what i'm eating and drinking in Ha Noi

Make Your Own Chè

Posted: June 7th, 2009 | Author: Josh Riedel | Filed under: Sweets and Treats | No Comments »


Che (Vietnamese Sweet Dessert Soup) - More DIY How To Projects


My Hanoi Street Food Guide

Posted: June 4th, 2009 | Author: Josh Riedel | Filed under: Breakfast, Dinner, Drinks, Lunch, Snacks, Sweets and Treats | No Comments »

Some of you might be interested in the Hanoi street food guide I made on Nextstop. It’s a collection of all the dishes I think anyone who visits Hanoi or Vietnam should try to eat before they leave. Most of the places listed in the guide were brought to my attention by my students, friends and some of the food blogs I read.





Be sure to look around Nextstop while you’re on the site. It’s an easy way to share information about where you’ve lived and traveled and to learn about where you’re going next. I’ve also been using the site as a way to preserve some of my memories of the places I’ve visited or lived (see my Switzerland guide).


Huế Highlights

Posted: May 5th, 2009 | Author: Josh Riedel | Filed under: Dinner, Drinks, Lunch, Snacks, Sweets and Treats | No Comments »

We just returned from our vacation to the imperial city of Hue, the culinary capital of Viet Nam. According to various guidebooks, we can thank Emperor Tu Duc for the city’s culinary diversity: when the former emperor sat down for dinner, he insisted on being served fifty different dishes, each prepared by a different chef. Of course, the chefs didn’t always create entirely new dishes–they’d make minor alterations to meals by mixing up the garnishes, for instance–but they certainly did manage to diversify the cuisine in the region quite a bit.

100_0412Our first mission was to find nem lụi and bánh khoai1. Nem lụi is grilled minced pork that comes on a bamboo stick. Like almost all the pork I ate in Hue, it’s brushed with some kind of shrimp sauce that makes it taste a little sweet2. You build each roll of nem lụi at your table by putting some greens on a sheet of rice paper, pulling the pork off the stick and onto the paper, and rolling it all up into a “nem.” Then you dip it in peanut sauce and enjoy. Bánh khoai is a fried rice flour pancake filled with bean sprouts, pork and shrimp. So greasy and delicious.

Desserts in Hue are fantastic. I had my first glass of chè–a gooey, gloppy drink that originated in Hue–on a street corner near the Perfume River. The drink consists of crushed ice and coconut milk plus whatever else the chè-maker feels like throwing into the glass that day. You drink/eat chè with a spoon, and each bite tastes different. In the photo, the chè on the right contained red beans, sweet corn and tapioca, among various other ingredients. At another chè place, we had chè xoa xoa, which, according to our Vietnemese friends3, literally translates as “chè touch touch.” Chè touch touch consists of a bunch of colorful jello-like squares4. I also tried chè heo quay, which is essentially a glass of crushed ice and coconut milk with about 6-8 pork dumplings thrown in. Pork in a dessert drink confused my tastebuds, but didn’t stop me from gulping it down. We also tried lotus chè and banana chè, both refreshing and a little less extreme.

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Another popular drink is nước mía, or sugarcane juice. Ours came in a clear plastic bag, like the kind goldfish come in, with a straw sticking out. The best thing about nước mía is that the stands are easy to spot: you just look for a bucket of sugarcane stalks next to a metal crank-powered stalk-crushing machine. (Lucky for us, in the last week or so a few chè and nước mía stands have popped up on our street in Hanoi.)

We also found some scrumptious candy. One is a gooey sesame seed-covered square5, and the other is a tiny peanut bar6 that tastes sort of like a Payday, minus the sticky caramel part.

  1. known as bánh xèo in Hanoi and Saigon []
  2. This sauce is made from shrimp paste (mắm tôm) mixed with garlic, chilies, and caster sugar []
  3. or, rather, according to their guesses, which were presented in the form of song lyrics []
  4. We all agreed that the name must refer to the interesting way these squares feel in one’s mouth []
  5. kẹo mè xửng []
  6. kẹo đậu []

Cakes on Bach Mai

Posted: April 13th, 2009 | Author: Josh Riedel | Filed under: Sweets and Treats | No Comments »

Bach Mai is the name of a street near our house. Here you can find all sorts of mattresses and pillows, faux-designer shoes and shirts, as well as cakes. A few weeks ago, we took our first stroll down Bach Mai in hopes of finding a birthday cake for Erin. We weren’t able to spot a bakery right away, so we crossed to the other side of the street and began walking back towards our house, resigned to try our luck on another street. This is when we realized that while one side of Bach Mai is completely devoid of cakes, the other side is lined with them. We stopped at a small stand, much like the one below, and bought this beautiful cake from a young girl for 60 000vnd (~$3.40USD)

Happy Birthday Erin!

Happy Birthday Erin!

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A cake stand on Bach Mai

What’s probably more amazing than the decorations on these cakes is where they’re made. We weren’t able to catch the baker in action, but here, right behind the cake stand, is the alleyway where she makes all of the cakes displayed above.

the alley behind the cake case where all the cakes are made

the very narrow alleyway where all the cakes are made

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We stumbled upon these decorative cakes a few meters down the road from the stand above.

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A smiling bunny rabbit cake? Perhaps for Easter?

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a tiny blue-eared pig creature and his fantastical world of icing and giant roses