VIETNAM TRAVEL MAP
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VIETNAMESE FOOD & DRINKS
Vietnamese cuisine is one of the reasons that attract visitors to vietnam.
The cuisine reflects long years of cultural exchange with China, Cambodia
and, more recently, France. As elsewhere in Southeast Asia, rice is the main
staple, though bread ??? especially baguettes introduced by the French ??? is
ubiquitous and usually very good.
Dishes are generally served at the same time rather than by course, and
eaten with long-grain rice, nuoc mam or fish sauce, and a wide range of
fresh herbs and vegetables. Meals are generally eaten with chopsticks or, if
European food, with knife and fork.
Yin and Yang
In Vietnam, meals are typically comprised of some permutation of five
components: a sour salad, a salty fish of meat dish, white rice, soup and a
vegetable. The meal ushers diners through a full range of flavors and
creates balance between yin and yang foods.
Yin foods are warm and wet, while yang foods are dry and crisp. The reason
for mixing yin and yang might be to experience the pleasure of textures, but
it also provides your body with a combination of food types that keep it
running in optimal condition.
Some of the more popular Vietnamese dishes include Nem: small-spring rolls???
of minced pork, prawn, crab meat, fragrant mushrooms and vegetables wrapped
in thin rice paper and then deep fried.
Another dish eaten in a similar fashion is cuon diep, or shrimp, noodles,
mint, coriander and pork wrapped in lettuce leaves. Hue, a city associated
with Buddhism, is famous for its vegetarian cuisine and for its banh khoai,
or ???Hue pancake???. A batter of rice flour and corn is fried with egg to make
a pancake, then wrapped around pork or shrimp, onion, bean sprouts and
mushrooms. Another Hue specialty is bun bo, or fried beef and noodles served
with coriander, onion, garlic, cucumber, chili peppers and tomato paste.
Soups are popular, and generally served with almost every meal. Mien ga is a
noodle soup, most popular in the south, blending chicken, coriander, fish
sauce and scallions. Hu tieu is chicken, beef, pork and shrimp served with a
broth over rice noodles mixed with crab meat, peanuts, onion and garlic.
Canh chua, a sour soup served with shrimp or fish head, is a fragrant blend
of tomato, pineapple, star fruit, bean sprouts, fried onion, bamboo shoots,
coriander and cinnamon. Perhaps the best known of all Vietnamese soup
dishes, often eaten for breakfast or as a late night snack, is pho, a broth
of rice noodles topped with beef or chicken, fresh herbs and onion. Egg yolk
is often added, as may be lime juice, chili peppers or vinegar. Pho is
generally served with quay ??? a fried piece of flour dough.
The Herb for What Ails You
Comment herbs and seasonings in Vietnamese food are believed to provide a
host of health benefits: spring onion for digestion and respiratory tract
infections; coriander to strengthen the stomach, stimulate discharge and
reduce fever; dill to protect against free radicals, carcinogens and bone
loss and betel leaf to stop cell degeneration
Fruits, desserts and drinks
A wide range of fruit is available, including many lush tropical fruits such
as mango, custard apple, sapodilla, durian, pineapple, star fruit, and
rambutan. More temperate fruits such as apples, cherries and strawberries
can be found in the north.
Bottled fresh water, canned and bottled soft drinks and a wide range of
canned beers are available throughout the country. French and Australian
wines are increasingly popular, especially at French restaurants. Local rice
liquors are cheap and fierce; as a legacy of Vietnam???s recent history
Stolychnaya and other Russian vodkas may be found on some shelves.
Many people say Vietnamese Coffee is a MUST TRY when you are there. As
Vietnam is the second largest coffee producer so you can find coffee powder
almost everywhere. Real Vietnamese coffee is best brewed the traditional way
??? coffee grounds are placed on an aluminum filter that sits on top of a cup.
Hot water is then poured over the grounds and the coffee drips slowly. This
creates an extremely dense, strong tasting cup that requires a few teaspoons
of sugar or condensed milk. In fact, if you order an iced coffee, the sugar
will usually be put in be whoever is making the brew. You can order hot
coffee, which usually comes in a cappuccino sized cup. However, Viet Nam
being a tropical country, coffee is almost always taken iced. The ice cuts
the strong taste a little, while giving the drink a crisper edge.
In Vietnam, probably Bia Hoi is the cheapest beer in the world. Bia Hoi is
beer that???s freshly brewed every day and distributed to the many small bars
that line the city streets. Its served warm from the keg and then poured
over ice. In Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City you???ll find little bars selling Bia
Hoi everywhere. Many of these places serve food, though local vendors come
by hawking peanuts, rice cakes, and other snacks. This is the quintessential
experience that every visitor must have at least once. Things get rowdy
later on at many of these places, so enjoying a couple of liters earlier in
the evening is a good idea.