Showing posts with label Trang. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trang. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

New bar at Sheraton Nha Trang rules the sky

The five-star international hotel, Sheraton Nha Trang has added a highpoint to the local bar-scene with the opening of the Altitude Bar on the hotel’s 28th floor making it the highest bar in the central coastal city.

Open from 4  p.m. to 8  p.m. daily, the bar with stunning sunset views of one of the world’s most beautiful bays offers a wide selection of wines, champagne, cocktails, mocktails, juices, spirits, beers, coffee and soft drinks.

Michiel de Kleer, the hotel’s director of food and beverage (F&B), says both hotel guests and Nha Trang locals would enjoy the Altitude bar. “This is one of the best spots to watch the sunset in Nha Trang and enjoy the scene of the seaside city lit up at night.”

The hotel is launching a series of F&B and spa promotions in March. On March 8 or Women’s Day, every female guest will receive a rose and complimentary soft drinks when she has lunch at Steam n’ Spice, the dim sum and noodle shop on the first floor, and a special mocktail of the day with the dinner buffet at Feast.

One complimentary manicure or pedicure session will be given to female customers who purchase any spa package or 90-minute massage at the Shine Spa. For the entire March, guests can enjoy the Shine Romantic Package of a relaxing bath, 60-minute Shine Facial therapy and one-hour soothing Shine Aroma Massage from VND3.29 million for two persons.

Throughout March, guests who dine at Feast will stand a chance to win a prize of a two night weekend stay at Sheraton Saigon.

For more information and reservations, call (058) 388 0000 or email dining.nhatrang@sheraton.com.

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Friday, January 28, 2011

Sheraton Nha Trang celebrates Tet in style

The Sheraton Nha Trang Hotel & Spa, is gearing up for its first Tet celebration with an exciting line-up of events and activities. On Jan. 29, the hotel will host a dinner for 30 children from the local Nhan Ai Orphanage and distribute li xi (lucky money).

On Feb. 2, the last day of the Year of the Tiger, guests are invited to enjoy a special buffet dinner priced at VND500,000++ per adult and VND250,000++ per child aged 3-11. Later that evening, Nha Trang lights up with a spectacular fireworks display, best viewed from Sheraton Nha Trang’s 28th-floor sky bar, Altitude. The entrance fee is VND500,000 nett per person, inclusive of two drinks of your choice (wine, beer, soft drinks). On the first morning of the New Year, the hotel will organize a calligraphy session in the hotel lobby and a traditional lion dance show.

Between Jan. 28 and Feb. 15, Sheraton Nha Trang is offering a special Tet package of VND2.3 million++ per room per night, inclusive of accommodation in a Deluxe Ocean View Room, buffet breakfast for two adults, free breakfast for children under 12 years sharing the room with parents (maximum two children per room), 15% discount on food and beverage and Shine Spa body treatments (except for packages), and 20% discount on laundry services. The festive package is applicable to Vietnamese nationals, overseas Vietnamese and expats working in Vietnam that book two nights or more.

For more information and reservations, call 058 388 0000 or email to reservations.nhatrang@sheraton.com

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Thursday, January 13, 2011

Cruise Nha Trang on King Yacht

King Yacht at Bao Dai wharf in the coastal city of Nha Trang. The new cruise takes in beautiful Nha Trang Bay - Photo: Hoang Long
Cruising is the best way to see Nha Trang Bay and what better way to cruise than the new four-star standard King Yacht.

The US$1 million 28m yacht can do speeds of 11 knots. With two decks including restaurant, bar on the lower and four rooms on the upper deck, visitors can indulge themselves on a lavish four-day tour of Saigontourist Travel Service Co. that departs from HCMC to meet The King in Nha Trang.

The yacht tour will start from Bao Dai Wharf in Nha Trang city and then cruise to Tre, Mun, Mot, Tam and Mieu islands. Cruise around Mun islet for swimming, coral reef diving and fishing before stopping at Tri Nguyen aquarium. Guests on board the motor yacht can also request stops at sights they choose along the way.

Mun Island’s marine protected area has 1,500 kinds of corals and hundreds of sea creatures making it a prime diving and snorkeling site. Saigontourist’s tour guides and instructors will guide visitors to discover the underwater world. Even people who cannot swim can easily explore the coral reefs, just 10 meters underwater.

The tour also visits sights around Nha Trang and the Thap Ba Hot Spring Mudbath.

The first tour will leave HCMC on January 22, and then head off every Saturday after that. Costs are VND 3.4-5.7 million a ticket. Guests can book by calling 08 3833. 6442 or logging onto http://www.dulichtet.com

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Friday, December 3, 2010

Postcard paradise

Bai Tru Beach on Hon Tre Islet in Nha Trang City - Photo: Dang Hoang Tham
Bai Tru Beach on Hon Tre Islet in Nha Trang City is one of the nicest beaches in Vietnam – a tropical paradise for tourists to enjoy.

To get to the islet, take a taxi to Cau Da Port and then take a cable car to Vinpearl Land at VND320,000 return. After playing some games at the Vinpearl Land such as outdoor games, 4D movies, water sports at Vinpearl Water Park and a visit to the bizarre marine creatures at Vinpearl Underwater World, it’s just a few steps more and your toes will be squeaking in the fine white sand of Bai Tru Beach.

The beach is like a postcard. There are lines of coconut trees leaning toward the sea, blinding white sand, azure water that is as flat as bathtub and bungalows under the shade of the palms. Get yourself an umbrella or lay back on a reed mat under the coconut palms and let Bai Tru help you forget your worries.

You can hire a motor boat and cruise around the island, even hire some diving equipment to go underwater and admire the reef.

If thrills are your thing, try the hot air balloon to take in an amazing panoramic view of the islet and Nha Trang City.

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Friday, November 26, 2010

Rival for old ceramics village

A new craft village site, the Minh Hai ceramic village, which has been
built near the Bat Trang ceramic village, began welcoming tourists on
October, and offers more choice for tourists looking for a day out from
Hanoi.


Bat Trang village is a well-known half-day tour
from Hanoi, but the new site will offer travellers more choices in
exploring a large natural site with folk performances and a backdrop
modelled in the typical style of craft villages in the northern delta
region.


The 10-ha Vietnamese art village displays
different traditional handicraft trades, such as ceramics, silk,
woodwork and bamboo.


A lake stage has been set up at the
site to feature traditional Vietnamese folk performances such as “cheo”
(traditional opera), “chau van” (spiritual music), “quan ho” (love
duet), “ca tru” (ceremonial singing), and water puppetry twice a day
every Saturday and Sunday.


Visits cost from 150,000 VND (7.5 USD) to 300,000 VND (15 USD) for a day-time tour.


The cost includes pottery practices, cultural performances, lunch and fishing from the lake.


The site is a 20-minute bus journey from the city centre. The No 47 bus
leaves from Long Bien station to Bat Trang village every 15 minutes
from 5.30am to 8.20pm daily.


The bus route winds the 12km
river dyke from Chuong Duong bridge to the east and runs across the site
gate, which is 300m from Bat Trang.


Visitors can explore both the site and Bat Trang village over a few hours.


Hanoian Nghiem Huyen Trang and her friends visited the site as soon as it opened last month.


The 19-year-old student, who grew up in the Old Quarter, said she
enjoyed the peace and quiet of the place, just 20-minutes from the
crowded city centre.


Nguyen Minh Hai, the owner of the
Minh Hai craft village, designed the gate of the site in the shape of a
pottery-kiln, while pavilions and stilt houses surround a big lake.


The passageway imitates a stream with dotted stepping-bricks in the middle.


Hai, 40, who has 20 years of experience in the tourism and pottery
industries, wanted the site to offer a new look at traditional ceramic
villages.


"Bat Trang village has been long-known as a
pottery centre, but it's not easy to promote it as a charming
destination due to its polluted environment. Although villagers have
introduced gas furnaces to replace coal-fired kilns," said Hai.


"I launched the cart-buffalo service 10 years ago, but I want to lure tourists with a new tourist product," he added.


The site has different galleries showcasing silks from Van Phuc Village
in Ha Dong town; brocade weaving from Sa Pa ; wooden furniture,
rattan and bamboo products, terracotta from Bau Truc in Ninh Thuan
central province and precious stone from Yen Bai northern province .


"It's like a miniature centre for Vietnamese craft villages. I even
made myself a flower pot with the help of a craftsman in the ceramic
workshop," said Tran Thanh Van.


Van, 28, a shop assistant from Hanoi , said she was glad to make the clay pot within half an hour.


Craftsman Nguyen Van Doanh, 36, instructs visitors in practising with porcelain clay.


"I teach them how to form thing with hands and a slab-roller. It lets them do a bit of handicraft," Doanh said.


"Tourists can take home unfinished things that they make themselves. We
want to let visitors have a bit of fun for a few hours."


The tour closes with cultural performances./.

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Tuesday, October 26, 2010

The grave of Yersin – friend of the Vietnamese

The grave of doctor Alexandre Yersin on a hill near Nha Trang City - Photo: Anh Viet
On your tour of the central coast city of Nha Trang, after exploring the islands and beaches, you should head south on National Highway 1A for 20 kilometers to visit the grave of the physician and bacteriologist, Alexandre Yersin. The Swiss/French who had made Vietnam his home is best known for discovering the bacteria that causes the bubonic plague. The grave is in Suoi Cat Commune, Dien Khanh District, Khanh Hoa Province.

Accessed via a small trail, the grave is on a hill under the shade of rubber trees. The tombstone says he was a “Benefactor and humanist, venerated by the Vietnamese people”.

Yersin (1863-1943) was born in Switzerland to a Swiss father and a French mother. He studied in Switzerland and later moved to France where he obtained a degree in medicine. Yersin devoted 50 years of his life to work in Pasteur Institute

He traveled to Nha Trang for the first time in 1891. At the end of 1899, he came back and established the Pasteur Institute. He devoted 50 years of his life to microbiology, virology, and epidemic research and he developed a vaccine against the bubonic plague.

Living modestly, he gained the trust of Con hamlet villagers. He traveled in the mountains and recorded his observations. He also recommended to the government to establish a hill station in what is now Dalat.

Yersin died in Nha Trang on March 1, 1943. According to the instructions in his will, his body was buried with his face to the earth and facing the sea so that he could forever embrace his second homeland.

For the many things he did for Vietnam, he is the most beloved French person to the people here.

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Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Sheraton Nha Trang celebrates grand opening

Life Resort Danang gets five-stars

The Sheraton Nha Trang Hotel & Spa had its official opening last week after taking six months to complete the final touches.

“We opened in March, but in the last few months we’ve taken the product to the next level,” said Scott Hodgetts, the Sheraton Nha Trang’s general manager. “It’s only after every aspect of your operation has been finely-tuned that you can really celebrate the introduction of a tremendous hotel. We’re there now.”

Situated less than an hour’s flight from HCMC, the 30-storey, 284-room Sheraton Nha Trang drinks in views of Nha Trang Bay, which has been rated as one of the world’s most beautiful bays. The property offers both leisure and business travelers more accommodation options for their trip to the central coastal city.

“Blending the resort charm with modern comforts, the Sheraton Nha Trang Hotel & Spa is a choice addition to the Sheraton resort portfolio,” said Wayne Buckingham, regional vice president of Starwood Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia and Singapore. “The hotel offers visitors a variety of sites to explore and a wide selection of restaurants, markets and exciting adventures.”

Other facilities of the Sheraton Nha Trang on Tran Phu Street include the Wine Bar, the Shine Spa, the first purpose-built cooking school inside the hotel, a WiFi community lounge and a multi-purpose function room.

Sheraton is the largest and most global brand of Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc. – a global hotel and leisure company with over 980 properties in more than 100 countries and territories.

*The Vietnam National Administration of Tourism has recognized Life Resort Danang on Bac My An Beach near the ancient town of Hoi An as a five-star hotel.

The rating for the resort in the tourism and economic hub of central Vietnam comes more than half a year after the hotel was inaugurated

“We will always make every effort to become a destination for guests,” said Nguyen Thi Tuy Van, general director of Hoang Tra Travel and Trading Co. Ltd. – that owns the hotel. She added the five stars make a good contribution to constantly developing tourism in Vietnam and the beautiful coastal city of Danang.

Life Resort Danang’s 187 rooms are categorized in superior, deluxe, suite, villa and grand presidential suite standards. Besides, the resort has the 1,400 square-meter Nang Spa with 10 treatment rooms, a fitness center, tennis courts, a resort pool and conference facilities. Life Resorts now owns and operates the 94-room Life Heritage Resort Hoi An and the 63-room Life Wellness Resort Quy Nhon, as well as manages the 84-room Blue Ocean Resort at Mui Ne. The Dutch resort company plans to open a property on Halong Bay later in 2010.

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Monday, September 27, 2010

Rice done right

Tay Ninh Province is approximately 90 kilometers to the northwest of Ho Chi Minh City.

The area remains a popular tourist destination thanks to its lush forests and serene pagodas. But, for most foodies, Tay Ninh’s major draw is its local delicacies. Between banh trang phoi suong Trang Bang (Trang Bang dew-wetted rice paper) and banh canh (a thick Vietnamese noodle made from a mixture of rice and tapioca flour), the province is worth the visit.

Banh trang phoi suong Trang Bang

Rice paper is everywhere in HCMC. It typically appears at the table in piles of store-bought rounds and eats with the consistency of a raincoat.

To offset this, some moisten the sheets with water and fill them with tasty bits of meat and fresh herbs.

Trang Bang District’s “dew-wetted rice paper,” however, is the result of a painstaking, seven-step process.

The special ingredient is the rice itself. Tay Ninh varietals are known for their delicate fragrance and the trick to making good paper is remaining true to the grain’s original flavor.

When cooks want to make the rice paper, the grains are soaked for two to three hours.

The wet grains are then mixed with a little salt and ground into a sort of paste.

The processed mush is then spread in two thin layers on a cloth that is hung over a cauldron full of boiling water. The mixture is then spread out over a bamboo grid and left to dry in the sun.

The resulting paper is grilled over a fire of peanut shells. The cooks use a shallow pan to cook the double-layered paper and sniff the resulting smoke to ensure the fragrance is not lost.

HCMC LOCATIONS:

Hoang Ty Restaurant850 Xo Viet Nghe Tinh Street, Binh Thanh District

Tel: (08) 3 899 8820

691 B Xo Viet Nghe Tinh Street, Binh Thanh District

(08) 3 898 8789

106 Cao Thang Street, District 3

Tel: (08) 3 833 2077

Banh canh Trang Bang441 Nguyen Tri Phuong Street, District 5

Tel: (08) 3 856 1268

180 Ly Thai To Street, District 3

Tel: (08) 3 832 2532

The paper is then left out overnight, to be moistened by the evening dew. Ideally, these famed rice paper makers will yield a wrap that is, at once, soft, tender and springy. Most importantly, the final product should still bear the smell of the original rice plant.

Pork is also a crucial ingredient in the dish, therefore, it must be chosen carefully. Tay Ninh favors lean cuts from the rump which is selected for its thin skin.

The meat is then paired with locally-grown fresh herbs like basil, peppermint, and chives. Locals from the district are known to throw in thin slices of mango bud and perilla. Add some strips of pickled carrot and Daikon and you’re almost there. But this roll is nothing without the nation’s famed sweet and sour dipping sauce - comprised of fish sauce, sugar, garlic, lime and chili.

It costs around VND90,000 for a portion which easily feeds two.

Banh canh Trang Bang

Another Tay Ninh favorite is the famed banh canh Trang Bang (thick noodle soup with pork hock). The dish is comprised of a bowl of delicious bone broth filled with springy noodles, and spiced fish sauce.

A fatty and chewy smoked ham hock is plopped down in the center of the dish, which can intimidate some foreign eaters.

Ham hocks in the New World are typically smoked, stewed and discarded. But here in Vietnam, they are chewed gnawed and sucked clean of marrow.

Thick skinned, and chock full of tasty tendons, the hock should be tacked with a combination of spoon and pork chops. Just eat it! You won’t be sorry.

Thanks to a little help from the tapioca flour, the chewy banh canh noodles will have absorbed a good deal of that divine swine flavor.

A bowl of banh canh costs between VND27,000–40,000 depending on where you’re dining.

Related Articles

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Rice done right

Tay Ninh Province is approximately 90 kilometers to the northwest of Ho Chi Minh City.

The area remains a popular tourist destination thanks to its lush forests and serene pagodas. But, for most foodies, Tay Ninh’s major draw is its local delicacies. Between banh trang phoi suong Trang Bang (Trang Bang dew-wetted rice paper) and banh canh (a thick Vietnamese noodle made from a mixture of rice and tapioca flour), the province is worth the visit.

Banh trang phoi suong Trang Bang

Rice paper is everywhere in HCMC. It typically appears at the table in piles of store-bought rounds and eats with the consistency of a raincoat.

To offset this, some moisten the sheets with water and fill them with tasty bits of meat and fresh herbs.

Trang Bang District’s “dew-wetted rice paper,” however, is the result of a painstaking, seven-step process.

The special ingredient is the rice itself. Tay Ninh varietals are known for their delicate fragrance and the trick to making good paper is remaining true to the grain’s original flavor.

When cooks want to make the rice paper, the grains are soaked for two to three hours.

The wet grains are then mixed with a little salt and ground into a sort of paste.

The processed mush is then spread in two thin layers on a cloth that is hung over a cauldron full of boiling water. The mixture is then spread out over a bamboo grid and left to dry in the sun.

The resulting paper is grilled over a fire of peanut shells. The cooks use a shallow pan to cook the double-layered paper and sniff the resulting smoke to ensure the fragrance is not lost.

HCMC LOCATIONS:

Hoang Ty Restaurant850 Xo Viet Nghe Tinh Street, Binh Thanh District

Tel: (08) 3 899 8820

691 B Xo Viet Nghe Tinh Street, Binh Thanh District

(08) 3 898 8789

106 Cao Thang Street, District 3

Tel: (08) 3 833 2077

Banh canh Trang Bang441 Nguyen Tri Phuong Street, District 5

Tel: (08) 3 856 1268

180 Ly Thai To Street, District 3

Tel: (08) 3 832 2532

The paper is then left out overnight, to be moistened by the evening dew. Ideally, these famed rice paper makers will yield a wrap that is, at once, soft, tender and springy. Most importantly, the final product should still bear the smell of the original rice plant.

Pork is also a crucial ingredient in the dish, therefore, it must be chosen carefully. Tay Ninh favors lean cuts from the rump which is selected for its thin skin.

The meat is then paired with locally-grown fresh herbs like basil, peppermint, and chives. Locals from the district are known to throw in thin slices of mango bud and perilla. Add some strips of pickled carrot and Daikon and you’re almost there. But this roll is nothing without the nation’s famed sweet and sour dipping sauce - comprised of fish sauce, sugar, garlic, lime and chili.

It costs around VND90,000 for a portion which easily feeds two.

Banh canh Trang Bang

Another Tay Ninh favorite is the famed banh canh Trang Bang (thick noodle soup with pork hock). The dish is comprised of a bowl of delicious bone broth filled with springy noodles, and spiced fish sauce.

A fatty and chewy smoked ham hock is plopped down in the center of the dish, which can intimidate some foreign eaters.

Ham hocks in the New World are typically smoked, stewed and discarded. But here in Vietnam, they are chewed gnawed and sucked clean of marrow.

Thick skinned, and chock full of tasty tendons, the hock should be tacked with a combination of spoon and pork chops. Just eat it! You won’t be sorry.

Thanks to a little help from the tapioca flour, the chewy banh canh noodles will have absorbed a good deal of that divine swine flavor.

A bowl of banh canh costs between VND27,000–40,000 depending on where you’re dining.

Related Articles

Rice done right

Tay Ninh Province is approximately 90 kilometers to the northwest of Ho Chi Minh City.

The area remains a popular tourist destination thanks to its lush forests and serene pagodas. But, for most foodies, Tay Ninh’s major draw is its local delicacies. Between banh trang phoi suong Trang Bang (Trang Bang dew-wetted rice paper) and banh canh (a thick Vietnamese noodle made from a mixture of rice and tapioca flour), the province is worth the visit.

Banh trang phoi suong Trang Bang

Rice paper is everywhere in HCMC. It typically appears at the table in piles of store-bought rounds and eats with the consistency of a raincoat.

To offset this, some moisten the sheets with water and fill them with tasty bits of meat and fresh herbs.

Trang Bang District’s “dew-wetted rice paper,” however, is the result of a painstaking, seven-step process.

The special ingredient is the rice itself. Tay Ninh varietals are known for their delicate fragrance and the trick to making good paper is remaining true to the grain’s original flavor.

When cooks want to make the rice paper, the grains are soaked for two to three hours.

The wet grains are then mixed with a little salt and ground into a sort of paste.

The processed mush is then spread in two thin layers on a cloth that is hung over a cauldron full of boiling water. The mixture is then spread out over a bamboo grid and left to dry in the sun.

The resulting paper is grilled over a fire of peanut shells. The cooks use a shallow pan to cook the double-layered paper and sniff the resulting smoke to ensure the fragrance is not lost.

HCMC LOCATIONS:

Hoang Ty Restaurant850 Xo Viet Nghe Tinh Street, Binh Thanh District

Tel: (08) 3 899 8820

691 B Xo Viet Nghe Tinh Street, Binh Thanh District

(08) 3 898 8789

106 Cao Thang Street, District 3

Tel: (08) 3 833 2077

Banh canh Trang Bang441 Nguyen Tri Phuong Street, District 5

Tel: (08) 3 856 1268

180 Ly Thai To Street, District 3

Tel: (08) 3 832 2532

The paper is then left out overnight, to be moistened by the evening dew. Ideally, these famed rice paper makers will yield a wrap that is, at once, soft, tender and springy. Most importantly, the final product should still bear the smell of the original rice plant.

Pork is also a crucial ingredient in the dish, therefore, it must be chosen carefully. Tay Ninh favors lean cuts from the rump which is selected for its thin skin.

The meat is then paired with locally-grown fresh herbs like basil, peppermint, and chives. Locals from the district are known to throw in thin slices of mango bud and perilla. Add some strips of pickled carrot and Daikon and you’re almost there. But this roll is nothing without the nation’s famed sweet and sour dipping sauce - comprised of fish sauce, sugar, garlic, lime and chili.

It costs around VND90,000 for a portion which easily feeds two.

Banh canh Trang Bang

Another Tay Ninh favorite is the famed banh canh Trang Bang (thick noodle soup with pork hock). The dish is comprised of a bowl of delicious bone broth filled with springy noodles, and spiced fish sauce.

A fatty and chewy smoked ham hock is plopped down in the center of the dish, which can intimidate some foreign eaters.

Ham hocks in the New World are typically smoked, stewed and discarded. But here in Vietnam, they are chewed gnawed and sucked clean of marrow.

Thick skinned, and chock full of tasty tendons, the hock should be tacked with a combination of spoon and pork chops. Just eat it! You won’t be sorry.

Thanks to a little help from the tapioca flour, the chewy banh canh noodles will have absorbed a good deal of that divine swine flavor.

A bowl of banh canh costs between VND27,000–40,000 depending on where you’re dining.

Related Articles

Rice done right

Tay Ninh Province is approximately 90 kilometers to the northwest of Ho Chi Minh City.

The area remains a popular tourist destination thanks to its lush forests and serene pagodas. But, for most foodies, Tay Ninh’s major draw is its local delicacies. Between banh trang phoi suong Trang Bang (Trang Bang dew-wetted rice paper) and banh canh (a thick Vietnamese noodle made from a mixture of rice and tapioca flour), the province is worth the visit.

Banh trang phoi suong Trang Bang

Rice paper is everywhere in HCMC. It typically appears at the table in piles of store-bought rounds and eats with the consistency of a raincoat.

To offset this, some moisten the sheets with water and fill them with tasty bits of meat and fresh herbs.

Trang Bang District’s “dew-wetted rice paper,” however, is the result of a painstaking, seven-step process.

The special ingredient is the rice itself. Tay Ninh varietals are known for their delicate fragrance and the trick to making good paper is remaining true to the grain’s original flavor.

When cooks want to make the rice paper, the grains are soaked for two to three hours.

The wet grains are then mixed with a little salt and ground into a sort of paste.

The processed mush is then spread in two thin layers on a cloth that is hung over a cauldron full of boiling water. The mixture is then spread out over a bamboo grid and left to dry in the sun.

The resulting paper is grilled over a fire of peanut shells. The cooks use a shallow pan to cook the double-layered paper and sniff the resulting smoke to ensure the fragrance is not lost.

HCMC LOCATIONS:

Hoang Ty Restaurant850 Xo Viet Nghe Tinh Street, Binh Thanh District

Tel: (08) 3 899 8820

691 B Xo Viet Nghe Tinh Street, Binh Thanh District

(08) 3 898 8789

106 Cao Thang Street, District 3

Tel: (08) 3 833 2077

Banh canh Trang Bang441 Nguyen Tri Phuong Street, District 5

Tel: (08) 3 856 1268

180 Ly Thai To Street, District 3

Tel: (08) 3 832 2532

The paper is then left out overnight, to be moistened by the evening dew. Ideally, these famed rice paper makers will yield a wrap that is, at once, soft, tender and springy. Most importantly, the final product should still bear the smell of the original rice plant.

Pork is also a crucial ingredient in the dish, therefore, it must be chosen carefully. Tay Ninh favors lean cuts from the rump which is selected for its thin skin.

The meat is then paired with locally-grown fresh herbs like basil, peppermint, and chives. Locals from the district are known to throw in thin slices of mango bud and perilla. Add some strips of pickled carrot and Daikon and you’re almost there. But this roll is nothing without the nation’s famed sweet and sour dipping sauce - comprised of fish sauce, sugar, garlic, lime and chili.

It costs around VND90,000 for a portion which easily feeds two.

Banh canh Trang Bang

Another Tay Ninh favorite is the famed banh canh Trang Bang (thick noodle soup with pork hock). The dish is comprised of a bowl of delicious bone broth filled with springy noodles, and spiced fish sauce.

A fatty and chewy smoked ham hock is plopped down in the center of the dish, which can intimidate some foreign eaters.

Ham hocks in the New World are typically smoked, stewed and discarded. But here in Vietnam, they are chewed gnawed and sucked clean of marrow.

Thick skinned, and chock full of tasty tendons, the hock should be tacked with a combination of spoon and pork chops. Just eat it! You won’t be sorry.

Thanks to a little help from the tapioca flour, the chewy banh canh noodles will have absorbed a good deal of that divine swine flavor.

A bowl of banh canh costs between VND27,000–40,000 depending on where you’re dining.

Related Articles

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Rice done right

Tay Ninh Province is approximately 90 kilometers to the northwest of Ho Chi Minh City.

The area remains a popular tourist destination thanks to its lush forests and serene pagodas. But, for most foodies, Tay Ninh’s major draw is its local delicacies. Between banh trang phoi suong Trang Bang (Trang Bang dew-wetted rice paper) and banh canh (a thick Vietnamese noodle made from a mixture of rice and tapioca flour), the province is worth the visit.

Banh trang phoi suong Trang Bang

Rice paper is everywhere in HCMC. It typically appears at the table in piles of store-bought rounds and eats with the consistency of a raincoat.

To offset this, some moisten the sheets with water and fill them with tasty bits of meat and fresh herbs.

Trang Bang District’s “dew-wetted rice paper,” however, is the result of a painstaking, seven-step process.

The special ingredient is the rice itself. Tay Ninh varietals are known for their delicate fragrance and the trick to making good paper is remaining true to the grain’s original flavor.

When cooks want to make the rice paper, the grains are soaked for two to three hours.

The wet grains are then mixed with a little salt and ground into a sort of paste.

The processed mush is then spread in two thin layers on a cloth that is hung over a cauldron full of boiling water. The mixture is then spread out over a bamboo grid and left to dry in the sun.

The resulting paper is grilled over a fire of peanut shells. The cooks use a shallow pan to cook the double-layered paper and sniff the resulting smoke to ensure the fragrance is not lost.

HCMC LOCATIONS:

Hoang Ty Restaurant850 Xo Viet Nghe Tinh Street, Binh Thanh District

Tel: (08) 3 899 8820

691 B Xo Viet Nghe Tinh Street, Binh Thanh District

(08) 3 898 8789

106 Cao Thang Street, District 3

Tel: (08) 3 833 2077

Banh canh Trang Bang441 Nguyen Tri Phuong Street, District 5

Tel: (08) 3 856 1268

180 Ly Thai To Street, District 3

Tel: (08) 3 832 2532

The paper is then left out overnight, to be moistened by the evening dew. Ideally, these famed rice paper makers will yield a wrap that is, at once, soft, tender and springy. Most importantly, the final product should still bear the smell of the original rice plant.

Pork is also a crucial ingredient in the dish, therefore, it must be chosen carefully. Tay Ninh favors lean cuts from the rump which is selected for its thin skin.

The meat is then paired with locally-grown fresh herbs like basil, peppermint, and chives. Locals from the district are known to throw in thin slices of mango bud and perilla. Add some strips of pickled carrot and Daikon and you’re almost there. But this roll is nothing without the nation’s famed sweet and sour dipping sauce - comprised of fish sauce, sugar, garlic, lime and chili.

It costs around VND90,000 for a portion which easily feeds two.

Banh canh Trang Bang

Another Tay Ninh favorite is the famed banh canh Trang Bang (thick noodle soup with pork hock). The dish is comprised of a bowl of delicious bone broth filled with springy noodles, and spiced fish sauce.

A fatty and chewy smoked ham hock is plopped down in the center of the dish, which can intimidate some foreign eaters.

Ham hocks in the New World are typically smoked, stewed and discarded. But here in Vietnam, they are chewed gnawed and sucked clean of marrow.

Thick skinned, and chock full of tasty tendons, the hock should be tacked with a combination of spoon and pork chops. Just eat it! You won’t be sorry.

Thanks to a little help from the tapioca flour, the chewy banh canh noodles will have absorbed a good deal of that divine swine flavor.

A bowl of banh canh costs between VND27,000–40,000 depending on where you’re dining.

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Rice done right

Tay Ninh Province is approximately 90 kilometers to the northwest of Ho Chi Minh City.

The area remains a popular tourist destination thanks to its lush forests and serene pagodas. But, for most foodies, Tay Ninh’s major draw is its local delicacies. Between banh trang phoi suong Trang Bang (Trang Bang dew-wetted rice paper) and banh canh (a thick Vietnamese noodle made from a mixture of rice and tapioca flour), the province is worth the visit.

Banh trang phoi suong Trang Bang

Rice paper is everywhere in HCMC. It typically appears at the table in piles of store-bought rounds and eats with the consistency of a raincoat.

To offset this, some moisten the sheets with water and fill them with tasty bits of meat and fresh herbs.

Trang Bang District’s “dew-wetted rice paper,” however, is the result of a painstaking, seven-step process.

The special ingredient is the rice itself. Tay Ninh varietals are known for their delicate fragrance and the trick to making good paper is remaining true to the grain’s original flavor.

When cooks want to make the rice paper, the grains are soaked for two to three hours.

The wet grains are then mixed with a little salt and ground into a sort of paste.

The processed mush is then spread in two thin layers on a cloth that is hung over a cauldron full of boiling water. The mixture is then spread out over a bamboo grid and left to dry in the sun.

The resulting paper is grilled over a fire of peanut shells. The cooks use a shallow pan to cook the double-layered paper and sniff the resulting smoke to ensure the fragrance is not lost.

HCMC LOCATIONS:

Hoang Ty Restaurant850 Xo Viet Nghe Tinh Street, Binh Thanh District

Tel: (08) 3 899 8820

691 B Xo Viet Nghe Tinh Street, Binh Thanh District

(08) 3 898 8789

106 Cao Thang Street, District 3

Tel: (08) 3 833 2077

Banh canh Trang Bang441 Nguyen Tri Phuong Street, District 5

Tel: (08) 3 856 1268

180 Ly Thai To Street, District 3

Tel: (08) 3 832 2532

The paper is then left out overnight, to be moistened by the evening dew. Ideally, these famed rice paper makers will yield a wrap that is, at once, soft, tender and springy. Most importantly, the final product should still bear the smell of the original rice plant.

Pork is also a crucial ingredient in the dish, therefore, it must be chosen carefully. Tay Ninh favors lean cuts from the rump which is selected for its thin skin.

The meat is then paired with locally-grown fresh herbs like basil, peppermint, and chives. Locals from the district are known to throw in thin slices of mango bud and perilla. Add some strips of pickled carrot and Daikon and you’re almost there. But this roll is nothing without the nation’s famed sweet and sour dipping sauce - comprised of fish sauce, sugar, garlic, lime and chili.

It costs around VND90,000 for a portion which easily feeds two.

Banh canh Trang Bang

Another Tay Ninh favorite is the famed banh canh Trang Bang (thick noodle soup with pork hock). The dish is comprised of a bowl of delicious bone broth filled with springy noodles, and spiced fish sauce.

A fatty and chewy smoked ham hock is plopped down in the center of the dish, which can intimidate some foreign eaters.

Ham hocks in the New World are typically smoked, stewed and discarded. But here in Vietnam, they are chewed gnawed and sucked clean of marrow.

Thick skinned, and chock full of tasty tendons, the hock should be tacked with a combination of spoon and pork chops. Just eat it! You won’t be sorry.

Thanks to a little help from the tapioca flour, the chewy banh canh noodles will have absorbed a good deal of that divine swine flavor.

A bowl of banh canh costs between VND27,000–40,000 depending on where you’re dining.

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