Monthly Archive for September, 2008

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Bắp Chiên

A couple months back, I posted an entry about a savory snack called nui chien that the queen of salty bites, Miss Adventure, introduced me to. Reader and Saigon resident Dave suggested in the comments section of that post that I seek out a similar snack called bap chien or “fried corn” that he and his gal pal were big fans of.

While stocking up on nui chien at the local Maximark on Hai Ba Trung, I remembered Dave’s recommendation and picked up a bag of bap chien. As soon as I arrived back at the apartment, I busted out the bap chien for a highly anticipated taste test. As Dave promised, the bap chien were addictively crunchy. The bap chien initially register as salty, but end on an unexpected sweet note. 

Salty. Sweet. Salty. Sweet. Kind of like kettle corn. I liked them so much that I nearly ate the whole bag in one sitting. I managed to rationalize it to myself by saying that I went two whole years without consuming a single corn nut while wearing braces in middle school. Clearly, I was just making up for lost time.

Vegetation Profile: Calabash Tree Fruit

mystery fruit

Back in May, I posted this picture and gave the following description:

I encountered this vegetation in Ho Tram and have no idea what it is. I’ve asked a couple of locals, but they were just as clueless as yours truly. One guy said it was related to gac fruit. All I know is that it’s hard, larger than a softball, heavier than it looks and definitely not a pomelo. Can anyone identify what fruit or vegetable this is?

I received a number of guesses from helpful readers, but no one hit the nail on the head. That is until Anh chimed in. “It looks like Trái Đào Tiên,” she wrote. “It belongs to the same family with Pomelo. Vietnamese use it as a medicine.” Ding ding!

After a bit of research using this pertinent new information, I discovered that the scientific name for the tree is Crescentia and that it is ”a genus of six species of flowering plants in the family Bignoniaceae, native to southern Florida, the Caribbean, southern Mexico, Central America and northern South America. The species are small trees growing to 10 meters tall, and producing large spherical fruits up to half a meter in diameter.” I also learned that the Vietnamese use the dried Calabash fruit to cure such ailments as asthma and diarrhea.

Thank you, Anh. I’m so glad we have finally identified this mystery fruit. Woot!

Bánh Xu Xê

An alien’s breast implant or a Vietnamese dessert? If you guessed the former, you’ve got a wicked sense of humor, but are unfortunately incorrect. What you’re looking at is banh xu xe—a Vietnamese sweet with a jelly-like texture made of tapioca flour, pandan, mung bean paste, sugar, sesame seeds and coconut milk.

This one time, I left a banh xu xe in my messenger bag unknowingly for over a week and as a result, it grew fuzzy with mold. The day I discovered it at the bottom of my bag, I asked my colleague Chris at the AsiaLIFE office if I could please pelt him with it. Believe it or not, he said yes. I wound up softball-style and pitched it at him with all of my might. As anticipated, the banh xu xe exploded upon contact! God, it feels so good being a small child sometimes.

The bottom line—banh xu xe are interesting to look at, but lack substance and flavor. At 1,000 VND a piece, I suggest you buy a dozen and pelt them at your friends to show them how much you care. To satisfy that pandan-flavored, jelly-textured, mung bean-filled craving, eat banh da lon.

Quizzo II

The first person to correctly guess what this is a picture of wins big dong (and no whammies)…

Al Fresco's – Ho Chi Minh City

Al Fresco’s Café & Grill is a Saigon institution, at least among the expat crowd. I know this because my colleague Mimi, the quintessential expat, orders their barbeque spare ribs for lunch two or three times per week. Unbelievably, The Gastronomer and I made it through an entire year in Saigon without trying those puppies for ourselves. However, on our 368th day in town, and my last day at the East Meets West Foundation, my co-workers offered to take me out for a farewell lunch. They kindly let me choose the location, but at the last minute plans were changed (something about a meeting near the Sheraton) and we ended up eating at Al Fresco’s. I decided to go with the flow; after all, I like meat, and it seemed only right after eating at Pepperonis that I sample the cuisine at its slightly more upscale cousin.

IMG_1041

The Aussie-owned Al Fresco’s offers a mix of American, Italian, and Australian food, with a few wild cards thrown in. On this day, two of my co-workers ordered Mexican taco salads. They didn’t look very appetizing. I went for the ribs, of course. There were four portion sizes to choose from—Pygmy, Junior, Mini, and a fourth slightly less puny-sounding term that I can’t remember. I wasn’t feeling up to eating a whole slab of ribs, so I swallowed my pride and ordered the Mini (180,000 VND).

It turned out to be pretty damned large. I figured finishing off a half rack would be no problem; after all, as a gangly high schooler in Alabama I polished off full racks in one sitting on several occasions. However, these ribs were longer than the ones I’m used to (the meat’s imported—they certainly don’t have pigs like this here), and after living in Vietnam for some time, I’m not used to consuming large quantities of meat straight up. By the end of the meal I was feeling a little queasy.

I wasn’t really expecting much from these ribs. However, I found myself pleasantly surprised. The meat was awesome—really freaking fall-off-the-bone tender. The sauce certainly wasn’t classic vinegar-based Alabama style BBQ sauce, or Texas style or North Carolina style or any other recipe from the southern United States for that matter. More than anything, it tasted like pure ketchup. That may sound like a bad thing, but it wasn’t really. Meat and ketchup is good. I haven’t had decent ribs for well over a year, so I’m sure my standards have been lowered considerably, but I must admit that I really enjoyed the meal.

The ribs were served with a side of decent steak fries and a half-hearted attempt at a salad that I didn’t touch. I was too full for dessert, but I sampled a few bites of a solid chocolate fudge cake with ice cream. Although I shied away from eating at Al Fresco’s for a long time, I came away impressed. It seemed from my colleagues’ comments that the menu is hit or miss once you veer from the ribs, but the star attraction is well executed. They seriously use some pretty high-quality meat. The sauce has no tanginess to speak of, but it does the job. I certainly wouldn’t recommend coming here on a short visit to Vietnam, but for the long-term resident with the occasional BBQ rib craving, it serves its purpose well.

Alfresco’s
27 Dong Du Street
District 1, Ho Chi Minh City
Tel: 08 822 7318

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