Thursday, January 20, 2011

Tet products become creative

With their increasing prosperity, Vietnamese consumers are willing to shell out extra money to buy quality or unusual products for Tet and manufacturers are obliging.

Saigon Fisco, for instance, has unveiled a special frozen hotpot. Unlike normal hotpots, this one weighs almost a kilogram, has enough seafood for 10 people, and is targeted at families that gather or travel together during Tet.

Housewives will be much less desperate this year considering some of the other foods on sale, especially Vissan’s new herbal chickens. These chickens were fed a diet of mixed natural herbs for about two months before being slaughtered, ensuring their meat is much firmer and better tasting than normal chickens.

Each chicken weighs 1.3-1.5kg and costs VND104,000 (US$5.3) per kilogram. A Vissan spokesperson since this was the company’s first attempt at this and quality had to be strictly controlled, it would produce only 5,000 herbal chickens for Tet.

Another unusual treat this year is the candied grapefruit peel that comes in thin yellow slices like candied ginger, and amazingly, tastes bitter, sweet, salty, and pungent at the same time.

The strong, lingering taste of grapefruit peel in our throat can be further accentuated by a cup of hot tea, and we can feel the heat permeating the whole body.

Ngoc Thuy, owner of Thanh Long candied fruits supplier, said making candied grapefruit peels is a demanding process, and 10 tons of peels yield just a ton of candies. “The price is around VND70,000 for a kilo. Since it first appeared in the market, it has attracted a lot of customers, especially in the central and northern regions where people consume them to keep themselves warm during the freezing cold of Tet.”

Watermelons are a must-have fruit during the New Year. This year farmers in Long An and Hau Giang Provinces will introduce organic watermelons for the first time in cooperation with Syngenta Company.

Truong Tran Quang Phuong, Syngenta’s southern regional sales director, said farmers who participate in the organic watermelons program must scrupulously follow growing procedures such as not using forbidden chemicals and proper disposal of pesticides.

“When harvest time comes, the company and local authorities will take samples for analysis and only when they meet all the requirements will the melons be certified as organic,” he explained.

Unusually-shaped melons continue to be in great demand. There are square or sycee-shaped melons and even ones with words like Phuoc (Fortune), Loc (Prosperity), Tho (Longevity) etched on their peels.

However, despite the much higher supply this year, their prices are not lower than last year.

According to a melon supplier in An Giang Province, a mixed pair of melons -- one square and one round -- costs VND800,000 ($40), while a pair of square ones and a pair with embossed words cost VND1.2 million.

Artistic speakers

hang sang 2

Customers choosing artworks that double up as speakers at AA Company

Paintings that are actually speakers with excellent sound quality will be a unique gadget to show off to visitors during Tet.

This idea was conceived a long time ago by Nguyen Hung Son, director of AA Company (District 11), and now artistic speakers in more and more designs and materials have hit the market.

With sound equipment imported from Taiwan, China, Denmark, and other places, and paintings made by artists in various styles, the company provides customers a wide range of choice.

Customers can also provide photos or artworks for making custom-built speakers. The speakers too come in a wide range -- from 1.5W to over 100W -- and even lend themselves to karaoke singing.

AA also offers speakers of under 30W with a music collection integrated in a built-in USB that do not have to be connected to amplifiers and disc players unlike in the case of speakers of 60W and above.

For all of the above, prices range from $150 to $350.

According to Son, the most important factor remains the sound quality and it is also the hardest to ensure. Admittedly, in terms of sound these speakers cannot be compared to top-of-the-range speakers, but they are still a good choice for people who want to dazzle their Tet visitors.

Ornamental apricot blossom trees rented

An unusual service is the rental of apricot blossom trees. Thong, the owner of Minh Thuy apricot blossom garden in Thu Duc District, HCMC, said that the number of people renting the trees this year is large despite the high price of VND10 million to VND50 million for a tree that is more than 50 years old.

Hieu, owner of another apricot garden nearby, said more than 100 trees have been rented for up to VND15 million. A rough survey shows the rental costs 30 percent-50 percent of a tree’s value.

Gardeners said those renting trees are mostly households or businesses that cannot take care of the trees all year round and only needed them during Tet. People can rent the trees until next year, paying the owners an upkeep fee of up to 20 percent of their value.

hang sang 3

High-value apricot blossom trees are of high demand this Tet season

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Musician releases English album

Simple melodies: Musician Nguyen Xinh Xo is also the leading vocalist on his first album Afterlife. — File Photo

Simple melodies: Musician Nguyen Xinh Xo is also the leading vocalist on his first album Afterlife. — File Photo

HA NOI — US-based Vietnamese musician Nguyen Xinh Xo has just released his first album in English in Viet Nam.

Xo, 33, became famous in Viet Nam after composing Dong Ho Treo Tuong (Wall Clock), which won the Song of the Year award at the national Vietnamese Songs music contest in 2009.

Entitled Afterlife, the album includes 50 English pop songs using electronic music, most of which have not been released. Xo is also the leading vocalist on the album, which he produced himself.

"I tell the story by myself with my own feelings through my voice," he said. "[The album] is a gift to my late father."

Xo said he produced the album in his studio at home, which he said is more convenient than outsourcing the work.

Composing in Vietnamese is much harder than composing in English, he said.

"The Vietnamese language contains too many tones, which lead to more fluctuating melodies. That is why English is such a popular language to compose in," he said. "However, it is the musical score itself that is the main message carrier for the songs, not the language."

Xo added that he produced the album not for profit but to promote his music.

Xo was born in Ha Noi in 1978. He began learning the violin at five. His father, Nguyen Xinh, also a musician, was former director of Viet Nam Musicology Institute and deputy rector of the then Viet Nam Academy of Music.

Xinh was killed in a traffic accident when Xo was 18.

Xo's mother also taught the violin and is an accomplished performer, as are many of his family members.

Xo graduated with a bachelor's degree in business management and information technology. Later, in 1999, he went to study in the US, where he now works as a music teacher. He is also taking a master's degree in electronic music. — VNS

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Collected works of Uncle Ho released

HA NOI — The 15-volume Ho Chi Minh Toan Tap (Complete Works by Ho Chi Minh) was re-issued on Monday for the third time on the occasion of the 11th National Party Congress.

A total 3,300 copies with updated information on important documents of the late president have been printed. The collection was published for the first time in 1990 to commemorate Ho Chi Minh's 100th birthday and included 10 volumes. It was later reprinted in 2000 and included 12 volumes.

Nguyen Duy Hung, director of the National Politics Publishing House, said the latest edition would help readers more fully understand the invaluable spiritual legacy left by the late president.

Noble prizes to be announced

HCM CITY — The Mai Vang (Golden Ochna) Awards 2010 for musicians and actors will be announced on Saturday.

The singing awards at Hoa Binh Theatre, HCM City, will be broadcast live.

There will be five categories – Favourite Male and Female Pop Singers, Favourite Male and Female Country Singers and Favourite Song.

There will also be awards for Favourite Male and Female Stage Artists, Best Comic Actor and Best Stage Play.

The acting category will include best TV Actor and Actress, Best Movie Actor and Actress, Favourite Master of Ceremonies (MC) and best Film of the Year.

Meanwhile, on Monday, the Mai Vang Awards will be presented to the best 10 singers.

The annual awards have been organised by Nguoi Lao Dong newspaper since 1995.

HCM City TV spreads Tet cheer

HCM CITY — A music performance by pop stars and auction of ornamental trees and fish will be part of a charity event HCM City Television and Farmers Association will organise tomorrow to raise funds for poor farmers in the city during Tet (Lunar New Year).

The proceeds from the annual programme will be used to repair or build more than 150 houses for poor farmers and gift health insurance cards and presents to them.

Organisers will auction two rare mai (ochna) trees with "beautiful roots" which will bring their owners "luck and wealth", and two sets of Japanese carp symbolising the five elements and four directions.

The concert will be held at 7pm at the HTV Theatre, and broadcast live on HTV9.

Last year the programme managed to raise more than VND3.9 billion (US$185,000), enabling 237 houses to be repaired or built and 927 health insurance cards and 117 scholarships to be provided.

Ha Noi waiter represents region

HCM CITY — Tran Trong Hai Ha from Green Tangerine Restaurant in Ha Noi has won the ticket to represent South East Asia in the Asia sommelier competition in June.

After winning The Best Vietnamese Sommelier Competition for French Wine 2010 last October, Ha represented Viet Nam in the Southeast Asia sommelier competition at the Equatorial Hotel last week and won The First Runner-up prize. Peter Teng from Malaysia was the winner.

Both also won a course on wine tasting in France on March.

The contest was organised by Sopexa, which is the French food and wines PR and communications agency, and Saigon Bartender Sommelier Guild.

Ha and Teng beat eight representatives from Indonesia, Malaysia, Taiwan, Thailand and Viet Nam. — VNS

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Food day to seek real ‘Kitchen Gods'

HCM CITY — The head of the Institute of Vietnamese Gastronomic Research wants the 23rd of the 12th lunar month (which falls on next Wednesday) to be designated Ngay Bep Viet or Vietnamese Cuisine Day in honour of Ong Tao, the Kitchen Gods.

According to traditional belief, the Kitchen Gods return 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 Promote Vietnamese Cuisine 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 Gods 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 Cuisine 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 Promote Vietnamese Cuisine 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

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Good winds for last day of KTA in Mui Ne

The winner’s podium for the KTA twin tip course racing. (L-R) Nguyen Ngoc Kim (Vietnam) second place, Ken Nacor (Philipines) first, Lai Hong Phi (Vietnam) third - Photo: Alexandru Baranescu
Nature smiled Sunday on the third round of the Kiteboard Tour Asia (KTA) contest in Mui Ne with a full day of 20 knot winds making for some exciting course racing and freestyle events.

Over 100 competitors from 23 nations had waited for the wind for four almost windless days since the event had started last Wednesday.

Except for two races that were held in 15 knot winds late Friday afternoon, the KTA events were all held Sunday when the forecast winds finally arrived to the resort town that has earned an international reputation as the mecca of Vietnam kitesurfing.

“It couldn’t happen any better. The winds started early and went to the end of the day. We got all the results. It was a godsend,” said KTA tour organizer Willy Kerr adding the results were very important to competitors for world rankings.

A 16-year-old Japanese girl, Aya Oshima, beat last year’s tour champion, Kathrin Borgwardt from Germany, to win the freestyle in the women’s category. Borgwardt won the women’s course racing.

In another upset, last year’s Asian Champion, Thai kitesurfer, Narapichit Pudla, was beaten by the Japanese champion, Hiro Nakano, in the men’s freestyle.

After an uneventful week, Sunday’s big crowds were treated to some close-to-the shore wave riding from the freestylers as they played in the dumping Mui Ne shore break outside Wax nightclub.

In the men’s course racing, where kitesurfers use specialized racing boards, Heikki Gross from Estonia beat Tayner Aykurt in second place from Turkey who won out of the Asians. Vietnam’s Nguyen Ngoc Kim came sixth.

Kim came second in the twin tip course racing division. He was beaten by Ken Nacor from the Philipines. Kim’s team mate, Lai Hong Phi, came third.

Lai Hong Phi is the only Vietnamese in the KTA who has world rankings, ranked number 113 at the end of last year. Both Kim and Phi are fully sponsored to travel to all the rounds in this year’s KTA.

So far, 2011 rounds one and two were in China and Turkey with the next rounds in Thailand, the Philippines, and Korea.

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Vietnamese treasures shine in Seoul's heart

Vietnam and Korea seem to have nothing particular in common due to their geographical distance. But upon closer inspection, we can find that the two countries share many things — Confucian culture, colonial occupation and Chinese influence in history.

In modern times, the two have cooperated in economic exchanges since they established diplomatic relations in 1992.

In an effort to offer insight into the history and culture of Korea through a pan-Asian perspective and highlight the shared culture of the two countries, the National Palace Museum of Korea is holing a special exhibition titled “Treasures of the Vietnamese Nguyen Dynasty” through Feb. 6.

The exhibition features 165 relics and artifacts dating from the dynasty and photographs and videos of historical places in Hue, the imperial capital of the Nguyen Dynasty in association with the Hue Royal Antiquities Museum in Vietnam.

The Nguyen Dynasty (1802-1945), the last Vietnamese dynasty, relocated its capital city from Hanoi in the northern part of the country to Hue in the central region, to unite the cultures of the North and the South within the Confucian cultural sphere and established its borders to what is now present-day Vietnam. The dynasty was under the strong cultural influence of China.

The exhibition hall greets visitors with its glamorous throne of the Crown Prince from the 19th century set front and center, which symbolizes the nobility and dignity of the dynasty.

The exhibition also displays the relics used in shrines and rituals as the country is a Confucian society due to the strong Chinese influence. The rulers succeeded the traditions of previous dynasties and legitimized their authority by building the Nam Giao Esplanade, the Xa Tac Altar and the Temple of Literature.

The dynasty built a slew of shrines such as the Mieu and Thai Mieu within the Imperial Citadel of Hue. The exhibition features a tripod incense burner from 1925, along with a ceremonial sword and instruments used in various rituals.

robe

The middle section of the exhibition features royal attire of the dynasty that shows the styles established at the Qing royal court. The relics, which are similar to those from China, were categorized into ceremonial, formal and casual attire. The imperial family wore boots embroidered with symbolic patterns such as dragons or phoenixes, along with distinguishable hats or gold coronets depending on the ceremony. In everyday life, they wore silk shoes adorned with pearls and jade or gold accessories inscribed with a variety of titles and verses.

In the later part of the exhibition hall, sophisticated craftworks of the dynasty are on display. Items such as silver and lacquer wares were manufactured by the masters of the times and patterns representing the wearers’ dignity were also delicately engraved. Most ceramic pieces were imported while some were custom-made with a taste of the Nguyen court.

An impressive part of the exhibition is the digital reconstruction of the Hue Citadel conducted by KAIST’s Graduate School of Cultural Technology. The 3D reconstruction of the citadel can be seen in the exhibition hall to show the former splendor of the dynasty.

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Saying it with clay flowers during Tet

In Vietnam, flowers are a very popular decorative item, particularly during special events. But this Lunar New year clay flowers seem to be the in-thing and can be seen in many houses.

They have been imported for less than a year but some Vietnamese artisans have already visited Japan, where the art of making them was born, to learn how to make them.

The flowers are made of Japanese clay, and are pliable but tough.

From clay fig tree to orchid, each product has to go through several stages. Blended clay is laminated and molded in the shape of petals. Then an artisan has to patiently shape each vein in the leaf and cleverly and delicately use colors to bring the flowers to life.

“It takes six months to a year to learn the basics,” Son, owner of Gala Flowers in Hanoi, says.

“There are some flowers like carnation and orchid that requires an artisan to test hundreds of times to get the color right.”

During Tet, clay flowers are very convenient since people do not have to worry about watering them when they are busy visiting relatives.

Unlike plastic or paper flowers, clay flowers also have realistic colors and can last as long as a year. Besides, old ones can be remade into new styles and colors.

Followings are images of some clay flowers:

clay 1

clay 3

clay 2

clay 4

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