Thursday, October 7, 2010

Culture Vulture

Ly Quy Trung, owner of Pho 24, a successful southern restaurant chain model which has enjoyed success in both Ha Noi and abroad took part in the 11th European Foodservice Summit in Zurich, Switzerland, last month. It was the first time that Vietnamese cuisine had appeared at the event. Pho was also the only food on display to represent Asia at the summit.

Trung was interviewed by Thuy Pham.

Could you tell us about the event and how you became one of the 14 speakers there?

The event is held annually. The 11th European Foodservice Summit aimed to orientate and predict restaurant business development across the world. About 250 owners and general directors of restaurants along with members of the press attended the event. With the exception of speakers, all attendees had to pay a fee.

I was invited as one of the main speakers. I was the first Asian to ever speak at the event. The organisers had travelled to Viet Nam before to meet and interview me. After two interviews I received an official invitation. I know that they also surveyed a number of other regional countries.

Asia now has many big names in the restaurant industry but I don't think that interested the organisers. Restaurant chains that took part in the event were not big names but special, with unique methods and techniques that could be copied in most modern countries. I think that was why Pho 24 was chosen to take part in the event.

Vietnamese cuisine is an emerging market. Other cuisine like Chinese, Japanese and Thai are already well established and Vietnamese cuisine could be next.

Why is it ‘could be' not ‘sure'?

At present, more interest is starting to be shown in Vietnamese food. I say that for three reasons. Firstly, Vietnamese dishes are rich and nutritious. Secondly, we are in the Asia region which is a trendy part of the world. Finally, Viet Nam attracts a lot of attention in general, not just in cuisine.

However, we need the right strategy and investment in order for Vietnamese cuisine to become fully recognised. For example, cuisine should be developed as a national brand. Support from the State is also necessary in the fields of information, tax and licensing.

I know that many Vietnamese want to develop their restaurant chains abroad. I'm ready to share my experience with others. We need to be unified in our push for recognition. It would take a long time to do it all as individuals. Support from the State would increase progress.

Could you tell us something about your success with the development of Pho 24?

Fast-food chains like KFC appeared in Viet Nam in 1993. It now has 70 restaurants and Lotteria has 59. Since 2003, Pho 24 has opened 60 restaurants including 17 abroad. Pho 24 is growing rapidly.

Pho 24 is the first Vietnamese restaurant chain to operate to international standards. It means that the cooking procedures are standardised on paper. Normally, traditional pho restaurants depend on the individual chef's tastes.

The success of Pho 24 proves that popular Vietnamese dishes can be a success in restaurants around the world.

Many people are afraid of that traditional pho will lose its uniqueness through modernisation and the need to conform to international standards. What do you think?

I don't think so. Our food is prepared in line with these standards but the taste is still one hundred per cent Vietnamese.

Pho 24 restaurants are equipped with air-conditioning but we still use chopsticks. Pho 24 is cooked with traditional steps but in a more hygienic way. Pho eaters have more choices. Overseas Vietnamese like to enjoy traditional dishes that remind them of home.

Pho is very popular. Does that present any negative points?

The biggest challenge is that everybody can cook pho and think theirs is the best. But to make the good taste of pho is not simple. When I opened Pho 24 in Ha Noi, many people don't believe pho Sai Gon would be accepted in Ha Noi.

Hanoians came to Pho 24 out of curiosity. At that time, pho Ha Noi was sold for just a few thousand dong while Pho 24 cost at least 24,000 dong. Some people liked it and some people didn't. I understand that Hanoians want to try something from the south but I didn't know how to get them to keep coming back.

Hygiene and good service are strong points of Pho 24. Pho 24 is not as sweet as pho Sai Gon and does not have as much monosodium glutamate as pho Ha Noi.

Pho 24 restaurants in Ha Noi are much more crowded than in HCM City. If Pho 24 was cooked in the style of Ha Noi, it would not be successful. Delicious is an abstract concept. It depends on habits which can change. — VNS

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Historian traces Ha Noi's food culture

HCM CITY — Ha Noi is know for its unique cuisine, says historian Nguyen Nha, whose 200-page culinary history of Ha Noi was published yesterday as part of the celebrations of the capital city's 1,000th anniversary.

With support from other historians and cultural experts, Doc Dao Am Thuc Thang Long-Ha Noi (Unique Cuisine of Thang Long-Ha Noi) introduces about 400 dishes, both popular favourites and others which have nearly disappeared from local menus.

"I am on the way to tracing and preserving Vietnamese cultural values which are in danger of being buried in oblivion," Nha said. "I hope my project helps to preserve and introduce recipes of Ha Noi which are the pride of Hanoians and of the Vietnamese people."

The historian is planning additional volumes about the cuisine of Hue and Sai Gon.

After reading the book, Prof Tran Van Khe, who said he first came to Ha Noi in 1938 and has visited every year since 1976, confessed that it taught him much he didn't know about the special dishes of Ha Noi.

"The recipes are the cultural heritage of the Vietnamese." said Khe. Preserving them was as important as preserving traditional forms of music or water puppetry, he added.

Nha began teaching at the HCM City Teachers College in 1992 and began using his own money to travel to Ha Noi to record images about the city for use as teaching materials. The effort resulted in a documentary about the capital city, which he completed several years ago.

"Several historical sites in Ha Noi disappeared after I shot the film," Nha said, noting that the video would soon be screened in Ha Noi schools. — VNS

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Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Phuong Nam Cultural Corporation book fair opens in HCMC

More than 4,000 foreign publications, mostly of medicine and economics, are on display at selected city locations as part of Phuong Nam Cultural (PNC) Corporation’s book fair that opened in Ho Chi Minh City Tuesday.

McGraw-Hill publishing house’s selection include marketing, finance-credit, business administration, foreign trade, and accounting publications with popular titles such as “Strategic Bond Investor: Strategies and Tools to Unlock the Power of the Bond Market”, “Appreciative Leadership”, “Bond Portfolio Investing and Risk Management”, “Carrots and Sticks Don't Work”, “Competitive Selling: Out-Plan, Out-Think, and Out-Sell to Win Every Time”, and “Everything I Know about Marketing I Learned From Google”.

They are on shelf on the second floor of Saigon Center, 65 Le Loi Street, District 1.

The event also showcases 2,000 new medical reference publications from various publishing houses like Elsevier, Lippincott and McGraw Hill including Harrison's “Nephrology and Acid-Base Disorders”, Rutherford's “Vascular Surgery”, Williams’s “Hematology” and, Ferri's “Fast Facts in Dermatology”.

Medical titles are on display at the bookstore of the HCMC Medicine and Pharmacy University.

The book fair, which PNC hopes to organize twice every quarter, offers discounts of 10-50 percent.

The fair ends on October 15.

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Vietnam TV all set for 1st travel channel

Vietnam Television will launch its first travel channel on VCTV-TH, its cable network this week in cooperation with the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.

VCTV-TH, to be broadcast from 6am to midnight, hopes to educate the public about the nation’s history and culture, conservation of nature, and tourism development, and attract investments in these fields.

It will have local and international content.

A 30-minute travel news capsule will initially be broadcast thrice a week before becoming a daily feature.

There will be only seven other shows daily, introducing various tourist destinations in Vietnam.

“Vietnam in Me” (Vietnam trong toi) will focus on the culture, history, geography, and characteristics of various regions.

“Bamboo Sticks” (Dua tre) will feature journeys to discover the cuisines of various lands.

“Weekend Destination” (Diem den cuoi tuan) will take viewers to the country’s most beautiful landscapes.

The channel has plans to broadcast overseas to foreign audiences in future, Nguyen Manh Cuong, deputy director of the General Department of Tourism, said.

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Japanese film week promises exciting fare

Akira Kurosawa’s “Rashomon” will be among eight films to be screened at a Japan film week to be held in Ho Chi Minh City and Nha Trang this month.

The movie, which has become a cult classic since being released in 1951, is about the rape of a woman (Machiko Kyo) and the murder of a man (Masayuki Mori), possibly by a bandit (Toshiro Mifune).

At Kyoto's crumbling Rashomon gate, several people shelter from a storm and discuss the crime which has shocked the region.

It won the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar in 1951 and the won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival in 1952.

The other films to be screened are “Happy Flight”, “Tony Takitani”, “Kamikaze Girls”, “Sansho the Bailiff”, the cartoon “5 Centimeters Per Second”, “Yunagi City, Sakura Country” and “Memories of Tomorrow”.

The program is sponsored by the Japanese consulate in HCMC and the Japan Foundation.

“It will provide an opportunity for people to further understand the Japanese land, people, culture and society, from traditional to modern, through films,” the consulate said in a release.

The films will be shown from October 8 to 14 at BHD Star Cinema in HCMC’s district 10 and from 22nd to 24th at Hoang Hoa Tham cinema in Nha Trang.

Free tickets are available at the consulate in Nguyen Hue Street, HCMC, and the venue in Nha Trang.

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Hanoi’s forward-looking architecture seeks its glorious past

Architects, city planners, researchers and art historians brainstormed and envisioned the city’s new planning and renovation direction at an international architecture seminar themed "1,000 years of Thang Long-Ha Noi: Architecture Hallmarks Overtime" hosted by The Vietnam Architecture Association on October 2 in Hanoi.

The seminar aimed at exploring Hanoi’s rich and diverse architectural heritage and understanding its uniqueness as the city’s thriving and modernizing energy comes to life daily against a backdrop of ancient, colonial, neoclassic and contemporary architecture.

Attendees strived to unearth the key to the city’s current charm amidst all of its contradictions while critically looking at past planning mistakes or shortsightedness both during colonial rule and throughout more recent administrations.

Colonial authorities were particularly insolent and showed extreme disregard to the city’s architectural and cultural history which preceded them. They destroyed old citadels and relics in the center of Thang Long in the 19th century as they set on building a new administrative center.

Just as the city’s colonial administrative center was built on the foundations of Bao An ancient pagoda, Saint Joseph Cathedral was built on the foundations of Bao Thien Tower.

They also filled in the To Lich River and a series of lakes from the city’s north to the south to build a new urban center seriously offsetting the ecological balance and limiting the city’s natural drainage capacity.

More recent administrations, first faced by the tragedy of war then overwhelmed by the task of rebuilding the country, neglected some colonial architectural treasures between 1954s to the middle of 1980s causing them to suffer environmental degradation some of which irreversible.

Some colonial villas gave way to more practical infrastructure as the administration had to meet the needs a ten-fold increase of the urban population following the rural-urban exodus and a redesigned national landscape.

The new government also built a series of new uniformly-designed residential areas such as Kim Lien, Trung Tu, Giang Vo, Thanh Cong, Thanh Xuan, Nghia Do and Dong Xa which ultimately proved inconsistent with effective city planning and were considered esthetically unappealing.

A recent boom of plot-split front houses robbed the capital’s most charming streets of their character.

Skyrocketing real estate values began changing the very identities of communities in once more traditional neighborhoods as homes became financially prohibitory to many of their members.

Moreover, the construction boom the city is experiencing and the sprouting of high-rise apartment buildings is not only raising concerns for infrastructure overload, traffic jams, and increased flooding risks, but also causing Hanoi’s new urban landscape to resemble that of Seoul, Bejing and Singapore.

“In spite of historically detrimental policies and irresponsible decisions due to limited knowledge or unsustainable development practices, Hanoi is still beautiful”, Vietnam-born architect Nguyen Chi Tam, who was raised in Paris, said, as he returned to Vietnam to explore his origins.

He believes that Hanoi should follow an eco-friendly and esthetically conscious urban redevelopment path and architects should be involved in the urban planning process. Xenophilous tendencies which motivated some of Hanoi’s architectural decisions caused it to lose its soul. Tokyo’s architecture deprived of cultural identity should be a lesson learnt.

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Hanoi’s forward-looking architecture seeks its glorious past

Architects, city planners, researchers and art historians brainstormed and envisioned the city’s new planning and renovation direction at an international architecture seminar themed "1,000 years of Thang Long-Ha Noi: Architecture Hallmarks Overtime" hosted by The Vietnam Architecture Association on October 2 in Hanoi.

The seminar aimed at exploring Hanoi’s rich and diverse architectural heritage and understanding its uniqueness as the city’s thriving and modernizing energy comes to life daily against a backdrop of ancient, colonial, neoclassic and contemporary architecture.

Attendees strived to unearth the key to the city’s current charm amidst all of its contradictions while critically looking at past planning mistakes or shortsightedness both during colonial rule and throughout more recent administrations.

Colonial authorities were particularly insolent and showed extreme disregard to the city’s architectural and cultural history which preceded them. They destroyed old citadels and relics in the center of Thang Long in the 19th century as they set on building a new administrative center.

Just as the city’s colonial administrative center was built on the foundations of Bao An ancient pagoda, Saint Joseph Cathedral was built on the foundations of Bao Thien Tower.

They also filled in the To Lich River and a series of lakes from the city’s north to the south to build a new urban center seriously offsetting the ecological balance and limiting the city’s natural drainage capacity.

More recent administrations, first faced by the tragedy of war then overwhelmed by the task of rebuilding the country, neglected some colonial architectural treasures between 1954s to the middle of 1980s causing them to suffer environmental degradation some of which irreversible.

Some colonial villas gave way to more practical infrastructure as the administration had to meet the needs a ten-fold increase of the urban population following the rural-urban exodus and a redesigned national landscape.

The new government also built a series of new uniformly-designed residential areas such as Kim Lien, Trung Tu, Giang Vo, Thanh Cong, Thanh Xuan, Nghia Do and Dong Xa which ultimately proved inconsistent with effective city planning and were considered esthetically unappealing.

A recent boom of plot-split front houses robbed the capital’s most charming streets of their character.

Skyrocketing real estate values began changing the very identities of communities in once more traditional neighborhoods as homes became financially prohibitory to many of their members.

Moreover, the construction boom the city is experiencing and the sprouting of high-rise apartment buildings is not only raising concerns for infrastructure overload, traffic jams, and increased flooding risks, but also causing Hanoi’s new urban landscape to resemble that of Seoul, Bejing and Singapore.

“In spite of historically detrimental policies and irresponsible decisions due to limited knowledge or unsustainable development practices, Hanoi is still beautiful”, Vietnam-born architect Nguyen Chi Tam, who was raised in Paris, said, as he returned to Vietnam to explore his origins.

He believes that Hanoi should follow an eco-friendly and esthetically conscious urban redevelopment path and architects should be involved in the urban planning process. Xenophilous tendencies which motivated some of Hanoi’s architectural decisions caused it to lose its soul. Tokyo’s architecture deprived of cultural identity should be a lesson learnt.

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