1. Cá lóc nướng - Hay-grilled whole snakehead
The recipe is rather easy to make: impale the poor living fellow with a bamboo stick, head to tail, put it in the hay (or other dry plant leaves) fire, keep turning until the scales are burnt to a dark ashy black. Remove the beyond-recognition scales and enjoy the steamy smoky tender, firm textured white meat.
This dish is best served with tamarind fish sauce, with a few slices of red hot chili pepper. The meat is wrapped in with a variety of different local vegetables. One can choose to add in or leave out a few according to his taste. Some of the veges are baby mango slices, bean sprout, star fruit (rather a must), green early banana and other condiments.
A recommendation would be Nghĩa Phát pub, no. 20 Lữ Gia, 5th district, Ho Chi Minh city.
2. Bò bía - Vegetables and Chinese sausage wrap
The snack is common and can be found most everywhere, but students do have quite an appetite for it, so seek them out for the best chance of satisfying a sudden crave.
Note that “bo bia” means a totally different snack in the north, which has nothing in common with the southern type.
3. Gỏi cuốn - Fresh summer rolls
There are two types of dipping sauce, but how anyone can ditch the soul-defining peanut butter sauce for the common fish sauce is beyond one’s imagination. It is not an overstatement that for all the goodness goi cuon manages to pack in, it is the peanut sauce that is the soul of the dish. It brings out the light in the indulgent neurons, opens up all the flavors and combines all that is onto a match made in heaven.
Just please remember to spare the main course! The roll is only meant to be a snack/appetizer.
Where to find one? That’s about as tough as finding a place that carries pho. Duh!
4. Bánh xèo - Pan-fried rolls/ Vietnamese crepes
One wraps bánh xèo in rice paper with a good number of other fresh uncooked herbs, including the all too familiar lettuce. That will definitely cool down all the cholesterol just right.
For locals, the dipping sauce sometimes may just be what either makes or breaks a bánh xèo. Each vendor has her own secret of the trade, and probably will not tell a stranger anytime soon. Generally speaking, it is a “right” combination of fish sauce, coconut milk, vinegar, sugar, chilly pepper, garlic and lemon… give or take a few? First timers will probably just “wow”.
Recommendation: Ăn là Ghiền, Mười Xiềm restaurants are popular banh xeo chains in Ho Chi Minh City.
5. Nem nướng - Coal- BBQed pork rolls
Chefs will not roll this for diners, so prepare to master the art! The good roll is tight, seamless and packing in all the good stuff.
This is a favorite drinking snack, so seek out the boozing crowd and join them.
6. Thịt luộc cuốn bánh tráng - Trang Bang rolls
To tell to truth, every ingredient of the dish is rather dull and nothing to get excited about. Some herbs are almost inedible if consumed alone. But to put every single one of them into a complete roll, the combination opens up the senses! It is a sudden explosion that seems to wake even the long-slumbering taste buds. It is as if the door to another half of those unused nerves has been busted open, unable to stand the force of the flow of saliva.
Well, that is a bit much, but do trust that it IS good!!!
Go to Trang Bang for the authentic experience. It is a little further away from Cu Chi tunnel. You will not regret the trip!
» Also you like our Travel to Vietnam
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