie, grilled pork, salted shredded pork and some chicken eggs. They often have a small oil stove to fry eggs.

Everyday you hear the shout Banh mi Saigon, dac ruot, thom bo! (Saigon bread! solid core, butter-smelling!) from hawkers as they pedal bicycles through alleys in early morning, sunny noon or late afternoon.

Some popular brand names of Saigon bread are Ngan Saigon, Ha Noi or Nhu Lan. Now, many famous brands have come to town such as Tous Les Jour, Kinh Do, Duc Phat, Givral in many shapes, sizes and flavors but Saigonese still love to buy their bread in sidewalk booths for the authentic taste of Saigon.

(Sourcel: SGTO)

Tom long is the Mekong’s delicacy

Tom long, a kind of small crayfish the size of a thumb, is popular in the Mekong Delta area and is expensive for its size but worth every dong.

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Tom long nau bong so dua is delta favorite - Photo: Hoang Tham

Tom long lives in canals and waterways or along the banks of Tien and Hau rivers. The local farmers usually put bung, a tool to catch this shrimp, in the area with strong flows of water. The crayfish can even be raised in paddy-fields or small ponds.

To cook tom long nau bong so dua, you need a half kilo of fresh catches. First, you need to wash them, cut their feelers and leave the shrimps in a basket until they dry.

The next step is to cook a pot of water, wait until it boils and add some salt. Then you need to mince some lemon grass, red pepper and merge it all into hot water.

After that, you put some sugar, monosodium glutamate, fish sauce, tomatoes, pineapple, and tamarind into the pot. The dish will be even tastier if you add some con me.

A half kilo of flowers of so dua should be prepared for the next step. When the water boils, you have to put tom long into the pot first.

When the shrimps turn red, put so dua flowers into the pot and turn off the cooker. What you have to do now is to add some flavor with mu om vegetables.

Enjoy the dish with hot cooked rice or bun (soft noodles), and dipping one shrimp into delicious fish sauce or a combination of salt and red pepper surely makes for a beautiful taste. The season to taste tom long is from January until the rainy season arrives.

You can find many tom long dishes in several restaurants in Mekong Delta provinces, including tom luoc nuoc dua (shrimps boiled with coconut milk), tom chien bot (shrimps fried with flour), tom tron goi ngo sen (shrimps mixed with lotus rootstock) etc. However, the most simple and attractive one is still tom long nau bong so dua.

(Source: SGTO)

“Oc” Saigon is now part of Saigonese culture

Saigon has so many dishes made of mollusk and crustacean species that people call them simply oc (snail). And now oc is part of Saigonese life.

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Fried crab’s pincers with chili salt is a popular snail dish of Saigonese - Photo: My Tran

It is easy to find snail eateries as they are everywhere in Saigon, from downtown to outlying areas, from big restaurants in main streets to small bistros off alleys or along the city’s many canals. Don’t think for a minute snail dishes are only for beer drinkers, as it is a favorite snack for both young and elderly Saigonese, from students to executive and clerical officers, from cyclo drivers to glamorous celebrities.

Snail eateries often open from late afternoon to midnight. When students finish classes or workers gather to eat and make some jokes with friends before they head home. Middle-aged men with drinking companions enjoy idle talk while women come to satisfy their eating pleasure and gossip with their buddies. Also, celebrities come to sample something from home instead of signature Western foods in luxury restaurants.

People call them snail restaurants but they serve many kinds of dishes to meet diverse options of diners. From many kinds of snails such as oc buou (middle-sized snail), oc huong (sweet snail), finger snail or oc mo (fat snail), diners can also enjoy clams, oysters, shrimps, crab and duck embryos. They are often made with lemon grass, lemon leaves, tamarind and garlic – boiled, grilled or steam fried to balance the flavor of the seafood and make them delicious.

In some snail stalls, revelers can also find other dishes made of pork, beef, rabbit, ostrich and many kinds of hotpots. Therefore, boiled oc buou with lemon leaves, fried oc mo with tamarind, grilled oyster with onion fat, steamed oc len with coconut juice, steamed clam with lemon grass, snail salad, fried crab or shrimp with chili salt, grilled chicken wings, legs or fried rau muong (water spinach) with garlic, seafood fried rice and fish or beef hotpot are some popular dishes for oc lovers.

The price depends on location and season. But the dishes often cost from VND30,000 to VND100,000 a dish.

Beer or a soft drink like coca-cola are suitable drinks for snail eaters who are recommended not to drink fruit juice or sweet soup while eating snail dishes to ensure they don’t get stomach trouble. If you are also an oc addict, why don’t you make an evening out with your friends when you finish work today. I make a bet on that you will have a lot of fun and will enjoy some tasty delights.

(Source: SGTO)

Hotpot beats the rainy blues

Saigon these days is quite cool in the evening due to the incessant heavy rain but it can’t stop Saigonese dining out, especially at hotpot shops. The cooler from rain, the more perfect reason for people to sit around a smoke spiraling hotpot to taste the hot soup and watch the raindrops falling down from the eaves.

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A guest enjoys a Thai-style hotpot in Ba Huyen Thanh Quang Street in District 3 - Photo: Kieu Giang

Saigon has many locations offering different kinds of hotpot including keo fish at Ba Huyen Thanh Quan, Su Thien Chieu and Nguyen Thi Dieu streets in District 3, beef at Truong Dinh Street in District 3 and An Duong Vuong Street in District 5, goat at Nguyen Cong Tru Street in District 1, mam (fish sauce) at Tran Huy Lieu Street, fish heads at Chau Van Liem Street in HCMC’s District 5 and mixed hotpot at Tung Thien Vuong Street in District 8.

Apart from local hotpot, people can find many international styles of Thai, Japanese and Korean hotpot at many restaurants around town.

Eating hotpot doesn’t mean dining only. It brings you into a cozy atmosphere when friends and family members gather to talk and share a big cook of soup. Food accompanied with hotpot is diversified, including many kinds of meat, seafood and vegetables for people to choose which one they like or sometimes to compete with each other for their favorites. It makes a happy and jubilant atmosphere and sees people join together.

The most important thing about hotpot is the soup; it has to be not too salty or not too flat so that when you put all the ingredients together they will mingle together for a perfect taste.

Once eating this dish, we should put the food which takes longer to cook first then wait until bubbles appear on the surface to put vegetables inside. Then, we take some rice vermicelli into a small bowl, and pour soup and food into the bowl.

It’s a big mistake not to mention the fish sauce when eating hotpot. If soup contributes 60% to the delicious flavor of the dish, fish sauce adds 20%.

The freshness of vegetables and ingredients is the other 20% to complete the perfect hotpot. Just imagine the pungent spice of fish sauce at the top of your tongue mingled with the morish flavor of hot soup and the chewy taste of vegetables is an amazing feeling that only a hotpot can give us.

Additionally, hotpot not only wakes up our taste buds but also our vision thanks to the many colors of ingredients including the white-yellow soup, the green vegetables and the white and red meat and dark brown of fish sauce.

People, especially foreigners, find it interesting to see different cookers at different hotpot shops. They range from a coal cooking fire in Chau Van Liem Street, alcohol cookers at Ba Huyen Thanh Quan Street and gas cooker at many hotpot shops.

Prices for hotpot vary from VND80,000 for a small pot to over VND300,000 for a large one. If you want to order more vegetables or food for the pot, you pay VND10,000-50,000 per dish.

Even when the rain stops, people don’t want to leave hotpot shops. Maybe they are scared of the coldness outside or does the soup, the warmth of the cooker or the happiness inside keep them in the bosom of the hotpot.

(Source: SGTO)

Versatile Phu Ly pancakes

Steamed rolled rice pancake (banh cuon) is a popular dish in Vietnam, but it can be enjoyed in different ways in various locations.

7241a banh cuon Versatile Phu Ly pancakes

Phu Ly steamed rolled rice pancakes with grilled pork and raw vegetables - Photo: Thoa Nguyen

Unlike steamed rolled rice pancakes in Hanoi, which are stuffed with meat and served with sheets of orange hued, roasted cinnamon sausage (cha que) or classic silky Vietnamese sausages (cha lua), Phu Ly steamed rolled rice pancakes are white, soft yet flexible sheets of rice flour with fried shallots on top and are eaten with grilled pork, fish sauce and a variety of raw vegetables.

Not only satisfying diners in the Ha Nam countryside and commuters along National Highway 1A, Phu Ly steamed rolled rice pancake also pleases picky customers and is becoming a favorite dish in the capital.

In order to make delicious steamed rolled rice pancakes, one must go through several stages from selecting ingredients to making the rice pancakes and preparing the sauce.

To make steamed rolled rice pancakes, the rice must be soaked until soft and ground the night before, then filtered through a thin cloth. Some of this batter is spread with the back of a ladle into the steamer base to have the thin sheet of the pancake. After that, the pancakes are carefully plucked off the steamer base.

Sliced pork sides (thit ba chi) are spiced with fish sauce, dried onions, peppers, sugar and other spices and then roasted over hot charcoal. The fish sauce served with this dish, which is warmed before eaten, contains all flavors: salty, sweet, hot and sour.

Raw vegetables include coriander, purple perilla (tia to), Vietnamese balm (kinh gioi), and thinly sliced banana blossom (hoa chuoi thai roi).

With the softness of the rice pancakes, sweet fragance of cinnamon, the fat of grilled pork and the strong taste of warm fish sauce, steamed rolled rice pancakes in Phu Ly should be prepared and enjoyed no matter where you are based in the country.

(Source: SGTO)

A taste of France at TOTT bar and restaurant

d7154 tott A taste of France at TOTT bar and restaurant

This month, diners do not need to leave the city to savor their favorite French delights thanks to the TOTT Bar and Restaurant of the Windsor Plaza Hotel in HCMC’s District 5 bringing classics like entrecote (steak) with pepper sauce and tarte tatin (fruit tart).

This and other French fare can be enjoyed with your loved ones with panoramic views of the city from level 25 of the Windsor Plaza Hotel. Dishes start from VND165,000++.

For further information and reservations, contact the Windsor Plaza Hotel at 18 An Duong Vuong Street, District 5, HCMC, tel: 3833 6688 ext. 2626, email: tott@windsorplazahotel.com.

(Source: SGTO)

Vietnamese village introduced at world baking competition

Using wheat flour and salt, Vietnamese bakers made “My village” with bamboo, coconut trees and houses on stilts as their submission at the Louis Lesaffre Cup’s Asian selection round in Guangzhou, China.

“My village” is the name of a baking artwork of Vietnamese bakers at the Louis Lesaffre Cup’s Asian selection round, one of the world’s largest baking competition, which drew the participation of seven regional countries, including China, Japan , Indonesia , the Philippines , the Republic of Korea , Australia and Vietnam. The competition took place in Guangzhou from May 26 to 28.

Three prominent bakers who represented Vietnam at the competition included Vo Thanh Tuan from BigC supermarket, Nguyen Truong Kim Phung from ABC Bakery and Nguyen Van Hung from Caravelle Saigon Hotel. They competed in three categories: Loaves, Viennes Pastries and Artistic Piece, respectively.

The best two teams at the round will go on competing in the Bakery World Cup, scheduled to be held in France in 2012.

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The work named “My Village” by Vietnamese bakers.

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The work by Chinese bakers.

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The work by Japanese bakers.

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The work by Indonesian bakers.

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The work by Philippine bakers.

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The work by Australian bakers.

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Traditional Baguette bread.

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Sweet bread with stuffing.

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Bread in the shapes of fruits.

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Bread with sesame and almond.

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Bread with sesame and almond.

(Source: Vietnamnet)

Hue festival to feature traditional cuisine

Traditional foods will be the highlight of the fourth Traditional Craft Villages Festival 2011, themed “Vietnamese Kitchen in Hue’s Garden” and will be held in the ancient capital of Hue from April 30 to May 3.

festival Hue festival to feature traditional cuisine

Poster of the 4th Traditional Craft Villages Festival 2011, to take place in the ancient capital of Hue from April 30 to May 3.

The festival which will be organized in three areas: Ngo Mon Square (Noon Gate), Dai Noi (Royal Palace) and at the Huong (Perfume) River bank. The biennial festival will introduce hundreds of specialty dishes from the south, Hanoi and Hue. Native bonsais plants from all across Vietnam will be showcased to plant lovers.

Some local dishes featured will be heo nuong lu (baked pork in jar), chao luon dau xanh (eel porridge cooked with green peas), oc buou hap hem (medium-sized edible snail steamed with draff) and more will be served in the southern cuisine pavilion.  While enjoying these culinary treats in the pavilion, festival goers will be delighted with a performance of don ca tai tu (southern amateur music), Khmer dance and folk music.

Save some room for the northern food and recipes pavilion which will attract visitors with its offerings of Hanoi specialties and performances of ca tru (an ancient genre of chamber music featuring female vocalists, with origins in northern Vietnam) and hat xam (a type of Vietnamese folk music which was popular in the northern region of Vietnam).

For those who like to eat like a King, the food sections in Ngo Mon Square will represent culinary delights from the central area of Hue. According to officials from the Hue People’s Council, they will introduce traditional Hue dishes including vegetarian foods, royal dishes, sweet soups, and rice and cakes.

According to the organizers at Ngo Mon Square there will also be a floating food fair on Huong River in the evening, a cooking contest for children during the festival, and an exhibition of ancient cooking utensils at the Lieu Quang cultural center and Ta Vu House in Dai Noi.

In addition, the event will include street music, artistic kite performances, folk games, a human chess contest and an exhibition of ornamental tree and culinary arts along Phu Van Lau Park and Nguyen Dinh Chieu walking street.  Many artisans of ornamental tree clubs throughout Vietnam will join the show.

The festival is held every two years and aims to encourage visitors to come to Thua Thien-Hue Province, and to Hue City, in particular.

(Source: Thanh Nien News)

A Spice world Among Hanoi
P27a A Spice world Among Hanoi

Famous Restaurant in Hanoi

La Verticale in Hanoi is more than a classy restaurant in the capable hands of Didier Corlou, a five-star Diamond Award chef and member of the French Culinary Academy. It is also the place to find exotic spices from Vietnam and other countries.

Corlou – who has served his fare to several visiting heads of state including Jacques Chirac, Bill Clinton and George Bush – has been working as a chef in Vietnam for 20 years, starting with the French and Vietnamese restaurants at the Sofitel Metropole.

During this time he has traveled all over the country in search of exotic ingredients, spices and traditional cooking methods to create his unique menu.

The best Vietnamese food is made in Vietnam as the land provides special spices and herbs that no traditional dish can go without. For example, anyone wanting to learn how to cook pho must first learn how to use ginger and star flower.

These spices and herbs from all over can be found in the shop adjacent to La Verticale. It’s located on the ground floor of a French villa and is warm and inviting with its hundreds of large and small glass jars of exotic spices.

Corlou says he investigated how nuoc mam (fish sauce) differed from place to place in Vietnam, particularly Cat Hai (Hai Phong), Phu Quoc (Kien Giang Province), Nha Trang (Khanh Hoa Province) and other established sauce-producing areas on the coast.

On his journeys around Sa Pa in the northwestern mountains, he came across the spices that the local tribes use to keep their meat and other food for months.

Much of what he discovered for himself as he traveled around can be found in his shop at 19 Ngo Van So Street.

“At this shop I can find different kinds of pepper ranging from wild pepper to Phu Quoc Island pepper. Pollen from the forest and 15-year-old fish sauce are my favorites for spicing up my cooking,” says Nguyen Van, one of the customers in the shop.

“I like the wild honey and five-spice Tonkin honey for their special natural flavors. Fresh star anise and fresh coriander seeds in salt water (also called Caviar from the Gardens) add a special flavor to simple dishes,” says Le Huong, another customer.

“Vietnamese minorities have been cooking and treating diseases with spices for a very long time, such as with talauma or pepper from the mountain tops. The most commonly used spices are black cardamom and star anise, which only grow naturally on the cloudy plateaux of the north,” says Corlou.

His shop is a spice encyclopedia where the spices are sorted into two groups. The first comprises rare spices from the mountains and other remote regions inhabited by ethnic minorities. The second features spices in daily use in Vietnam like star anise, turmeric, ginger and cinnamon.

The shop also stocks cookbooks by Corlou and traditional Vietnamese cooking equipment including the dua ca (long bamboo sticks), stone pestle and mortar, and special dishes and bowls designed by the famous chef.

(From ThanhnienNews)