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Chả lụa (Saigon: [ca᷉ lûˀə]) or giò lụa (Hanoi: [zɔ̂ lûˀə]) is the most common type of sausage in Vietnamese cuisine, made of pork and traditionally wrapped in banana leaves. [ 1 ] Production and consumption
They are wrapped in cut pieces of banana leaves. They are usually served with a type of Vietnamese sausage giò lụa. [3] Bánh giầy can be fried to a thin crispy golden crust or be eaten with giò lụa. Another variation is called bánh giầy đậu, where ground boiled mung bean (đậu xanh)—salted or sweetened—is stuffed inside.
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The dish was described in 1959 by Vietnamese food writer Vu Bang (1913–1984), who described Hanoi as a town "transfixed by bún chả." Hanoi's first bún chả restaurant was on Gia Ngư, Hoàn Kiếm District, in Hanoi's Old Quarter. [2] [3] [4] Bún chả originated from and remains very popular in Hanoi and throughout Vietnam.
Bánh cuốn Thanh Trì or Bánh cuốn làng Kênh are not rolls, but just rice sheets eaten with chả lụa, fried shallots, or prawns. Bánh ướt is simply the unfilled rice sheet, and is typically served with bean sprouts, chopped lettuce, sliced cucumber, fresh basil and mint, fried shallots and onions, chả/giò lụa, and fish sauce. [3]
Bún thịt nướng (Vietnamese: [ɓǔn tʰìt nɨ̌əŋ], 'rice noodles [with] grilled meat'), which originated from Southern Vietnam, [1] [2] is a popular Vietnamese dish of cold rice vermicelli topped with grilled pork, fresh herbs like basil and mint, fresh salad, giá (bean sprouts), [3] and chả giò (spring rolls).
A piece of Bánh giò. Bánh giò is a Vietnamese steamed pyramid-shaped savory rice cake. It is made with a filling of ground pork, wood ear mushrooms, and onions covered with a thin layer of glutinous rice flour dough and wrapped with banana leaves.
Phá lấu (Chinese: 拍滷; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: phah-ló̍) is a Vietnamese dish from Ho Chi Minh City, [1] made from pork meat and offal that is braised in a spiced stock of five-spice powder (with curry powder sometimes added). [2]