Showing posts with label Vietnamese food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vietnamese food. Show all posts

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Signing up the Kitchen God to popularise Vietnamese food

HCM CITY – The head of the Institute of Vietnamese Gastronomic Research wants the 23rd of the 12th lunar month to be designated "Ngay Bep Viet" or Vietnamese Stove Day in honour of Ong Tao, the Kitchen God.

According to traditional belief, the Kitchen God returns to heaven on that day every year to report to the creator about all households on earth during the past year.

The Institute, along with Saigontourist Hospitality College, MINT Culinary School, and others also has a programme to popularise Vietnamese cuisine globally called "Together Build Vietnamese Stove in the World."

A meeting they held last weekend to discuss plans for the programme's second year attracted more than 100 gastronomy and nutrition professors, members of the Saigon Professional Chef Association, and heads of restaurants in HCM City.

"Using the Kitchen God's Day to popularise Vietnamese food will remind everyone about their mission to develop Vietnamese cuisine as the nation's pride," Nguyen Nha, the head of the Institute, said.

Individuals and organisations who join the programme should help each other not only on Vietnamese Stove Day but also during the rest of the year to promote Vietnamese cuisine to food lovers around the world, he said.

"Tourist companies should be close fellow-travellers with Vietnamese restaurants in helping international tourist enjoy special local foods, " he said.

The Institute took the initiative to launch the "Together Build Vietnamese Stove in the World" and apply to UNESCO for recognition of Vietnamese cuisine as an intangible cultural heritage.

Under the programme, it offers courses for foreigners who want to learn how to cook Vietnamese food and for Vietnamese who plan to go abroad to work or study.

It is also teaming up with local firms to export Vietnamese cooking utensils. - VNS

Related Articles

Friday, December 10, 2010

Get a real taste of Viet Nam

by Le Huong

 

Taking a hand: Foreigners join a cooking class at Golden Sand Resort in Hoi An. — VNS

Taking a hand: Foreigners join a cooking class at Golden Sand Resort in Hoi An. — VNS

Juicy fruit: Lee Middleman and his wife Donnie (second and third from left) try to make coconut juice with the help of local cooks at Hue's La Residence Hotel&Spa.

Stirring work: Donnie Middleman (right) cooks a Vietnamese dish with the guide of a local cook at Hue's La Residence Hotel&Spa. — VNS/Lee Middleman

American pottery artisan Lee Middleman and his wife Donnie decided to spice up their holiday to Viet Nam by joining a cooking class at La Residence Hotel&Spa in the former royal capital city of Hue. It proved to be an unforgettable experience.

"Offering cookery classes to foreign visitors is an excellent idea," Middleman told Viet Nam News via email.

"We really appreciated the dishes they introduced us to. It was a joy watching the way the food was prepared, and then later tasting it."

Lee and his wife were taught how to make Hue-style spring rolls. Part of the delight was visiting the local food market to buy vegetables, fruits and fish prior to the cooking class, he said.

The hotel's chef Nguyen Dong Hai said tourists were encouraged to visit the local market, which he said added to the fun.

"We encourage tourists to go to Dong Ba Market to buy ingredients with us," Hai said. "There they get the chance to rub shoulders with the locals, even haggle."

If however they haven't time, they can just take part in the cooking class at Le Parfum Restaurant, which looks over the romantic Huong River.

Hai said students were typically taught how to make nem trang (local spring rolls), com sen (steamed rice with lotus seeds), ca kho to (southern-style fish stew) and che (sweetened porridge).

Hai said the hotel's cookery classes were most popular with Australian tourists, who were fascinated by the way the dishes were decorated and by the strong flavours of Hue-style food.

Cookery classes are popular up and down the country. Shiokawa Makoto, 25, is among thousands of young Japanese tourists who have visited Viet Nam aboard the Peace Ship. As soon as he landed in Da Nang's Tien Sa Port, he and some friends registered to join a cookery class.

"I like cooking delicacies at home," he said. "Vietnamese food is both strange and delicious. I will be very popular at home when I cook Vietnamese food there." Makoto and his friends were taken to a house in Hoang Dieu Street, where they were taught to make dishes such as cha gio (local spring rolls) and banh xeo (fried pancake with pork, shrimp and bean sprouts).

His notebook rapidly filled up with recipes.

Like Makoto, Akiko Natsuko was determined to learn how to make spring rolls.

Stirring work: Donnie Middleman (right) cooks a Vietnamese dish with the guide of a local cook at Hue's La Residence Hotel&Spa. — VNS/Lee Middleman

Juicy fruit: Lee Middleman and his wife Donnie (second and third from left) try to make coconut juice with the help of local cooks at Hue's La Residence Hotel&Spa.

"I often eat Vietnamese spring rolls at restaurants in Japan but don't know how to make them," she said. "After learning how to, I see that the food is very simple. But making banh xeo is fairly challenging. I don't know how to make the pancake both thin and filled evenly with pork, shrimp and bean sprouts."

Their teacher Ngo Thi Xuan Dieu, who regularly caters to large wedding parties in the city, enthuses about the eagerness of Japanese visitors to learn how to make local Vietnamese food.

"Japanese students are so polite. They bow their heads to welcome me when we are introduced," she said, adding that she was impressed by how hygienic they were. "They queue up in a row to wash their hands before preparing dishes. They even manage to make neater spring rolls than me."

Dieu said she had taught more Japanese students than she could remember. Often she said they gave her small tokens of appreciation. "The gifts may be a handkerchief, a hair clip or a pair of cooking chopsticks," she said. "These simple gifts remind me of how eager to learn Japanese students are."

She said some of her former students were even hoping to open a Vietnamese restaurant in Japan.

Do Thu Trang, from Ha Noi-based Buffalo Tours, said "home cooking" had become increasingly popular with visitors over the last few years.

"We introduce tourists to local households, where they can stay, preparing food together with the hosts and experiencing the warmth of family life," she said.

Karen Belcher from Denmark said she particularly enjoyed shopping at the local fishing village in Hoi An.

With a fresh squid in her hand, she could barely contain her excitement. "I feel as if I have lived here for years rather than just a few days."

Huynh Thanh Phuoc, 78, who often hosts foreign cookery students at his home near Cua Dai Beach, said it made him feel younger being surrounded by eager tourists.

"From the time we have spent together I have learnt interesting things about life in their home countries," he said. "For example, Chinese people prefer oily food, French people eat slowly and chew carefully and tend to chat a lot during meals, while Thais and Malaysians prefer spicier food."

Nguyen Son Thuy, deputy director of Hoi An Travel Company, said most Vietnamese women knew how to cook and were therefore not interested in cookery classes.

However, he said learning how to cook Vietnamese food can be a memorable and rewarding experience for foreign tourists.

He said a lot of restaurants even claimed a short cookery course would equip a visitor with the skills needed to open his own Vietnamese restaurant.

It's a bold claim, but few doubt that learning how to cook Vietnamese food enhances and enlivens a visitor's trip to Viet Nam. — VNS

Related Articles

Monday, September 27, 2010

HCMC street ushers in fine dining options

They say that British colonizers left their former ‘assets’ with railways, while the French left bread and coffee. The quip is intended to be derisive, pointing to superior British planning and nation-building. But Ho Chi Minh City’s foodies may well disagree.

This city of seven or so million is thankful for the culinary tradition the French left. Along with the one million or so Chinese immigrants, the southern spicier take on Vietnamese food and the multitude of cuisines that have sprung up around the city over the last decade of rampant economic growth, Ho Chi Minh City has become a Mecca for lovers of fine food.

Among the most popular streets for food lovers in the southern melting pot are the small, narrow and quiet streets of Ngo Van Nam, Le Thanh Ton, Suong Nguyet Anh in District 1 and Nguyen Thi Dieu, Le Ngo Cat and Le Quy Don in District 3.

The secret of their success could well lie in the three features they share, Sai Gon Tiep Thi (Sai Gon Marketing) newspaper reported.

They are all located near downtown but with less traffic and a wide variety of local and international dishes available at countless roadside restaurants, bars and coffee shops.

Le Quy Don is among the latest destinations to enter the list of popular food streets in the southern hub.

Within the last 12 months, countless restaurants, bars and café have been sprung up on the quiet street, luring customers from across the country to the small area for a change of scenery and new dinning experiences.

Opened in 1992, Cay Tre (Bamboo) Restaurant charms customers as a throwback Vietnamese garden villa.

The humble eatery which can serve up to 100 guests a time offers a wide range of traditional Vietnamese food ranging from simple, inexpensive daily treats to fancier dishes like chicken cooked in clay pots and hot pot made from seafood and flowers.

Seafood lovers can also head for Ngoc Suong Restaurant for some of its renowned specialties of fish salad, seafood spring rolls and raw oysters.

“Le Quy Don was a quiet street with little light and few people passing by,” Ngoc Cuong, marketing director of the restaurant, said when recalling when Ngoc Suong first opened its doors in 1996.

Pricey Au Manoir De Khai also found a place in an old villa at the corner of Le Quy Don and Dien Bien Phu Street and serves up well-to-do locals with a premium French dining experience.

Residents living on the street soon found their homes surrounded with a bevy of dinning options, from the most luxurious dishes to bizarre delicacies of ethnic minorities.

More menu options at the street’s eateries also mean new clientele.

A few years ago, most restaurants only attracted businessmen and expats but the venues nowadays are packed with office workers and young, hip locals.

The high concentration eateries and coffee shops on the small streets has also motivated the business owners to look for more menu options, services, new targeted customers and improve the venues’ designs to compete with their next-door rivals.

Nha Toi (My House) Restaurant takes pride in its barbecue dishes while Red Tile Restaurant lures diners with its collection of rare delicacies from rural areas of Cambodia such as mouse and dried fish and catfish from Tonle Sap Lake in Cambodia.

The increasing number of food streets like Le Quy Don is, after all, a part of HCMC’s booming food industry where people are know for their love of food and their willingness to spend to prove it.
 

Related Articles

Saturday, September 25, 2010

HCMC street ushers in fine dining options

They say that British colonizers left their former ‘assets’ with railways, while the French left bread and coffee. The quip is intended to be derisive, pointing to superior British planning and nation-building. But Ho Chi Minh City’s foodies may well disagree.

This city of seven or so million is thankful for the culinary tradition the French left. Along with the one million or so Chinese immigrants, the southern spicier take on Vietnamese food and the multitude of cuisines that have sprung up around the city over the last decade of rampant economic growth, Ho Chi Minh City has become a Mecca for lovers of fine food.

Among the most popular streets for food lovers in the southern melting pot are the small, narrow and quiet streets of Ngo Van Nam, Le Thanh Ton, Suong Nguyet Anh in District 1 and Nguyen Thi Dieu, Le Ngo Cat and Le Quy Don in District 3.

The secret of their success could well lie in the three features they share, Sai Gon Tiep Thi (Sai Gon Marketing) newspaper reported.

They are all located near downtown but with less traffic and a wide variety of local and international dishes available at countless roadside restaurants, bars and coffee shops.

Le Quy Don is among the latest destinations to enter the list of popular food streets in the southern hub.

Within the last 12 months, countless restaurants, bars and café have been sprung up on the quiet street, luring customers from across the country to the small area for a change of scenery and new dinning experiences.

Opened in 1992, Cay Tre (Bamboo) Restaurant charms customers as a throwback Vietnamese garden villa.

The humble eatery which can serve up to 100 guests a time offers a wide range of traditional Vietnamese food ranging from simple, inexpensive daily treats to fancier dishes like chicken cooked in clay pots and hot pot made from seafood and flowers.

Seafood lovers can also head for Ngoc Suong Restaurant for some of its renowned specialties of fish salad, seafood spring rolls and raw oysters.

“Le Quy Don was a quiet street with little light and few people passing by,” Ngoc Cuong, marketing director of the restaurant, said when recalling when Ngoc Suong first opened its doors in 1996.

Pricey Au Manoir De Khai also found a place in an old villa at the corner of Le Quy Don and Dien Bien Phu Street and serves up well-to-do locals with a premium French dining experience.

Residents living on the street soon found their homes surrounded with a bevy of dinning options, from the most luxurious dishes to bizarre delicacies of ethnic minorities.

More menu options at the street’s eateries also mean new clientele.

A few years ago, most restaurants only attracted businessmen and expats but the venues nowadays are packed with office workers and young, hip locals.

The high concentration eateries and coffee shops on the small streets has also motivated the business owners to look for more menu options, services, new targeted customers and improve the venues’ designs to compete with their next-door rivals.

Nha Toi (My House) Restaurant takes pride in its barbecue dishes while Red Tile Restaurant lures diners with its collection of rare delicacies from rural areas of Cambodia such as mouse and dried fish and catfish from Tonle Sap Lake in Cambodia.

The increasing number of food streets like Le Quy Don is, after all, a part of HCMC’s booming food industry where people are know for their love of food and their willingness to spend to prove it.
 

Related Articles