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.
 

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4th Environmental Film Festival launched

The Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment, Vietnam Television and the Vietnam Cinematography Association on September 23 launched the 4th National Environmental Film festival in Hanoi.

According to the organizing board, the entries focus on environmental problems, feasible solutions for rectifying them and proven examples of environmental protection work.

Organizations and individuals from across the country who have made films on Vietnam’s environment, including, videos, documentaries, feature films and cartoons, are being encouraged to take part.

The deadline for the entries is November 20 and the awards ceremony is scheduled for December.

Nguyen Thai Lai, Deputy Minister of Natural Resources and Environment said that in recent years, the ministry has held many competitions to raise public awareness of the importance of protecting and improving Vietnam’s environment. All the winning entries will be used to help protect the country’s environment.

Lai also called on people from all walks of life to contribute to protecting the environment.

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4th Environmental Film Festival launched

The Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment, Vietnam Television and the Vietnam Cinematography Association on September 23 launched the 4th National Environmental Film festival in Hanoi.

According to the organizing board, the entries focus on environmental problems, feasible solutions for rectifying them and proven examples of environmental protection work.

Organizations and individuals from across the country who have made films on Vietnam’s environment, including, videos, documentaries, feature films and cartoons, are being encouraged to take part.

The deadline for the entries is November 20 and the awards ceremony is scheduled for December.

Nguyen Thai Lai, Deputy Minister of Natural Resources and Environment said that in recent years, the ministry has held many competitions to raise public awareness of the importance of protecting and improving Vietnam’s environment. All the winning entries will be used to help protect the country’s environment.

Lai also called on people from all walks of life to contribute to protecting the environment.

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Hue’s sensational sweet soups

The imperial city of Hue is not just famous for its citadels and pagodas. As a popular saying goes, “Hanoi has 36 streets, Hue has 36 kinds of sweet soup.”
The central city’s iconic che, as it is broadly known, is usually made from various kinds of beans and sometimes sticky rice, and can be served hot or cold as a dessert.
A particular feature of Hue dishes, including che, that sets them apart from other regional cuisines in Vietnam, is their relatively small serving size and refined presentation, a vestige of their royal origin.
There are two types of Hue sweet soup, che cung dinh (royal sweet soup sold in restaurants) and che hem (hem means an “alley” in Vietnamese). The first is famous for its sophisticated cooking process and presentation while the second is a bit simpler.
But both reflect Hue people’s patience and devotion to work, which usually make their dishes sensational and unique.
It is very common for people drop into sidewalk shops run by street vendors in Hue to enjoy a bowl of sweet soup costing just VND5,000 (25 US cents).
Xich lo drivers drive tourists into narrow alleys where small shops serve even more delicious stuff for the same price.
The most popular che cung dinh dishes are che hat sen (lotus seed sweet soup; see photo), che hat sen long nhan (lotus seeds wrapped in longan pulp), and che dau ngu (kidney beans sweet soup).
The alleys sell a wide range of sweet soups, including che bap (corn sweet soup), chebot loc thit quay (sweet soup made from cassava flour and roasted pork), che khoai mon (taro), che chuoi (banana), and che buoi (sweet soup made from pomelo peel, green beans and cassava flour).
Hueans are proud of two ingredients that are unique to their sweet soup: lotus seeds and corn.
The best lotus seeds come from plants growing in Tinh Tam Lake, which records say King Minh Mang of the Nguyen Dynasty ordered built for entertainment. His servants used to make him fragrant tea from the seeds and petals taken from its lotuses.
The best corn comes from a field in Con Hen (Clam Isle), a poor area where residents make their living mostly from fishing and farming.
The islet is now a popular tourist spot which has many food shops selling com hen (clam rice) and che bap.

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Violinist of Vietnamese origin wins prize at int’l contest

Ailen Pritchin, a Russian violinist of Vietnamese origin, won the third prize of EUR10,000 (US$13,328) in cash at the seventh international Frits Kraisler violin competition, which wrapped up in the Austrian capital city of Vienna Thursday.

The Vietnamese-Russian violinist, 22, is currently studying at the Tchaikovsky Conservatory. His father Nguyen Van Thong, is a businessman and his Russian mother, Marina Pritchina, is a teacher in Saint-Petersburg.

Ailen won four first prizes at the International Tchaikovsky Competition for Young Musicians in Japan and third prize at the international violin competition in Sweden last year.

The young violinist plans to get a doctorate degree at the Tchaikovsky Conservatory, which will provide him with opportunities to perform worldwide.

First prize of the Frits Kraisler competition this year was worth EUR15,000 ($19,992) and second prize EUR12,000 ($16,000). These prizes went to Russian violinists Nikita Borisoglebsky and Ekaterina Frolova.

Frits Kraisler (1875-1962) was an Austrian musician and a violinist of exceptional talent. The international violin competition named after him was organized for the first time in 1979.
 

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Violinist of Vietnamese origin wins prize at int’l contest

Ailen Pritchin, a Russian violinist of Vietnamese origin, won the third prize of EUR10,000 (US$13,328) in cash at the seventh international Frits Kraisler violin competition, which wrapped up in the Austrian capital city of Vienna Thursday.

The Vietnamese-Russian violinist, 22, is currently studying at the Tchaikovsky Conservatory. His father Nguyen Van Thong, is a businessman and his Russian mother, Marina Pritchina, is a teacher in Saint-Petersburg.

Ailen won four first prizes at the International Tchaikovsky Competition for Young Musicians in Japan and third prize at the international violin competition in Sweden last year.

The young violinist plans to get a doctorate degree at the Tchaikovsky Conservatory, which will provide him with opportunities to perform worldwide.

First prize of the Frits Kraisler competition this year was worth EUR15,000 ($19,992) and second prize EUR12,000 ($16,000). These prizes went to Russian violinists Nikita Borisoglebsky and Ekaterina Frolova.

Frits Kraisler (1875-1962) was an Austrian musician and a violinist of exceptional talent. The international violin competition named after him was organized for the first time in 1979.
 

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Friday, September 24, 2010

Cafés becoming new rendezvous for HCMC drama lovers

For Ho Chi Minh City coffee shops, serving just food and beverages is almost passé – the latest trend is to offer books, chess boards, and even theatrical performances.

Bet Cafe at 57A Tu Xuong Street, District 3, staged the first play three years ago and now at least five cafes do it though only two of them, Bet and Lit, advertise publicly and have a license.

The actors are usually amateurs or theater arts students who are yet it to make big stage, the owner of Bet Café, Thien Kiem, said.

“It took me a year of preparations and two more for trials to bring a drama stage inside a coffee shop,” she recalled. “I faced innumerable difficulties.”

Many of her friends considered it odd, she said.

The first obstacle was getting a license from the city Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism.

“My group of young performers and I were patient,” she told Tuoi Tre.

Under the law, all performances and drama scripts must get approval from local authorities before being staged.

Initially, Bet Café staged plays once a week before making it thrice a week on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays. Some show draw an audience of up to 100 visitors who enjoy food and drinks alongside the show.

“I like watching plays here as they are very realistic without props, lights, or special effects,” a customer said.

Some plays have become favorites at Bet Café -- Tinh Song Tinh Chet (Love Alive, Love Dead), Doan Tuyet (Breaking), and Sau Mot Con Dong (Aftermath of a Storm).

Kim said the café has a target of staging a new play every month.

At Lit Café, 3/13 Thich Quang Duc Street, Phu Nhuan District, plays are staged every Wednesday and Thursday.

At both places, visitors can also exchange ideas and talk to performers.

Theater cafes are becoming a place for young performers to test their skills while also earning a livelihood.

NNCK is a typical group. Hoang Minh Phi and Nhu Thao set it up out of their love for theater after failing to complete theater school.

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