Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Thanh Hoa to build mini Lam Kinh with VND114 bil.

The construction of a mini version of VND114.8 billion Lam Kinh Historical Relic in Xuan Lam Commune has been approved by authorities in Thanh Hoa Province, reports VietnamPlus.

The project will mark the 1,000th anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi.

Over the next five years, the sanctum area of the original Lam Kinh will also be restored to its former beauty during Le Trung Hung and Le dynasties.

The restoration will use precious wood and meticulous carvings of dragon images and patterns.

For nearly 600 years, Lam Kinh historical relic has been synonymous with national hero Le Loi, the leader of the resounding Lam Son uprising. Construction of Lam King began in 1433, immediately following the death of King Le Thai To, the first ruler of the Le Dynasty. Building a second capital, with monuments and mausoleums in Lam Son strengthened the loyalty of the people to the King and the reigning family.

Along with mausoleums, the Le Dynasty also built three temples in Lam Kinh. The Wind and Cloud temple was used to pray for favorable weather for the harvests. The second was for Society, where wishes for a wealthy life were made. The third, South Communion, was where Kings reported and expressed their gratitude to the heavens.

Through the changing times, the relics of Lam Kinh tell the history of Vietnam.

Wars and time have destroyed most of the magnificent architecture. The only things that can remind us of the splendor of the former capital are the moss grown terraces and stone pillars.

The project hopes to honor the significance of the sanctuary, making it a tourist attraction and festival site.

This year, the Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism will collaborate with local authorities to host Lam Kinh Festival on September 28-30 to mark 592 years since the Lam Son Revolution, 582 years since Le Thai To’s enthronement, and 577 years since the death of Le Loi King.

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Gone fishing at Cam Son Lake

Hiring a boat is a great way to see Cam Son Lake in Bac Giang Province - Photo: Mai Ly
Cam Son Lake in Luc Ngan District, Bac Giang Province, is a famous tourist site that you should not miss when you visit the north.

The lake covers 2,600ha, but during the rainy season it swells to 3,000ha. The 30km-long lake is 7 kilometers at its widest point and 200 meters at the narrowest.

It is surrounded by mountain ranges.

Hiring a wooden boat is the best way to admire the scenery and get close to nature. You can find a quiet place to anchor and throw in a fishing line.

After exploring the lake, visitors should take a hike to visit the local tribe and learn about their daily lives and customs - enjoy local specialties such as chestnut, honey and gecko wine. Singing is also popular among the San Chi, Cao Lan, Nung, and Tay minorities in this area.

Bac Giang Province, 51 kilometers from Hanoi, has three large rivers including Luc Nam, Thuong and Cau. The province also boasts many other attractions such as Duc La Pagoda built early in the Tran Dynasty. The pagoda is in the foothills of Co Tien (Fairy) Mountain and bound by Luc River, rice fields and small villages. Nham Bien Mountains are in the distance.

Tourists can also visit Khe Ro Primitive Forest, which is a 7,153ha protected forest in An Lac Commune, Son Dong District. The area boasts a rich variety of flora and fauna and many fresh water streams.

Other sites of interest include Khuon Than Lake and Tu Ma Temple.

Related Articles

Gone fishing at Cam Son Lake

Hiring a boat is a great way to see Cam Son Lake in Bac Giang Province - Photo: Mai Ly
Cam Son Lake in Luc Ngan District, Bac Giang Province, is a famous tourist site that you should not miss when you visit the north.

The lake covers 2,600ha, but during the rainy season it swells to 3,000ha. The 30km-long lake is 7 kilometers at its widest point and 200 meters at the narrowest.

It is surrounded by mountain ranges.

Hiring a wooden boat is the best way to admire the scenery and get close to nature. You can find a quiet place to anchor and throw in a fishing line.

After exploring the lake, visitors should take a hike to visit the local tribe and learn about their daily lives and customs - enjoy local specialties such as chestnut, honey and gecko wine. Singing is also popular among the San Chi, Cao Lan, Nung, and Tay minorities in this area.

Bac Giang Province, 51 kilometers from Hanoi, has three large rivers including Luc Nam, Thuong and Cau. The province also boasts many other attractions such as Duc La Pagoda built early in the Tran Dynasty. The pagoda is in the foothills of Co Tien (Fairy) Mountain and bound by Luc River, rice fields and small villages. Nham Bien Mountains are in the distance.

Tourists can also visit Khe Ro Primitive Forest, which is a 7,153ha protected forest in An Lac Commune, Son Dong District. The area boasts a rich variety of flora and fauna and many fresh water streams.

Other sites of interest include Khuon Than Lake and Tu Ma Temple.

Related Articles

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Gone fishing at Cam Son Lake

Hiring a boat is a great way to see Cam Son Lake in Bac Giang Province - Photo: Mai Ly
Cam Son Lake in Luc Ngan District, Bac Giang Province, is a famous tourist site that you should not miss when you visit the north.

The lake covers 2,600ha, but during the rainy season it swells to 3,000ha. The 30km-long lake is 7 kilometers at its widest point and 200 meters at the narrowest.

It is surrounded by mountain ranges.

Hiring a wooden boat is the best way to admire the scenery and get close to nature. You can find a quiet place to anchor and throw in a fishing line.

After exploring the lake, visitors should take a hike to visit the local tribe and learn about their daily lives and customs - enjoy local specialties such as chestnut, honey and gecko wine. Singing is also popular among the San Chi, Cao Lan, Nung, and Tay minorities in this area.

Bac Giang Province, 51 kilometers from Hanoi, has three large rivers including Luc Nam, Thuong and Cau. The province also boasts many other attractions such as Duc La Pagoda built early in the Tran Dynasty. The pagoda is in the foothills of Co Tien (Fairy) Mountain and bound by Luc River, rice fields and small villages. Nham Bien Mountains are in the distance.

Tourists can also visit Khe Ro Primitive Forest, which is a 7,153ha protected forest in An Lac Commune, Son Dong District. The area boasts a rich variety of flora and fauna and many fresh water streams.

Other sites of interest include Khuon Than Lake and Tu Ma Temple.

Related Articles

Gone fishing at Cam Son Lake

Hiring a boat is a great way to see Cam Son Lake in Bac Giang Province - Photo: Mai Ly
Cam Son Lake in Luc Ngan District, Bac Giang Province, is a famous tourist site that you should not miss when you visit the north.

The lake covers 2,600ha, but during the rainy season it swells to 3,000ha. The 30km-long lake is 7 kilometers at its widest point and 200 meters at the narrowest.

It is surrounded by mountain ranges.

Hiring a wooden boat is the best way to admire the scenery and get close to nature. You can find a quiet place to anchor and throw in a fishing line.

After exploring the lake, visitors should take a hike to visit the local tribe and learn about their daily lives and customs - enjoy local specialties such as chestnut, honey and gecko wine. Singing is also popular among the San Chi, Cao Lan, Nung, and Tay minorities in this area.

Bac Giang Province, 51 kilometers from Hanoi, has three large rivers including Luc Nam, Thuong and Cau. The province also boasts many other attractions such as Duc La Pagoda built early in the Tran Dynasty. The pagoda is in the foothills of Co Tien (Fairy) Mountain and bound by Luc River, rice fields and small villages. Nham Bien Mountains are in the distance.

Tourists can also visit Khe Ro Primitive Forest, which is a 7,153ha protected forest in An Lac Commune, Son Dong District. The area boasts a rich variety of flora and fauna and many fresh water streams.

Other sites of interest include Khuon Than Lake and Tu Ma Temple.

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Of Love and Shashlik

 The grill master at Quan Chieu Nay on 30B Vo Van Tan Street adjacent to the War Remnants Museum

Pham Thanh Giang says he’s old now. The retired, 64 year-old economist has been married three times and has run the same Soviet-style barbeque joint at 30B Vo Van Tan Street for the past 16 years.

But there is something spritely in his manner when speaking about the essence of barbeque. His pointy eyebrows arch high on his head when he gets to talking.

As his face stretches into a taut grin, Giang seems to almost glow.

When he was 17, the government decided to send him to the Ukraine to study Economics. The year was 1967 and Giang was happy to leave the Hanoi suburbs at the height of the Vietnam War.

Kiev was like a dream to him, he says half-rising out of his seat. Old buildings, tree-lined streets and snow.

He mingled with Germans and Poles and Czechs. He went to public parks, where the Ukrainians sparked up long metal boxes full of charcoal and served meat in the open air. “Nobody sat,” he said. “Everybody stood, ate, drank and talked. That’s the way to eat barbeque.”

He produces a few snapshots of a grinning young man with sweeping black hair posing before a statue of Lenin in Kiev. There he is, palling around with his classmates in front of a propaganda mural.

Then there are some photos which, he says, we cannot reprint. They feature a striking young blond and her plump mother standing with young Giang on a terrace in Uzbekistan.

In his 20th year, he met this girl, Anna while picking fruit in the Turkic Soviet republic during a summer work program.

“She was just 17,” he says grinning. “And so, so beautiful.”

They met at her parent’s roadside shashlik stand and fell in love over grilled skewered meat.

Two weeks before he left, her mother told him she wanted to teach him how to prepare their traditional food.

She explained that the Uzbek nomads had defined barbeque as the roasting of a whole animal – nose to tail. The choicest parts of the creature were reserved for the most senior members. The worst parts were carved up, skewered and grilled again.

This, she said, was the basis of shashlik



Pham Thanh Giang, (3rd, R) pictured with a group of Vietnamese foreign exchange students in Kiev in 1971. During his seven years spent studying economics in the Soviet Union, Giang says he learned the secrets of shashlik (Turkic-style barbeque) from the Uzbek family of his first true love. Photo courtesy of Pham Thanh Giang

“I want you to learn this dish and prepare it for your friends,” Anna’s mother told him. “I want you to remember the USSR.”

In their kitchen, at home, Anna’s mother taught him how to choose and prepare the meat. She also revealed the secret ratios of salt and spices – none of which Giang will discuss.

In his final weeks, Giang worked with the family at their restaurant to ensure he got everything about the recipe right – and to stay close to Anna.

“I had no money,” he says. “So I made her no promises. The story ended there.”

Giang returned home in 1974. After liberation, he was transferred to Ho Chi Minh City where he worked as a government economist.

He liked the southern girls and the tropical weather.

He got married, twice, and retired from public service after twenty years. In 1994, he decided he was bored. It was then that he remembered Anna’s mother’s recipe.

“I had nothing to do,” he says.

“So I thought I’d open a little restaurant.”

Some friends told him about a long-narrow space that had opened up next to the War Remnants Museum. He’s been renting it ever since.

Five years ago, he got married again. He took up photography and says his favorite subjects are beautiful nude women. His wife, Ho Thi Kim Yen can often be seen managing the restaurant from a steel desk in the middle of the busy restaurant.

On a recent evening, he stood before the smoky entrance to Quan Chieu Nay (this afternoon) wearing a pink, fish-print shirt and a garish, brown crocodile-skin fanny pack.

Above him, a perplexing sign glows with a cartoon sheep head and Cyrillic lettering advertising shashlik.

On a busy night, diners pour out into the street. Long rows of tables sit covered in empty plates and cups. Stacks of chicken bones and towlette wrappers pile up faster than they can be swept into a dust pan.

Giang’s restaurant features a number of unlikely imports.

His specialty, he says, is ostrich, which is grilled and served in tender brown slices with pickled root vegetables and a small bowl of mustard for VND80,000. For a time, he was the town’s kangaroo king; a giant skin hanging on the wall attests to Giang’s marsupial heyday. (A couple of years ago, he says, Ho Chi Minh City’s only importer stopped bringing it in).

Australian plates aside, Quan Chieu Nay’s menu features “Soviet style” pork, lamb and veal.

Like everything at the restaurant (with the exception of the limp salads) these sizeable hunks of meat are skewered onto twisted metal skewers and cooked through over the restaurant’s charcoal grill. The Soviet-style meat platters are a steal at VND55,000: salty, sweet and marbled with just enough fat to butter each bite. The meat eats tender, with a flavor not unlike lean smoked brisket, and is accompanied nicely by the toasty rolls that run 3,000 a piece.

“This is a not a luxury restaurant,” Giang said as he uncorked a sizeable bottle of iced Merlot and invited Thanh Nien Weekly to dinner. “In art as in cuisine, one need not be luxurious to succeed. It’s the atmosphere. My place is cozy, not very expensive. That’s what shashlik is all about.”

In addition to the kangaroo skin, photos and paintings of Vietnam and Russia line the walls. Not far from the smoky entrance hangs a huge browned print of a birch forest taken in Kiev, by a friend.

He’s never been back to the Ukraine, but he heard that Anna got married and her mother passed away.

“Like the poet says: ‘love is only beautiful when it lacks a happy ending.”

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Of Love and Shashlik

 The grill master at Quan Chieu Nay on 30B Vo Van Tan Street adjacent to the War Remnants Museum

Pham Thanh Giang says he’s old now. The retired, 64 year-old economist has been married three times and has run the same Soviet-style barbeque joint at 30B Vo Van Tan Street for the past 16 years.

But there is something spritely in his manner when speaking about the essence of barbeque. His pointy eyebrows arch high on his head when he gets to talking.

As his face stretches into a taut grin, Giang seems to almost glow.

When he was 17, the government decided to send him to the Ukraine to study Economics. The year was 1967 and Giang was happy to leave the Hanoi suburbs at the height of the Vietnam War.

Kiev was like a dream to him, he says half-rising out of his seat. Old buildings, tree-lined streets and snow.

He mingled with Germans and Poles and Czechs. He went to public parks, where the Ukrainians sparked up long metal boxes full of charcoal and served meat in the open air. “Nobody sat,” he said. “Everybody stood, ate, drank and talked. That’s the way to eat barbeque.”

He produces a few snapshots of a grinning young man with sweeping black hair posing before a statue of Lenin in Kiev. There he is, palling around with his classmates in front of a propaganda mural.

Then there are some photos which, he says, we cannot reprint. They feature a striking young blond and her plump mother standing with young Giang on a terrace in Uzbekistan.

In his 20th year, he met this girl, Anna while picking fruit in the Turkic Soviet republic during a summer work program.

“She was just 17,” he says grinning. “And so, so beautiful.”

They met at her parent’s roadside shashlik stand and fell in love over grilled skewered meat.

Two weeks before he left, her mother told him she wanted to teach him how to prepare their traditional food.

She explained that the Uzbek nomads had defined barbeque as the roasting of a whole animal – nose to tail. The choicest parts of the creature were reserved for the most senior members. The worst parts were carved up, skewered and grilled again.

This, she said, was the basis of shashlik



Pham Thanh Giang, (3rd, R) pictured with a group of Vietnamese foreign exchange students in Kiev in 1971. During his seven years spent studying economics in the Soviet Union, Giang says he learned the secrets of shashlik (Turkic-style barbeque) from the Uzbek family of his first true love. Photo courtesy of Pham Thanh Giang

“I want you to learn this dish and prepare it for your friends,” Anna’s mother told him. “I want you to remember the USSR.”

In their kitchen, at home, Anna’s mother taught him how to choose and prepare the meat. She also revealed the secret ratios of salt and spices – none of which Giang will discuss.

In his final weeks, Giang worked with the family at their restaurant to ensure he got everything about the recipe right – and to stay close to Anna.

“I had no money,” he says. “So I made her no promises. The story ended there.”

Giang returned home in 1974. After liberation, he was transferred to Ho Chi Minh City where he worked as a government economist.

He liked the southern girls and the tropical weather.

He got married, twice, and retired from public service after twenty years. In 1994, he decided he was bored. It was then that he remembered Anna’s mother’s recipe.

“I had nothing to do,” he says.

“So I thought I’d open a little restaurant.”

Some friends told him about a long-narrow space that had opened up next to the War Remnants Museum. He’s been renting it ever since.

Five years ago, he got married again. He took up photography and says his favorite subjects are beautiful nude women. His wife, Ho Thi Kim Yen can often be seen managing the restaurant from a steel desk in the middle of the busy restaurant.

On a recent evening, he stood before the smoky entrance to Quan Chieu Nay (this afternoon) wearing a pink, fish-print shirt and a garish, brown crocodile-skin fanny pack.

Above him, a perplexing sign glows with a cartoon sheep head and Cyrillic lettering advertising shashlik.

On a busy night, diners pour out into the street. Long rows of tables sit covered in empty plates and cups. Stacks of chicken bones and towlette wrappers pile up faster than they can be swept into a dust pan.

Giang’s restaurant features a number of unlikely imports.

His specialty, he says, is ostrich, which is grilled and served in tender brown slices with pickled root vegetables and a small bowl of mustard for VND80,000. For a time, he was the town’s kangaroo king; a giant skin hanging on the wall attests to Giang’s marsupial heyday. (A couple of years ago, he says, Ho Chi Minh City’s only importer stopped bringing it in).

Australian plates aside, Quan Chieu Nay’s menu features “Soviet style” pork, lamb and veal.

Like everything at the restaurant (with the exception of the limp salads) these sizeable hunks of meat are skewered onto twisted metal skewers and cooked through over the restaurant’s charcoal grill. The Soviet-style meat platters are a steal at VND55,000: salty, sweet and marbled with just enough fat to butter each bite. The meat eats tender, with a flavor not unlike lean smoked brisket, and is accompanied nicely by the toasty rolls that run 3,000 a piece.

“This is a not a luxury restaurant,” Giang said as he uncorked a sizeable bottle of iced Merlot and invited Thanh Nien Weekly to dinner. “In art as in cuisine, one need not be luxurious to succeed. It’s the atmosphere. My place is cozy, not very expensive. That’s what shashlik is all about.”

In addition to the kangaroo skin, photos and paintings of Vietnam and Russia line the walls. Not far from the smoky entrance hangs a huge browned print of a birch forest taken in Kiev, by a friend.

He’s never been back to the Ukraine, but he heard that Anna got married and her mother passed away.

“Like the poet says: ‘love is only beautiful when it lacks a happy ending.”

Related Articles