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Bánh Xèo is a traditional street food in Vietnam. The working class mainly ate it because it was cheap and easy. [9] Its origins are unknown. However, Vietnamese people agreed that the creation of this dish could be somewhere in Central Vietnam through the fusion of French culture from the French colonial times or South Vietnam by migrating immigrants moving into Vietnam and mixing with the ...
Besides, it is also the main ingredient to make bánh chưng and bánh dày, which are very important in the Lunar New Year. Before the synthetic glue was created, xôi was used by Vietnamese people as a specialized and cheap glue. However, it can only be useful to paper and some thin items made from bamboo. Examples : Fans, lanterns, pictures...
Bánh tráng trộn (meaning mixed rice paper or rice paper salad [1] in Vietnamese), is a popular Vietnamese street food made of rice paper mixing with a varieties of other ingredients. Originated as a snack for school students, bánh tráng trộn has since gained popularity in all over Vietnam and with oversea Vietnamese communities.
Bánh khọt are small round savoury pancakes made from rice flour, coconut milk and turmeric, usually topped with shrimps, green unions and shrimp powder. Vung Tau has its own variety that is more crispy and has shrimp added on top. [32] Bánh xèo Vũng Tàu are pancakes famous for its taste which cannot be found in anywhere. Ingredients ...
Bánh khoái (Hue shrimp and vegetable pancake) is the modified form of Bánh xèo. It is deep fried and served with Hue peanut dipping sauce containing pork liver. Its ingredients include egg, liver, prawns and pork belly or pork sausage, and carrot. It is served with lettuce, fresh mint, Vietnamese mint, star fruit, and perilla leaves.
A bowl of Cao lầu. Cao lầu is a regional Vietnamese noodle dish, from the city of Hội An, in central Vietnam's Quảng Nam Province.It typically consists of pork and greens on a bed of rice noodles made from rice which has been soaked in lye water, giving them a characteristic texture and colour that sets the dish apart from other Vietnamese noodle dishes, including others from the same ...
Bánh xèo. Bánh bèo – small steamed savory rice cakes; Bánh căn – a southern specialty consisting of small pancakes made from rice batter cooked in small clay pans; Bánh đúc, rice cake or corn cake is eaten as a dessert or savory meal; Bánh rế – deep-fried pancake
Chè trôi nước (sometimes called chè xôi nước in southern Vietnam or bánh chay in northern Vietnam, both meaning "floating dessert wading in water") is a Vietnamese dessert made of glutinous rice filled with mung bean paste bathed in a sweet clear or brown syrup made of water, sugar, and grated ginger root.