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In northern Vietnam, bánh đúc is a cake made from either non-glutinous rice flour or corn flour.It is white in color and has a soft texture and mild flavour. It is typically garnished with savory ingredients such as ground pork, tôm chấy (grilled ground shrimp), fried onions, sesame seeds, salt, peanuts, lime juice, and soy sauce or fish sauce.
Bánh tét is a Vietnamese savoury but sometimes sweetened cake made primarily from glutinous rice, which is rolled in a banana leaf into a thick, log-like cylindrical shape, with a mung bean and pork filling, then boiled. After cooking, the banana leaf is removed, and the cake is sliced into wheel-shaped servings.
Bánh giầy, also written as bánh dầy – white, flat, round glutinous rice cake with tough, chewy texture filled with mung bean or served with Vietnamese sausage Bánh giò – pyramid shaped rice dough dumplings filled with pork, shallot, and wood ear mushroom wrapped in banana leaf [ 8 ]
' lumpy skin cake ') [a] [1] is a Vietnamese steamed layer cake, mostly popular in South Vietnam, made from tapioca starch, rice flour, [2] mashed mung beans, taro, or durian, coconut milk and/or water, and sugar. It is sweet and gelatinously soft in texture, with thin (approximately 1 cm) colored layers alternating with layers of mung bean ...
Bánh bò nướng (baked bánh bò) Bánh bò màu (màu = colored). Bánh bò (literally "cow cake" [1] or "crawl cake" [2]) is a sweet, chewy sponge cake from Vietnam. [3] [4] It is made from rice flour, water, sugar, and yeast, [5] and has a honeycomb-like appearance (called rễ tre, literally "bamboo roots," in Vietnamese) on the inside due to the presence of numerous small air bubbles.
Bánh phu thê (lit. ' husband and wife cake ') or bánh xu xê, is a Vietnamese dessert made from rice with mung bean stuffing wrapped in a box made of pandan leaves. [1] [2] The dessert was traditionally given by a suitor but is now part of many wedding banquets. [3]
Bánh giò is thought to be originated in northern Vietnam [2] and now has become a popular street food in all over Vietnam. [3] It is often kept warm and sold from small carts or stalls, and it is a popular breakfast and snack food. [3] Bánh giò can also be found in many Vietnamese restaurants.
The dish's name is believed to derive from the fact that it is shaped like a duckweed (bèo in Vietnamese). Bánh is a Vietnamese term translating loosely as "cake.". In modern Vietnamese culture, bánh bèo is slang for girls who are portrayed as overly feminine, weak-willed, and high maintenance (because of its soft, rubbery texture).