Monday, November 30, 2009

What do you know about banh khot?

Possibly no one knows when banh khot (a somewhat small Vietnamese pancake) appeared in Vietnam’s cuisine and people are sure if the popular and cheap dish is the specialty of the southern coastal province of Ba Ria-Vung Tau.


However, many Vietnamese know that the neighbors of HCMC, especially Vung Tau City, are well-known for having many stalls selling delicious banh khot.

A banh khot stallholder on Ba Cu Street in Vung Tau City, who has been named Ms. Muoi by guests, said that the general method to make banh khot is the same at every stall, but each one focuses on different details to create specific characters to attract more guests.

Rice, cold rice after being cooked or rice crust at the bottom of the pot, shrimp, ground dried shrimp, nuoc mam (fish sauce) and vegetables are the main ingredients of the dish.

Muoi said that first she mills the mix of rice and cold rice after being cooked into flour before pouring the flour into a mould that has nearly 50 small holes in the shape of a half circle.

After that, she adds dried shrimp and fresh shrimp to the holes. Diners can eat the dish after the mix’s skin becomes yellow. “Rolling the banh khot with vegetables and using fish sauce is the feasible way to enjoy the banh khot,” she said, adding that a banh khot dish contains 8-10 pieces.

The owner of the Banh Khot Goc Vu Sua stall on Nguyen Truong To Street, which is said to serve the most delicious banh khot dishes in the city, has a different specific detail to attract diners.

“In the flour mix, besides rice, we also use rice crust from the bottom of the pot so that the cake becomes crisper,” the owner said. “Moreover, for the vegetable, we use many cabbages. The combination the slight bitterness of the cabbage, banh khot’s crispness and the fish sauce’s saltiness is wonderful for diners.”

The stall is now some 21 years old, the same age as the owner’s daughter, who is being trained to inherit her mother’s stall.

Available for breakfast or light meals


Because of the popularity of the dish in small pieces, the banh khot can be eaten for breakfast. “Especially on weekends, when people are off work, the mornings are peak times at our stall with many diners coming here to enjoy banh khot for breakfast,” the Banh Khot Cay Vu Sua’s owner said.

When traveling to other banh khot stalls from Banh Khot Co Hai on Ky Dong Street to Banh Khot Ms. Muoi on Ba Cu Street or others on Hoang Hoa Tham Street, they are found to be just as busy.

In the afternoon when school or work is finished, friends can drop in at a stall to enjoy banh khot pieces as a light meal.

The Banh Khot Rach Dua Stall on Ba Muoi Thang Tu Street, about 5 km from the city’s downtown, can be an interesting option because it only serves banh khot in the afternoon. Although it is a good distance from downtown, many residents and tourists visit there to dine because of its quality.

At night, especially on weekends, is also a favorite time to enjoy banh khot. During the trip around the Vung Tau City, tourists can visit a banh khot stall to enjoy the dish while relaxing in the quiet atmosphere and cool wind from the sea.

It is said that besides seafood, which is already famous there, tourists can enjoy a banh khot tour when visiting Vung Tau to understand more about the specialty.

A banh khot dish includes 8-10 small pieces. Prices start from VND10,000-15,000 a dish.

Source Viet Nam Net
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Seabass Rolled in Prosciutto with Cream Sauce



Prosciutto wrapped meats accompanied by light sauces have long been popular at Italian restaurants. This rendition, however, uses fish as the main meat, foregrounding the light flakiness of the seabass by wrapping it in a delicately salted prosciutto and covering it with a simple sauce of white wine and heavy cream. The dish pairs particularly well with pasta or a salad.
This dish is available at the Leone D’oro, 2 Co Tan, Ha Noi. Call for reservations: (04) 9350879
Source VietNamNews
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Pan-fried seabass on sauteed spinach and polenta



The secret of the dish lies in the way the seabass is marinated. To have an irresistible aroma and be crispy and golden brown, the fish must be fresh.
The sauteed spinach and polenta, as well as the red pepper sauce, is not only delicious but also visually appealing. This healthy dish does take time to prepare and is wonderful for a dinner party.
The dish is served at the hotel’s Corso Bistro Restaurant at 117 Le Thanh Ton Street, District 1, HCM City. Tel:829 5368.
Source VietNamNews
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Thursday, November 26, 2009

Binh Thuan - Travel Guide Photos Gallery

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Hue - Travel Guide Photos Gallery

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Ba Be Lakes - Bac Can - Travel Picture

Hoa, a professional tour guide on the canoe trip on Ba Be lakes!
Very friendly butterfly at the pure nature of Ba be lakes, Vietnam
Our canoeing heading towards the Puong Cave, we will go through this cave on this small canoe.
Feel like being alone among the great nature of Ba be lakes and national park.
Another sense of Ba Be lakes from the jungle side.
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Sunday, November 22, 2009

Flavors of Mekong Delta specialties


The bright green neon-lit signs, tables and benches of the mid-town restaurant Mekong VietFood Express catch the attention of passers-by. There, enthusiastic young guys invite diners to a gastronomic experience of the food specialties of the Mekong Delta.


Recently opened on the tree-lined boulevard Ham Nghi, the fine-dining eatery offers various simple dishes from the region, carefully the owner Vuong Tieu Lan and his wife for the daily breakfast, lunch and dinner menu.
Bun ca Kien Giang is a feature of the menu. This rice vermicelli and fish soup is cooked in the style of Kien Giang Province, a coastal locality where Lan spent his childhood before traveling to HCMC to settle down. Lan says locals of the province have bun ca Kien Giang for breakfast, lunch and dinner. He credits the special taste of this dish to the harmonious combination of rice vermicelli, fish, shrimp fried with onion and garlic, and sweet-and-salty seafood broth.
In addition to the specialty of his home land, Mekong VietFood Express also serves goi du du, an appetizer comprising of thin papaya slices, steamed pork and shrimp. The additional component rice vermicelli distinguishes this dish from the traditional recipe found at other restaurants in town.
Experienced diners pour a bowl of fish sauce and pickles over the plate of goi du du and mix in papaya slices and rice vermicelli until they are soaked with the sauce before eating.
The menu also includes goi cuon (fresh spring roll), deep-fried shrimp cake and other dishes based on rice, vegetables and other ingredients abundant in the Mekong Delta region where canals and rivers crisscross.
Diners can order fruit juice to whet their appetite before enjoying the favors of the dishes Lan and his wife, who traveled a long way inside the region to find authentic tastes for their restaurant.
A long list of vintage wines imported from around the world is also available for diners to accompany their choice of cuisine at the eatery, which is about 50 meters from the city’s landmark market Ben Thanh.
Lan says he and his wife enjoy eating as many Mekong Delta dishes as possible when they return home to Kien Giang Province. They can never find all the foods they like at one restaurant, so, they have to go from eatery to eatery to satisfy their tastes.
In HCMC, he adds there were no restaurants serving a wide the region.
The couple used the green color to decorate the restaurant to give diners the feeling of being in the rice paddy fields and orchards that have earned a reputation for the region.
Address: 136 Ham Nghi Boulevard, District 1, HCMC.
Tel: 0903 878 555.
Source SaigonTimes
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Gai pan tod klua


(Thai-style fried chicken with salt) made by Thai Chef Kawesri Viroj from the Sawasdee Saigon Restaurant in HCM City

Chef Kawesri, a specialist in Thai cuisine, says gai pan tod klua, or fried chicken with salt, is a simple, easy dish to make, requiring little prep or cooking time.
Lemongrass and kaffir lime leaves are the two decisive elements that give this dish its fantastic aroma, while the saffron adds a yellow-brown colour to the chicken. The dish can be served as a main course or as a starter or hors d’oeurve.
Gai pan tod klua
Ingredients: to serve 4
  • 500g farm chicken
  • 50g chopped crosus
  • 100g lemongrass
  • 2tsp salt
  • 1tsp pepper
  • cooking oil
  • 10g kaffir lime leaves, well shredded
  • 2tsp monosodium glutamate, like granule bouillon
For decoration

  • 1 carrot (carved into flower shape)
  • 5 cherry tomatoes, halved
  • A few greens
  • 1 cucumber (cut into a round shape)
Directions:
  • Chop chicken into small pieces
  • Marinate the chicken with lemongrass, kaffir lime leaves, saffron, salt, granule bouillon and pepper for five minutes.
  • Heat cooking oil in a frying pan, toss the marinated chicken pieces in the pan and fry them four or five minutes until they turn golden brown and are aromatic.
  • Set the chicken pieces in a dish and garnish with carrot, tomato and cucumber flower or leaf shapes.
You can enjoy this dish at Sawasdee Saigon Restaurant, 102-104 Le Lai Street, in District 1, HCM City. For reservations, call (08) 925 7777.
Source VietnamNews
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Tao Li pleases early birds and night owls


Diners in suburban Sai Gon South no longer have to venture to downtown HCM City for fine dining. Anh Thu samples the Cantonese and Vietnamese offerings of this new restaurant and decides she’s a fan – morning, noon and night.


Tao Li, a new restaurant in HCM City’s suburb Sai Gon South, offers Vietnamese and southern Chinese cuisine from sun-up to late night, a long-awaited service that fulfills the fastidious demands of the area’s residents.

Many of Sai Gon South’s residents are foreigners and overseas Vietnamese fond of quality food and service.
With this new venue, owned by Khaisilk, one of Viet Nam’s leading corporations in fashion, resorts and restaurants, the area now boasts a restaurant that supports the suburb’s needs for fine dining in the early and late hours.
Tao Li has different menus for breakfast, lunch and dinner, but what I especially liked was its capacity to serve not only large parties of diners but also quick meals for the single visitor.
For breakfast, you can try a banh bao (shrimp dumpling) cooked Cantonese style (originating from the southern Chinese province of Guangdong).

Served hot in a bamboo pot, the dish includes three soft, white dumplings that resemble delicate white flowers. The outer coating of the dumpling tastes sweet while the inner stuffing is salty. The fraballs are sufficient for a small breakfast.
For vegetarians and those who are watching their weight, there are vegetable dishes, some of which include cabbage and mushrooms, served with a hot, thick sauce. I chose a vegetable dish with steamed rice, which in total cost under VND100,000 (US$6.25) and was more than enough to last me through dinner.
The restaurant at night is especially beautiful. You can dine outdoors and take in the fresh air and quiet atmosphere.
For a main course, fried oysters in honey at VND125,000 ($7.81) is a good choice. The dish’s secret is the coating of flour and honey, which turns a yellow-brown after deep-frying.

Served hot on a large white plate, the dish is enough for two. I finished the dish alone as well as the thin threads of cabbage placed under the oysters as a garnish.
One of the restaurant’s special desserts is sweet dumplings with sesame. The dish is served in hot milk, instead of the traditional hot syrup.
For the thirsty, Tao Li serves free-flowing iced or hot tea during the meal. The restaurant offers more than 120 different dishes ranging from VND28,000 to over VND1 million ($1.75-$62.50).
Its dinner menu includes noodle dishes and rice porridge, as well as dim sum, though the Chinese dumplings are usually served for breakfast. Prices are reasonable, from VND28,000 to VND50,000 ($1.75-$3.10) per item. Service fee is 6 per cent instead of the standard 5 per cent.
"We provide our customers not just with food, but a cuisine," said Tao Li’s owner Hoang Khai, who took great care in decorating the restaurant.
I’m sure that few could have done it better.
Source VietnamNews
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Biz café for businessmen


Designed in the traditional French architectural style, every detail in Bizcafe is harmoniously laid.


The color, lighting and interior decoration are elegant and dynamic. Each floor of Bizcafe has a projector showing the latest news for businessmen or business researchers, relating to finance, the economy and the stock market. Food and beverages here are processed by famous chef in Bizcafe’s own style and include Biz fried rice, Biz seafood soup, etc. In addition, no mater where you are in the café, you have free access to the Internet through WiFi. Biztaxi is always available at the gate of the café to take you anywhere at any time
BIZ CAFÉ
66 Tran Hung Dao, Hanoi
Tel: 04.9426536
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Enjoy tea and music

On entering Thao Tra, you feel as if you are in a small teashop in Japan, the land of the cherry blossom.

With a variety of sparkling lanterns imported from Japan by the shopes owners, together with melodious Tam Thap Luc music ( a musical instrument with 36 strings ), you will savor the taste of many kinds of tea served by young girls dressed in kimonos.
In the wonderful Thao Tra atmosphere, all the pressures of everyday life seem to dissolve. It is so wonderful sitting on a soft cushion enjoying tea on a cold evening.
THAO TRA
109 – D8 Dang Van Ngu, Ha Noi
Tel: 04.2455837
Source Travellive
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Saturday, November 21, 2009

Throwing a sacred ball through the ring (nem con)

Each ethnic group in Vietnam has unique ways of celebrating Tet. The Tay people of Cao Bang and Lang Son Provinces have a special Tet game that not only ushers in the spring but also serves as a matchmaker.
According to Tay legend, Pia, an orphan, war poor and lonely. Discouraged with life, he went to the forest and gathered pieces of fruit to throw around. One time, he threw a fruit so hard it flew straight to heaven, where a fairy caught it. The fairy flew down to the earth to play with Pia. Before long, they fell in love and became husband and wife.

The people of the mountain village believed that the fruit had brought Pia happiness. To celebrate this story, young men and women toss balls (nem con) each year from the third day of Tet until the end of the first lunar month.

Players gather on a level field where villagers have planted a tall bamboo tree. A bamboo ring about 30-40 cm in diameter hangs from the tree. Gaudy fabric covers the balls, which the makers have stuffed with rice grains (representing food) and cotton seeds (clothing) along with their hidden desires. A multicoloured tassel decorates the balls.

According to tradition, before playing, the Tay people first prepare a tray of food, which they take to the field and offer to the Sky and Earth. Two balls and a bamboo ring on the tray represent vitality and virtue. The festival leader, who must have high status, prays to the Sky and Earth lo brings rain so that the community will have a good harvest. After this ceremony, the leader tosses the two balls high into the air. Everyone competes to catch them, signaling the beginning of festivities.

At that point, each family may throw its own household ball through the bamboo ring for good luck. Naturally, some balls do not make it through on the first try. The owners may try over and over until they are successful.

The festival leader closes with a prayer for a good planting season, then slashes the ball open and distributes seeds to everyone. These seeds bring good luck and will sprout quickly because they unite the forces of am and duong (yin and yang) in the warmth of women's and men's hands. Everyone receives the holy seeds of the Sky, the Earth and Humanity with the belief and hope that their crops will increase, people will prosper and the entire village will have sufficient food, clothing and happiness. For this reason, the ball game is a major feature of Tay tradition.
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