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Tet Food (Detail)
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Banh Chung and banh Tet (Boiled rice and
pork cakes)
Boiled rice and pork cakes
are usually cooked 2-3 days
before Tet. Both can be kept for about two
weeks in cool temperature. However, after
this time they become hard and must be
re-boiled.
Soak some green beans overnight in water to
soften. Drain, rub and clean to remove the
skin, and leave to dry. Next, cook the beans
in a steamer and grind. Form into balls the
size of tennis balls.
Soak some glutinous rice overnight. Clean
and rinse. Mix with a little salt. Cut fresh
pork meat (lean or fat, according to
personal taste) into 2cm strips. Mix with
salt, fish sauce and pepper, and leave for
about one hour.
Clean dong leaves (leaves from
arrowroot) and place them over each other to
form a cross. Place an amount of rice in the
centre of the leaves. Shape into a square
(the southern version is in a circle). Press
a "ball" of green bean on top. Then, add 1-2
pieces of marinated pork, then more green
bean, and finally rice. Press firmly into a
compact square and wrap the leaves over to
cover the cake completely. Tie with bamboo
strings. Place in a large pot of boiling
water and boil overnight. Squeeze the
moisture out by placing it in a colander
with a heavy object on top.
To serve, untie and open the leaves. Invert
on a plate and cut into pieces using the
bamboo strings, not a knife. Serve cold.
Canh mang (Dried bamboo shoot soup)
Soak dried bamboo shoots in water for 2-3
days to soften. Boil 2-3 times if necessary.
Cut into 5cm strips. Fry with pig trotters
and salt. Add water, bring to boil and
simmer until meat is tender. Garnish with
green onion.
Bong (Dried pig skin)
Soak dried pig skin (the skin should be
yellow, which means it has been pre-treated)
in water for one hour. Drain and then add a
cup of rice whisky and fresh ginger. Rub
onto the skin (this will remove the smell).
Cut into diamond-shaped pieces.
To make fresh chicken stock, add dried
shrimps and dried huong (perfume)
mushrooms, which have been pre-soaked in
warm water, to 2-3 chicken carcasses. Bring
to boil and simmer. Remove the dried
mushrooms. Cut carrot and kohlrabi into
decorative shapes (flowers, leaves etc).
Boil the dried pork skin in the chicken
stock for several minutes until tender. Add
French/ string beans. To serve, mix all
drained ingredients (place vegetables on
top) and garnish with coriander.
Hanh muoi (Pickled onions)
You should make this dish about two weeks
before Tet. Clean onions. Dissolve some salt
and sugar in warm water. Add onions, cover
and keep in a clean, dry place for two
weeks.
Mien (Vermicelli noodles)
Cut mien into lengths and pre-soak
for 10-15 minutes in water. Boil chicken
innards (liver, heart, etc), salt and green
onions in a fresh chicken stock. Mix with
mien and serve.
Moc (Pork soup)
Buy raw minced pork. Add dried mushrooms,
which have been soaked to be softened. Mound
pork on the mushrooms and boil in chicken
stock.
Ga ran or luoc (Fried or boiled chicken)
Fried version: marinate raw chicken in salt,
sugar, garlic, fish sauce and burnt sugar.
Fry chicken and marinade in oil.
Boiled version: served with julienne lemon
grass.
Ca chep kho rieng (Carp with galangal)
Scale carp, cut into steaks and fry. Add
finely sliced galangal, fish sauce,
salt, burnt sugar and water (this makes the
fish turn dark brown). Cook over a low heat
until the fish is hard and little liquid
remains.
Bo kho que (Beef with cinnamon)
Tie up beef muscle firmly with several
strips of bamboo. Break cinnamon into small
pieces, rub into beef. Sear.
Add fish sauce and salt, and cook over a low
heat. Only cut beef when about to serve. The
meat should be firm but not tough.
Xoi gac (Steamed momordica glutinous
rice)
Soak glutinous rice in water overnight.
Drain. Cut open the momordica (qua gac).
Remove flesh and large black/red seeds. Mix
this with a small cup of rice alcohol. Mix
rice with salt and qua gac mixture.
Steam in a rice steamer. During steaming,
add some chicken fat and stir through. When
steamed, add a little sugar and stir through
with chopsticks. Mound onto a plate and
decorate with the black seeds from the
fruit.
Che kho (Soft green bean cake)
Soak green beans in water overnight to
soften. Rub and remove skin. Drain. Cook in
boiling water until soft. Drain and grind
into a wet powder. Mix with sugar in a pan
over a medium heat. Keep stirring until a
little drier and smoother. Place in a mound
and invert onto a plate. Sprinkle with
sesame seeds. To serve, cut into slices like
a cake.
Mut (Preserved fruit)
Prepare a week before Tet. The most
important thing is to maintain the shape of
the fruit. Use apple, potato, tomato, plum,
ginger, mandarin, or gourd.
Apple: Pierce skin lengthwise, but don’t cut
too deep. Place in a bowl of cold water and
lime. Soak overnight. Wash carefully and
dry. Cover in red sugar. Stir very carefully
in a dry pan over low heat until sugar melts
and solidifies. Take off heat. Press down
carefully on top of apple to make into shape
evocative of a seashell.
If using a kumquat, a traditional Tet fruit,
use white sugar to keep the natural orange
colour of the fruit. You must also keep the
stalk in to keep the shape. You must also
carefully press juice out after piercing
skin.
Last, but not least
After indulging in all the above, remember
that you cannot throw out any leftovers
until the fourth day of Tet. It would also
be highly inauspicious to sweep the rubbish
from the house as all the good luck you have
been working hard at will disappear with it. |
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Special food in Vietnam (Detail)
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Nem ran
(Spring roll)
Nem ran (called cha gio in
the south) is a much-appreciated speciality,
although it is very easy to prepare. Since
long ago, nem ran has been a familiar
dish on the menu at all households during
the New Year’s festivities, at family
parties, and at receptions.
The
stuffing of the nem ran is comprised
of mince pork, sea crabs, eggs, minced Jew's
ears, thin-top mushroom, dried onions,
bean-sprouts, pepper, spiced salt, etc. The
mixture is then rolled in flat rice cakes
and fried in a pan until crispy.
Nem
are eaten hot with a sauce that it is, at
the same time, somewhat salty, sweet, acidic
and scented (with the flavours of onion and
pepper). Papaya and a few fresh scented
vegetables are added.
Gio lua
(Silky lean meat paste)
By itself, the name “silky lean meat paste”
evokes thoughts of the silky aspect of this
speciality. Gio lua is made with lean
pig meat, which is pounded with a pestle
until it becomes a sticky paste. Fresh
banana leaves are tied very tightly around
the paste, and then it is well cooked. Good
gio lua has a fine white colour, is
firm, and has a perfumed and sweetish taste.
Gio
lua may be obtained anywhere in Vietnam,
but the best gio lua is from Uoc Le
Village (Hanoi), where the know-how for
Gio lua is strictly kept so as to allow
no secrets of the job to flow out from Uoc
Le. Slices of Gio lua are slightly
pink, moist, and sweet-smelling meat, fish
sauce and banana leaf. |
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Special food in the North (Detail)
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Special food in the North |
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Pho (Rice noodle soup)
Pho, a typical dish of Hanoi
people, has been existing for a long-time.
Pho
is prepared not only in a sophisticated
manner but also in the technique which is
required to have sweet but pure bouillon,
soft but not crashed noodle, soft and
sweet-smelling meat.
Only
in cold days, having a hot and
sweet-smelling bowl of Pho to enjoy,
would make you experience the complete
flavor of the special dish of Hanoi.
Bun thang ("Ladder" soft noodle soup)
Dishes made of soft noodle soup are diverse
such as vermicelli and fried chopped meat,
Bun Thang, vermicelli and sour crab
soup, stewed vermicelli and boiled lean
meat, etc. The popular dish is vermicelli
and sour crab soup whilst Bun Thang
is for con-noisseurs, unique and available
in Hanoi only. A bowl of Bun Thang
includes lean pork paste, thin fried egg,
salted shredded shrimp, chicken, onion,
shrimps paste, and a little Belostomatid
essence. Especially, Bun Thang
bouillon made from shrimps and meat must be
very sweet and pure. Without enjoying Bun
Thang when arriving to Hanoi, it
somewhat seems to lack of a part of taste of
Hanoi.
Mon oc (Snail dish)
Snail
dish is a popular but unique dish of Hanoi
people. It is easy to order some dishes like
snail steamed with ginger leaf, gingered
snail, snail sauted with carambola, snail
boiled with lemon leaf, snail steamed with
Chinese herbs, and so on, in many small
restaurants, restaurants, and even hotels.
However, vermicelli and snail sour soup is
the most attractive to young ladies because
of brittleness by snails, the slightly sour
taste by snail soup, and hot by chilly
boiled down, making even gorged people keep
eating.
Com
Every autumn, around September and October,
when the cool north-westerly wind brings a
cold dew, the sticky rice ears bend
themselves into arches waiting for ripe
grains because these rice grains are at
their fullest and the rice-milk is already
concentrated in the grains, predicting that
the com season has arrived.
Better
than any other person, the peasant knows
when the rice ears are ripe enough to be
reaped to begin making com. Com
is made from green sticky rice that is
harvested in blossom period, roasted in many
times, crashed and sieved.
Com
is a speciality; at the same time, it is
very popular. One can enjoy com with tieu
ripe banana. When eating com, you must
eat slowly and chew very deliberately in
order to appreciate all the scents, tastes,
and plasticity of the young rice.
Com
is an ingredient also used in many
specialities of Vietnam, including com
xao (browned com), banh com (com
cakes), che com (sweetened com
soups), etc.
Com
may be obtained anywhere in the North of
Vietnam, but the tastiest com is
processed in Vong Village, 5km from Hanoi,
where com making has been a
professional skill for many generations.
Cha ca La Vong
Cha ca La Vongg is a unique
specialty of Hanoi people, therefore one
street in Hanoi was named as Cha Ca Street.
Cha
ca is made from mud-fish, snake-headed
fish, but the best one is Hemibagrus (Ca
lang). Fish bone is left away to keep
fish meat only, then seasoning, clipping by
pieces of bamboo, and frying by coal heat.
An oven of coal heat is needed when serving
to keep Cha ca always hot. Cha ca
is served with roasted peanuts, dry
pancakes, soft noodle soup, spice vegetables
and shrimps paste with lemon and chilly.
The
Cha ca La Vong Restaurant on No.14 Cha Ca
Street is the "ancestor restaurant" of the
dish.
Banh cuon (
Banh cuonn is popular to Vietnamese
as disk for breakfast. The cake preparing
process includes grilled rice which is
steamed and oil-spread to have
sweet-smelling. Banh cuon is prepared
available. Leaves of cake put on plate as
the customers ask for the disk. The cake is
called Banh cuon Thanh Tri due to its
origin is Thanh Tri Village of South Hanoi.
Besides Banh cuon Thanh Tri, there is
rolled rice pancake with the filling of the
cake is made from minced pork mixed with
Jew's ears and thin-top mushrooms. The cake,
placed on plate, serve with salted shredded
shring and fried dry onions. The customers
immediately experience the disk as it is
just finished and stilI very hot.
It is
the sauce of the cake that fascinates the
customers. The cake-makers have their own
know-how, some of them prepare Banh cuon
with Belostomatid essence to have sweet
-smelling to attract to the customers.
Lon
quay Lang Son
(Lang Son roasted pork)
Anyone
who arrives in Lang Son Province could find
it difficult to say no to Lon quay
dish. Lon quay Lang Son is delicious
for many reasons, however, the main specific
taste of the dish comes from the unique
flavor of a kind of leaf called "Mac mat"
(meaning "sweet leaf"). The leaf is soaked
with spices, fish sauce, glutamate,
flavoring powder, then stuffed into clean
pig belly and placed on reverted furnace.
Pig is fried the spread with watery honey so
as to make the skin turn golden and brittle,
and pork is soft and sweet-smelling as
finish.
Banh tom Ho Tay (Ho
Tay fried shirmp cake)
All
people who used to live in Hanoi are
familiar with Banh tom Ho Tay Restaurant on
the Thanh Nien (Young) Street. The cake
preparing process includes wheat flour mixed
with potato fibres, placing on shape with
shrimps upper, then fried with oil. The cake
is brittle, soft, sweet-smelling, and served
with vegetable pickles and sweet and sour
fish sauce for best taste. |
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Special food in the Centre (Detail)
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Special food in the Centre |
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Banh beo xu Hue (Hue
bloating fren-shaped cake)
Banh beo is a specialty and
indispensable in Hue City. Banh beo
is delicious with its core stuffed with
small shrimps and sauce made from a mixture
of fish sauce, sugar, garlic, chilly and
fresh small shrimps, watery grease.
Therefore, it offers customers with sweet,
buttery and smelling flavors. Without
delicious sauce, the cake would become
worthless. When serving, it is required to
use a tool called Que Cheo (bamboo folk) to
pass through the cake, cut into pieces,
prick and eat. Customers would be impressed
forever with having Banh beo in a
green garden while listening to Hue folk
song coming from the Perfume River.
Bun bo gio heo (Beef and fork soft
noodle soup)
Preparing Bun bo gio heo is very
skillful. Pig leg is clean-shaved, chopped
into even slices with adequate bone, meat
and skin, mixed with lean beefs, and soaked
with salt, pepper, fish sauce, dry onion and
spices.
Bun
bo gio heo is proper with all appetites.
Even diet people could enjoy the
sweet-smelling of beef with less fat of pig
leg so as not to be fed up with as serving.
Bun bo gio heo is delicious anytime
you have it. You could enjoy this specialty
of the Central region on Hue City.
Banh la cha tom (Grilled rice cake with
Cray fish)
Anyone who used to experience the dish would
never forget such simple cake made from
grilled rice cake and Cray fish only.
The
cake must be as thin as a leaf but flexible
enough. Cray fish must be brittle and sweet.
Serving with long jawed anchovy sauce.
Banh la cha tom does not as heavily
smell as the majority of the other dishes
but gentle, elegant and attractive to
customers
Com hen song Huong (Perfume
River mussel cooked rice)
Com hen has a sweet-smelling flavor
of rice, onion, and grease, as well as
strange tastes of sweet, buttery, salty,
sour, bitter, and peppery-hot. You have to
arrive to Hen river-islet in the Perfume
River to have the original Com hen.
However, you can find out the dish on some
streets in Hue City. It requires 15
different raw materials to prepare for the
dish, including mussel, fried grease, watery
grease, peanuts, white sesames, dry pancake,
salted shredded meat, chilly sauce, banana
flower, banana trunk, sour carambola, spice
vegetables, peppermint, salad, etc.
Com
hen is always attractive to many
customers because it is tasty and, at the
same time, economic to anybody.
Cao lau Hoi An (Hoi An vermicelli)
Cao lau as a dish has its "own
kingdom", therefore, customers are likely to
be served with it only in Hoi An.
Cao
lau noodles are carefully made from
local new rice not stocked one. Water used
to soak rice must be taken from wells in the
Ba Le Village; noodles thus will be soft,
enduring and flavored with special
sweet-smelling. In addition, meat used to
prepare for Cao lau must be loin or
trotter.
Dry
pancakes used must be thick and have much
sesame. Greasy coconut quintessence and
bitter green cabbage are also indispensable.
The so-called genuine Cao lau Hoi An
must satisfy all above requirements.
Banh trang cuon thit heo (Dry pancake
roll with pork)
Coming to the Central region, you are
offered with the service of Banh trang
cuon thịt heo.
A big
plate of fresh vegetables with a peppery-hot
red chilly, a plate of boiled lean and fat
meat, a bowl of fish sauce, and a plate of
dry pancakes are displayed on the dining
table. Customers have to serve themselves
with all of the 10 substances mentioned
above.
Banh trang cuon thịt heo is considered
as not only a daily dish but also likely an
artistic specialty of the Central citizens.
My Quang (Quang soft noodle soup)
Similar
to rice noodle and chicken or pork soup (Hu
tieu), My Quang is a variety of
Pho (rice noodle soup), because the
noodles are made from rice and soused with
soup as serving. The soup sauce, which is
added, comes from a mixture of flavor from
beef or pork bone, shrimps, crabs, chicken
and duck. The noodles are yellow, somewhat
distinct from Pho. However, the main
reason for having this color is to be in
hannony with the colors of shrimps and
crabs.
The
best My Quang is made from rice in
Phu Chiem, shrimp in Cho Dai and spicy
vegetables in Tra Que. As a strict selection
of substances to prepare, My Quang
has been dominant in almost all of culinary
markets in the Central provinces and
expanded to Ho Chi Minh City with a high
qualification of a Quang Ngai's specialty. |
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Special food in the South (Detail)
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Special food in the South |
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Xoi chien phong (Bloating fried sticky
rice)
A
round plate of Xoi chien phong,
placed next to a plate of buttery roasted
chicken, is always attractive to anyone. A
lump of sticky rice will become a plate of
Xoi chien phong as big as a
grape-fruit by talent chefs. In the past,
Xoi chien phong was offered only in the
Binh Duong Restaurant, Dong Nai Province. At
present, you can taste the dish in star
classified hotels in Ho Chi Minh City.
Lau mam (Mixed vegetable and meat hot
pot)
At present, Lau mam folk dish in the
past hundred years - become a luxurious
specialty in the South. Chau Doc fish sauce
made from fresh-water fish, a kind of sweet-
smelling and greasy fish, which must be as
required to have a delicious Lau mam
dish.
Substances to prepare for Lau mam,
including fresh food-stuffs such as
snake-head fish, "keo" fish, pork, peeled
shrimps, eel, beef, and so on, accompanied
with at least 10 kinds of vegetable,
sometime amounting to 24 kinds of vegetable.
They include water-lily, egg-plant,
balsam-apple, straw mushroom, bean sprouts,
chilly, etc.
When
boiled, the flavors of the sauce, which is
mixed with citronella, chilly, vegetables,
fish, shrimp and meat, are very
sweet-smelling. Lau mam roam is scoop
out into bowls and served with soft noodle
soup, simply but deliciously.
Goi Buoi (Salad of shaddock)
Goi
buoi is available at the majority of
famous restaurants in Ho Chi Minh City. The
major substances to prepare for the dish
include shaddocks mixed with fresh shrimps,
pork, and dry cuttle-fish. The dish is
originated in Miet Buoi, Bien Hoa City.
Goi
buoi dish is especially flavored with
slightly sour, sweet, peppery-hot and
buttery tastes. It is also added with spice
vegetable, white sesames, coconut and dry
cuttle-fish. Therefore, the dish will be
appeared on dining table as a fresh colorful
picture and attractive to customers.
Ca tai tuong chien xu ("Tai tuong"
bloating fried fish)
"Tai
tuong" fish is classified as a kind of
luxurious food-stuffs.
The
fish is as white as chicken, delicious and
sweet smelling but not crushed. There are
two ways to prepare for the dish: Boiled
down or bloating fried.
In
bloating fried way, pour plenty of oil into
pan, wait for the oil to boil before placing
the fish in. In boiled oil, fish scabs would
be raised up as porcupine's feathers. As
serving, place the fish on to the plate,
arrange boiled quail eggs around with, fried
potato, fresh onion and tomato slices at the
edge, season with chilly.
Finally, pour soup and sprinkle fried
peanuts and crashed onion on to the fish.
The dish is served with sour and sweet sauce
of fish. Ca tai tuong chien xu is an
unique and luxurious specialty in the South.
Ca nuong trui (Bare fried fish)
The
Southern villagers in countryside areas
usually have fried fish in the field. They
use a bamboo piece to cross through the
fish. Pitch the head side to ground, pile up
rice straws at the wind-swept place to smoke
fish.
As
serving, use hand to remove the burned fish
scabs. Fish will become as white as chicken.
Place the hot fish on a lotus leaf, take up
each piece of fish and dip it in peppery
salt, squeeze with some lemon drops, roll in
fig leaf or sesame young shoot to experience
the dish. Bowl and chopsticks are not
necessary. At home, the dish can be served
with dry pancake, soft noodle soup and
vegetables. Ca nuong trui is a dish
that accompanies drinking. It is popular and
exciting.
Ca kho to (Dry-boiled catfish)
Fish,
which used to prepare for the dish, can be
catfish, anabas or snake-head fish.
Necessary spices include dry garlic, fresh
lemon, onion, chilly, sugar, glutamate, fish
sauce, grease, and a spoon of pepper and
wine.
Although Ca kho to is a popular dish
in the South, it is also a cheap specialty.
As serving, pick up fish to other bowl, boil
the bowl of fish on a low fire and sprinkle
some peppers to have sweet-smelling: Keep
fire when serving, Ca kho to can be
served with such boiled vegetables as
shallot, white cabbage, spinach to dip in
Ca kho to sauce. It is more convenient
to serve it with pickles such as vinegary
beet or green pineapple.
Cua rang muoi (Fried salted crabs)
The Westerners, especially those in
land-locked countries, usually appreciate
the dish as soon as they firstly experience
it.
At
parties, a plate of bright red Cua rang
muoi is usually acted as aperitif.
Customers suddenly feel sweet-smelling of
spices and delicious buttery flavor of crab
at the same time. Highly qualified chefs in
Vung Tau coastal area usually select
brackish water crabs with much meat and
liver-pancreas. A delicious crab dish also
depends on the soup, added to frying crabs
in pans, including star aniseed, cinnamon,
cardamom.
The
connoisseurs immediately experience the dish
as it is still very hot, mixed with some
lemon drops. |
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Tuberose (Hoa Hue)
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Tuberoses belong to the daffodil species. They are short and grow thin flowers.
(Detail)
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Tuberose (Hoa Hue) |
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Tuberoses belong to the daffodil species.
They are short and grow thin flowers. |
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Tuberose plants absorb a lot of sunlight,
but can still grow in the winter when most
other species become scarce. Their blossoms
are pure white and emanate a sweet fragrance
at night. They are often used in religious
ceremonies. |
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Chrysanthemum (Hoa Cuc)
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The chrysanthemum is a type of beautiful flower with a mild and secretive scent.
Its petals do not fall like those of roses or other flowers, which is why chrysanthemums are often placed on altars.
(Detail)
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Chrysanthemum (Hoa Cuc) |
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The chrysanthemum is a type of beautiful
flower with a mild and secretive scent. Its
petals do not fall like those of roses or
other flowers, which is why chrysanthemums
are often placed on altars. |
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They can be displayed in various ways, such
as in a vase, a pot, a bowl, or planted in
jars to decorate the house, or be placed on
the balcony or on the veranda.
Chrysanthemums are classified into two
classes, single or double flowers. All the
varieties have very refined and soft colours;
there are often yellow and white flowers.
Chrysanthemums are planted all year round.
The chrysanthemum is often looked upon as an
intimate friend, classified as one of the
gentlemanly flowers. The chrysanthemum has
many uses in art and medicine. |
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Peach Flower (Hoa Dao)
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The peach flower plant grows only in North Vietnam. It is the special flower of the Vietnamese
New Year because of its red colour, which is believed to bring many favourable opportunities throughout the year.
(Detail)
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Peach Flower (Hoa Dao) |
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The peach flower plant grows only in North
Vietnam. It is the special flower of the
Vietnamese New Year because of its red
colour, which is believed to bring many
favourable opportunities throughout the
year. |
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There are four varieties of peach flowers.
The dao bich has a deep rosy colour and the
plant bears many flowers; it is usually
planted in jars or pots for entertaining
during the New Year. The dao phai
(pale peach flower) flower is a pale rosy
colour and the plant bears many flowers, but
is generally planted for its fruits. The
dao bach (white peach flower) is
relatively difficult to grow. These three
varieties of peach flowers all bear double
flowers. The that thon plant is small
and low; the flowers are small and of many
colours.
Among those colours, those that are deep red
are generally grown in pots and their trunks
and branches generally bend so that it
becomes an ornamental plant. The sprigs of
the peach flowers from the of Nhat Tan are a
precious gift sent to relatives living in
the South on the occasion of the New Year.
The peach flower plant and its flowers are
now present in many European countries.
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Orchid (Hoa Lan)
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Orchid is sovereign flowers that are enchantingly beautiful. Orchids usually grow on the trunks of very high,
big trees, located on cliffs where it is humid and where sunlight is abundant.
(Detail)
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Orchid (Hoa Lan) |
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Orchid is sovereign flowers that are
enchantingly beautiful. Orchids usually grow
on the trunks of very high, big trees,
located on cliffs where it is humid and
where sunlight is abundant. |
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There are two groups of orchids, including
aerial orchids (phong lan) and
terrestrial orchids (dia lan).
Aerial orchids usually have their roots
anchored in high, big trees and their
branches hang down from the tree trunks.
They have very thin petals, but their
colours are time enduring. Their scent is
very mild, soft, and pure. Terrestrial
orchids, on the contrary, have their roots
anchored in the earth or a hollow in a rock
where there is humus or litter. The
terrestrial orchids, with varieties that
include bach cap, to tam,
hoang vu, anh kim, hac dinh,
loan diem, etc., have bright colours
and mild and flowing scents.
Orchids come from the mountainous regions of
the country, but because of their amiable
beauty, they are present in all the famous
flower villages on the plains. The Dalat
Flower Garden is an almost complete
collection of all of the precious and rare
orchids of Vietnam |
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Yellow Apricot Flower (Hoa Mai)
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If the peach flower is the symbol of Tet in the north, then the yellow apricot flower is its counterpart in the South. The yellow apricot flower belongs to the family of hoang mai (meaning “yellow apricot” in Chinese), which is a forest plant.
(Detail)
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Yellow Apricot Flower (Hoa Mai) |
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If the peach flower is the symbol of Tet in
the north, then the yellow apricot flower is
its counterpart in the South. The yellow
apricot flower belongs to the family of
hoang mai (meaning “yellow apricot” in
Chinese), which is a forest plant. |
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The trunk and sprigs of the yellow apricot
flower are suppler than those of the peach
plant. The flowers grow in bunches and have
stalks that hang loosely near the branches
at the side of the leaves. The flowers are
yellow and their scent is modestly
secretive. The leaves of the yellow apricot
flower fall in the winter. There are
varieties of yellow apricot, including
mai tu qui (apricot of all seasons) and
nhi do mai, which begin to produce
red coloured fruit after blossoming.
Mai chieu thuy, the aquatic variety of
apricot flower, have small leaves and small
flowers that blossom in white, scented
bunches. Mai chieu thuy, which blossoms in
the spring, is generally planted in small
rock gardens. Its trunk and branches are
trimmed and bent so that it becomes a
sculptured plant.
The apricot plant, which is planted to give
flowers on the occasion of the New Year is
planted from seeds or by the grafting of
branches. The plant can be planted in
gardens, in flowerbeds, or in pots.
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Lotus (Hoa Sen)
Lotus is a soft plant
living mainly in water. This pink or white
flower belongs to a species of plant called
hollyhock. Another species of lotus with a very
small trunk, leaves, and flowers is named little
lotus. It can be planted in a vase of water or
in an ornamental pond.
(Detail)
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Lotus (Hoa Sen) |
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Lotus is a soft plant living mainly in
water. This pink or white flower belongs to
a species of plant called hollyhock. Another
species of lotus with a very small trunk,
leaves, and flowers is named little lotus.
It can be planted in a vase of water or in
an ornamental pond.
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Lotus flowers have been growing for millions
of years. In Vietnam, the lotus is
classified as one the four gentlemanly
flowers along with pine, bamboo, and
chrysanthemum. The lotus is also classified
as one in the four qui (four seasons), which
also includes orchid, chrysanthemum, and
apricot. Lotus is the symbol of summer
because it blossoms in summer when there is
a lot of sunlight and its scent lightly
perfumes the air all around the pond.
Lotus flowers are used in different ways:
the flowers are offered to deities, the
seeds are used for tea, and the leaves are
used to wrap green rice. Lotus seeds can
also be made into a tonic medicine and
anesthetic and into an ingredient for sweet
soup and other recipes.
Lotus flowers generally bloom during the
summer since they require plenty of light.
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Water Lily (Hoa Sung)
Water lilies, which often
grow wild in ponds and lakes, are classified
into two species: lotus water lilies, planted in
lakes around pagodas and imperial palaces; and
wild water lilies, found in ponds, with a white
or violet flower.
(Detail)
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Water Lily (Hoa Sung) |
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Water lilies, which often grow wild in ponds
and lakes, are classified into two species:
lotus water lilies, planted in lakes around
pagodas and imperial palaces; and wild water
lilies, found in ponds, with a white or
violet flower. |
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In the south, the stem of lotus water lily
is used in meals.
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Grapefruit (Buoi)
In Vietnam, there are many tasty
varieties of grapefruit. Ordinarily, the
grapefruit is named for the locality where it is
grown. For example, in the North, there is the
Doan Hung grapefruit (Phu Tho Province), in the
Central there is the Phuc Trach grapefruit (Ha
Tinh Province), and in the South there is the
Tan Trieu grapefruit (Bien Hoa Province).
(Detail)
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Grapefruit (Buoi) |
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In Vietnam, there are many tasty varieties
of grapefruit. Ordinarily, the grapefruit is
named for the locality where it is grown.
For example, in the North, there is the Doan
Hung grapefruit (Phu Tho Province), in the
Central there is the Phuc Trach grapefruit
(Ha Tinh Province), and in the South there
is the Tan Trieu grapefruit (Bien Hoa
Province). |
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Each variety has a unique taste. The Phuc
Trach grapefruit has the distinguishable
sweet taste of the glucose that is dissolved
in the fruit and a fresh taste that slightly
permeates your body and makes your spirit
light. There are many different scents and
tastes of the Tan Trieu grapefruits. The
thanh tra is mildly sweet and somewhat
acidic. The buoi duong (grapefruit as
sweet as sugar) is very sweet. The buoi
xiem (Siamese grapefruit) has a rosy
core and a light sweet taste.
In Dong Thap Province (Plain of Rushes),
there is a variety of grapefruit that does
not have any seeds, called nam roi.
When it ripens, it bears a yellow colour and
is as sweet as the buoi duong. |
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Rambutan (chom chom)
A rambutan
tree has broad foliage and many
branches. In the southern provinces,
the tree yields fruit at the
beginning of the rainy season. The
rambutan season lasts until the end
of the rainy season (from May to
October).
(Detail)
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Rambutan (chom chom) |
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A rambutan tree has broad foliage and many
branches. In the southern provinces, the
tree yields fruit at the beginning of the
rainy season. The rambutan season lasts
until the end of the rainy season (from May
to October). |
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The skin of this fruit is tough, thick and
hairy. Its meat is transparent white and
tender, and has a cool sweet taste in the
mouth. The most reputed rambutan fruit
nation-wide is grown in Binh Hoa Phuoc
Village (Long Ho District, Vinh Long
Province), some 50km north of Ho Chi Minh
City. During the rambutan season one can
notice the typical bright red colour of
rambutan fruit stands located in the
markets, along road and at intersections
throughout the southern provinces.
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Banana (Chuoi)
Bananas offer various
mineral substances and
energy. Bananas are not
only a delicious fruit
when ripe, but green
bananas are also part of
some dishes.
(Detail)
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Banana (Chuoi) |
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Bananas offer various mineral substances and
energy. Bananas are not only a delicious
fruit when ripe, but green bananas are also
part of some dishes. |
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Banana flower is mixed in delicious salads.
Banana tree trunks, when young, can be eaten
as a vegetable, and banana tree roots can be
cooked with fish, or mixed in salads.
Several banana varieties grow all over the
country. Tieu bananas are the most
popular kind; they are small and smell sweet
when ripe. Ngu and Cau bananas
are small with a thin peel. Tay
bananas are short, big, and straight, and
can be fried or cooked in meals. Tra Bot
bananas are widely planted in the south;
their peel is yellow or brown when ripe with
a white pulp. When Tra Bot bananas are not
ripe, they taste sour. In the Southeast,
there are a lot of Bom bananas. They
look like Cau bananas, but their peel
is thicker and their pulp is not as sweet. |
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Pineapple (Dua)
Pineapple plants are
widely grown in the country. The peak ripening
time for this tropical fruit coincides with
summer when the hours of sunshine are longer.
People in southern Vietnam usually call this
tropical fruit trai thom (fragrant
fruit), which is literally a precise quote for
the fruit since anyone who takes their first
bite can surely notice the strong sweet smell.
Since the smell of the pineapples lingers longer
than that of some other fruits, connoisseurs
find it difficult to forget.
(Detail)
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Pineapple (Dua) |
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Pineapple plants are widely grown in the
country. The peak ripening time for this
tropical fruit coincides with summer when
the hours of sunshine are longer. People in
southern
Vietnam usually
call this tropical fruit trai thom
(fragrant fruit), which is literally a
precise quote for the fruit since anyone who
takes their first bite can surely notice the
strong sweet smell. Since the smell of the
pineapples lingers longer than that of some
other fruits, connoisseurs find it difficult
to forget. |
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Pineapples are processed into different
products such as canned pineapple, pineapple
liquor, sweet preserved pineapple liquor,
and sweet preserved pineapple. There is also
a special juicy drink that exists only in
pineapple growing areas. Growers press the
fruit into a juice which is then mixed with
the yoke of a hen's egg before being
thoroughly stirred together to become a
muddy drink. The drink is said to be very
sweet, creamy, and nutritious.
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Papaya (Du du)
Papaya is sold
all year round, especially in the
south, and is not very expensive. It
has a sweet smell and offers various
minerals and vitamins, such as
vitamin A and C.
(Detail)
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Papaya (Du du) |
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Papaya is sold all year round, especially in
the south, and is not very expensive. It has
a sweet smell and offers various minerals
and vitamins, such as vitamin A and C.
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In the south, one of the popular varieties
of papaya is the one with red, thick pulp
that has a fragrance but that does not
contain much sugar. This species is grown in
the Mekong Delta Region and in the area
close to the Cambodian border. Another
species of papaya available in the south is
the one with yellow or orange peel.
Papayas are not as abundant in the north.
Because of the colder climate, fruits take a
longer time to ripen. |
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Longan (Nhan)
The longan grows in many
provinces in the North.
The longan is no bigger
than a ping-pong ball
with brownish peel. The
peel only has to be
slightly removed to
reach the whitish pulp,
enclosing the glistening
black kernel.
(Detail)
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Longan (Nhan) |
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The longan grows in
many provinces in the North. The longan is
no bigger than a ping-pong ball with
brownish peel. The peel only has to be
slightly removed to reach the whitish pulp,
enclosing the glistening black kernel.
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There are many varieties of longans. The
most renowned variety of longan is the cage
longan of Hung Yen Province. There are
varieties that have a thick pulp and a very
sweet taste called pulp longan. Water
longans have a thin watery pulp and a fresh
sweet taste. In the South, there is the
longan of Chau Thanh (Dong Thap Province),
which is fairly renowned. This variety has a
watery pulp, a very sweet taste, a perfumed
scent, and small black seeds, which is why
it is called nhan tieu (pepper grain
longan).
The longan is a tropical fruit rich in
nutrients. It is used in the preparation of
sweet lotus seed soups. A longan that has
been rid of its black kernel then dried over
a fire is called long nhan
(literally: dragon’s eyes); it is one of the
tonics used in the recipes of traditional
medicine. |
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Custard Apple (Mang cau - Na)
In
Vietnam,
there are
two kinds of
custard
apple: firm
and soft.
Both
varieties
can have
various
shapes, for
example they
can be round
or oval.
When a
custard
apples is
ripe, it is
easy to
peel. The
peel is
thick,
green, and
covered with
white or
green
pollen. The
pulp is
white or
light yellow
and contains
many black
seeds.
(Detail)
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Custard Apple (Mang cau - Na) |
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In
Vietnam, there are two kinds of custard
apple: firm and soft. Both varieties can
have various shapes, for example they can be
round or oval. When a custard apples is
ripe, it is easy to peel. The peel is thick,
green, and covered with white or green
pollen. The pulp is white or light yellow
and contains many black seeds.
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In the south, custard apples call mang
cau, ripen in July, but not all at the
same time. Firm custard apples are densely
grown in the south, mainly in Ninh Thuan and
Ba Ria - Vung Tau provinces. Xiem
custard apples are oval or heart shaped.
Their peel is green with thorns, which turn
black when the fruit is ripe. The fruits are
generally big and can reach 1.5 kg. The pulp
is white, hard, and a bit sour.
Custard apple trees deliver fruit after
three or four years of growth. A tree
produces on average from 50 to 100 fruits
per year. The fruits ripen on the tree and
then cracks, especially during the rainy
season. |
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Persimmon (Hong)
Vietnam has many kinds of
persimmon such as my with yellow fruit
and cado with small fruit. Persimmon is
famous for providing a lot of sugar and vitamin
A. Persimmon fruits contain as much vitamin C as
oranges and tangerines, and their pulp does not
have a sour taste.
(Detail)
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Persimmon (Hong) |
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Vietnam
has many kinds of persimmon such as my
with yellow fruit and cado with small
fruit. Persimmon is famous for providing a
lot of sugar and vitamin A. Persimmon fruits
contain as much vitamin C as oranges and
tangerines, and their pulp does not have a
sour taste. |
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Persimmon can be either round or in the
shape of a heart. Persimmon fruits are
divided into two kinds: bitter and sweet.
Bitter persimmon fruits are edible when they
are green and hard, but is very sweet when
the fruit is ripe. The fruit of sweet
persimmon are always sweet, even when green
and hard.
In the
north, persimmon is grown widely; the most
popular varieties include Lang
persimmon in Lang Son and Hac
persimmon in Hac Tri. In the south,
persimmon can only be planted in the
highlands of Dalat.
In
Oriental medicine, persimmon is considered
effective to reduce high blood pressure and
relieve abdominal pain. Persimmon trees can
be trimmed into ornamental trees. When their
leaves fall down, fruits still hang onto the
branches. |
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Sapodilla (Hong xiem)
Sapodilla was
imported to
Vietnam a long
time ago. In the last 20 years,
sapodilla has been widely planted in
the north, where it grew for the
first time in Xuan Dinh, Tu Liem
District,
Hanoi.
(Detail)
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Sapodilla (Hong xiem) |
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Sapodilla was imported to Vietnam a long
time ago. In the last 20 years, sapodilla
has been widely planted in the north, where
it grew for the first time in Xuan Dinh, Tu
Liem District, Hanoi. |
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Sapodilla fruit is shaped like an egg and
weighs from 10 to 200 grams. Its peel is
brown with tiny cracks near the stalk. The
pulp, which is brown and yellow, is very
juicy and smells very sweet. When it is not
ripe, it is not edible because it contains a
lot of sticky resin.
There
are two popular species of sapodilla grown
in Vietnam: orange pulp and white-yellow
pulp sapodilla. The orange pulp sapodilla is
planted in the north on the highlands. The
pulp of the white-yellow sapodilla is light
yellow or yellow and the peel is green or
yellow. The peel is thin; the pulp is soft
and has taste of peach, banana, and apple.
Sapodilla flower consecutively bloom in
bunches so that it has fruits to offer
throughout the year. |
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Mangosteen (Mang Cut)
Hidden among dense
foliage, big as a fist
and brownish-violet in
colour, is the
mangosteen. When eating
a mangosteen, use a
knife to cut around the
fruit and to remove half
of the shell.
(Detail)
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Mangosteen (Mang Cut) |
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Hidden among dense
foliage, big as a fist and brownish-violet
in colour, is the mangosteen. When eating a
mangosteen, use a knife to cut around the
fruit and to remove half of the shell.
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The inside of the mangosteen is arranged in
white, soft sections, and is freshly
scented. There are three varieties of
mangosteens: the first variety is a little
acidic, the second is as sweet as candy,
with big segments and a thin shell, and the
last variety, called doi mangosteen,
has crisp segments. The mangosteen season
ordinarily lasts from May to August.
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Jackfruit (Mit)
Jackfruits contain a lot
of sugar and calories. They grow on every part
of the tree: the trunk, branches, and even on
the roots.
(Detail)
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Jackfruit (Mit) |
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Jackfruits contain a lot of sugar and
calories. They grow on every part of the
tree: the trunk, branches, and even on the
roots. |
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Jackfruit trees bear approximately 150 to
200 fruits per year. When the fruit are
ripe, their pulp is yellow and sweet,
containing a lot or little juice depending
on the species. Jackfruits without seeds are
planted densely in the Mekong Delta Region.
To
nu jackfruits are small and come from a
short tree. The flesh of ripe fruit is
firmly stuck to the core; when eating a
jackfruit, simply hold the core and pull it
out. In the south, the to nu
jackfruit harvest season starts from March
to June. There are several other species of
jackfruits divided into two main groups:
hard jackfruits with hard and crunchy flesh,
and soft jackfruits with soft flesh and a
lot of juice. |
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Durian (Sau Rieng)
You may wonder why this
fruit has to bear such an austere name as "sau
rieng" (one's own sorrows). If you are curious
enough, travel to the orchard province in
southern
Vietnam where
the locals are likely to recite the immortal
love story.
(Detail)
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Durian (Sau Rieng) |
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You may wonder why this fruit has to bear
such an austere name as "sau rieng" (one's
own sorrows). If you are curious enough,
travel to the orchard province in southern
Vietnam where
the locals are likely to recite the immortal
love story. |
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Long ago, there was a young couple that
lived in the region. Because of social
prejudices that could not be overcome, the
couple sought their own deaths in order to
be faithful to each other. Their own sorrows
received the population's sympathies, and
the story of their tragedy has been handed
down from generation to generation. To
commemorate the couple, the locals have
named one of their most valuable fruits
sau rieng.
Durian is an expensive fruit. One durian
fruit is five to six times larger than a
mango. Its skin is thick, rough, and covered
with sharp thorns. With a gentle cut between
the edges of the outer shell, you can easily
open the fruit to expose the layers of
bright yellow segments of meat that make the
pulp look like it is covered with a thin
layer of butter.
Literature writer Mai Van Tao once wrote
about the particularly good smell of the
durian. He wrote, "The dense fragrance which
spreads near and far, lingers a long time
before disappearing. The strong smell can go
straight to your nostrils, even though you
are still several meters away from the
fruit. The fragrance of durian is a mixture
of smells which come from a ripening
jackfruit and that of a shaddock. It can
also be compared to the strong smell of
foreign-made cheese and is rich as a hen's
egg. Others describe the fruit as sweet as
well-kept honey. All things considered,
durian has a special tempting smell.Those
who have not enjoyed the fruit before may
find it hard to eat. But once they have
tried it, they are likely to seek it again."
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Thieu Litchi (Vai Thieu)
Thieu is the name
dedicated to a special kind of litchi grown in
Hai Duong Province. The Thieu Litchi is a bit
bigger than the longan.
(Detail)
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Thieu Litchi (Vai Thieu) |
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Thieu is the name dedicated to a special
kind of litchi grown in Hai Duong Province.
The Thieu Litchi is a bit bigger than the
longan. |
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Unlike the skin of the longan, which is
rather smooth, the dark red skin of the
litchi is rough and rippled.The meat of the
litchi is also transparent white, but it is
thicker and juicier than that of a longan.
The litchi seed is also smaller than the
longan seed. |
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Star Apple (vu sua)
Star apple is a fruit
commonly grown in Southern orchards. Entering a
star apple orchard, you will see thousands of
these fruit hanging loosely on branches. They
have smooth peel that is either green or violet.
(Detail)
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Star Apple (vu sua) |
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Star apple is a fruit
commonly grown in Southern orchards.
Entering a star apple orchard, you will see
thousands of these fruit hanging loosely on
branches. They have smooth peel that is
either green or violet.
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The inside is shaped like a star, which is
why it is called a star apple. (In
Vietnamese, its name (vu sua) evokes
a woman’s breast because of its milky
flesh.) Before eating a star apple, press
your hands evenly around the fruit until it
gets very soft; then with a knife, cut it
into two parts. With a spoon, grate the pulp
until only the outer cover remains. In
summer, a glass of star apple soaked in
sweetly sugared iced water has no rivals
among refreshing drinks.
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Green dragon (Thanh long)
Green dragon is the name of a newly
cultivated fruit. It is rather big, weighs from
200 to 500 grams, and has pink or dark-red
colour. The ripe fruit looks like the kohlrabi
cabbage and has an oval shape.
(Detail)
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Green dragon (Thanh long) |
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Green dragon is the name of a newly
cultivated fruit. It is rather big, weighs
from 200 to 500 grams, and has pink or
dark-red colour. The ripe fruit looks like
the kohlrabi cabbage and has an oval shape.
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When ripe, the fruit peels as easily as a
banana. Its pulp is white and gelatinous.
The pulp contains many seeds that cannot be
extracted. The seeds taste like cactus,
giving the fruit a sweet and sour taste.
Before
1945, green dragon fruits were not sold in
southern markets. It is said that Americans
brought green dragon fruits to the south.
From Phan Thiet to Nha Trang or from Ninh
Hoa to Buon Ma Thuot, bushes of green dragon
fruits can be seen climbing to tree trunks
in gardens and even on doors.
Different from any other southern fruit, its
harvest season is particular; fruits become
available in markets in October, November,
April, and May. They are more expensive in
October and April, since there are smaller
quantities available. |
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Mango (Xoai)
Mango plants are widely
grown in the Southern provinces. There are many
varieties of mangoes, including the Cat mango
(Ben Cat mango), Hon mango, Thanh Ca mango,
Tuong mango (elephant mango), Xiem mango
(Siamese mango), Coc mango (toad mango)...
(Detail)
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Mango (Xoai) |
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Mango plants are widely grown in the
Southern provinces. There are many varieties
of mangoes, including the Cat mango (Ben Cat
mango), Hon mango, Thanh Ca mango, Tuong
mango (elephant mango), Xiem mango (Siamese
mango), Coc mango (toad mango)...
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They are all very tasty, each having its own
scent and taste. The mango of Ben Cat is
nevertheless the most famous. It has a
special scent and taste that is perfumed and
deeply sweet; the fruit is yellowish and
round, and some fruit can weigh up to half a
kilogram. The mango season lasts from March
to May. |
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