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Food Culture in Vietnam Part 1- Healing Foods

By: Michelle Nguyen- Vietnam Director

Come with me and let’s continue our virtual food journey through Asia. Andrea has shared about Myanmar and Nicole about Laos so let’s continue to Vietnam.

As a self-confessed foodie with a Vietnamese husband and family I fit right in here and have been on a journey of discovery since I arrived in 2004. Word of warning though, Vietnamese love to eat (constantly) and yet they remain so slim! Vietnamese are incredibly gracious hosts and they love to show their welcome through their food, rice wine, beer, tea and coffee (grown in the plantations in the central highlands here). Take note that if you are full then leave a little on the plate to indicate this, or the food may just keep on coming!

Vietnam has an extremely healthy and varied, albeit odd by Western standards, diet.  Living in Asia, you realize that nothing is wasted and everything goes into the pot- quite literally! A head or feet in the dish is quite normal in local cuisine, so be prepared.  However, many of these somewhat strange additions to dishes are made for a purpose.

Vietnamese consider food as their natural healing larder. If you have a cold then eat caramalised kumquats (including the skin) for a sore throat, drink a mug of fresh beansprouts in boiled water, or sliced fresh ginger in boiled water with a little honey. If you are constipated locals eat dragon fruit and if you have an upset tummy then you are recommended to eat green bananas.  There are too many local natural remedies to mention…

Vietnamese markets provide a vast array of fresh and healing food

In a similar manner, it is also believed that the part of the animal you eat brings health benefits to that part of your own body. So if you are feeling adventurous just go with the flow… For example chickens’ feet are considered to have a high vitamin nutritional value, provide a lot of energy and strengthen tendons.

Chicken feet- high in nutritional value

Offal and innards are also often eaten to strengthen health.

Insides and out

Certain meats in particular are also believed to have healing benefits:

Baby clam soup is one of my favourites and a dish I had a real craving for when I was pregnant, quite logical when you learn that it helps to reduce body heat and the nutritional properties it provides.

Snake (Thit Ran): Snake wine, made by soaking snakes in alcohol or by mixing the body fluids of a snake into wine or whiskey, is widely believed to enhance virility.  You will see snake whiskey is readily available everywhere and is considered very nutritious. Eating snake meat is also thought to be a great food remedy for the treatment of arthritis. It is, however, not allowed for pregnant women or children. Personally, I prefer drinking the snake whiskey to eating snake hot pot as, to me, snake can be quite boney.

Fetal duck eggs (Trung Vit Lon): This is where embryos develop in to young chicks inside the shell. Still in the shell they are boiled and eaten with lemon, salt and pepper and with Rau Ram (a kind of vegetable). I haven’t yet tried these but I am told they taste strong and minty. They are commonly eaten to encourage good luck after a run of bad luck and as an aphrodisiac.

If you have any sort of health problem I’m sure the Vietnamese have a food cure for it!

 … Read more »

Hopping-ly Fresh Riverside Dining in Thakek, Laos

By: Heather Van Hull- Booking Coordinator, Cambodia

Way back when (about 6 months ago), I used to live in Laos prior to migrating slightly southward to Cambodia.  Going with the theme of bizarre foods in Southeast Asia, I decided to repost a blog I wrote a few months back:

Who knew a quiet border town could also be a centre for fine dining? Thakek’s Mekong riverfront boulevard is lined with top notch quaint cafes serving local delicacies ranging from roast duck to spicy appendix (Still haven’t figured out whose appendix…) to be savoured while watching the sun set over Thailand.

After much contemplation we settle on a round of BeerLao and an appetizer of fried crickets – a traditional Lao on-the-go snack and ‘drinking’ food.

Bon appetit!

Typically these little flying morsels of ‘yumminess’ are brought in hopping-ly fresh from local bug farms, then quickly deep-fried to a golden brown, thrown on a plate (or in a doggy bag) and served accompanied with a side of chili sauce. Lightly frying the crickets in oil and spices not only makes them easier to catch with chopsticks, but also makes the outer shell delightfully crunchy and spicy.

See...nice and easy to catch. Imagine doing this if they were still hopping...

If plain ol’ crickets do not appeal to you, you can also order them with sticky rice or ground into the meatballs in your noodle soup. Although fried cricket may not be as ‘saep lai’ (Lao for ‘very delicious’) as a bag of crisps, they are little lumps of nutrition – rich in protein, fat and essential vitamins. The United Nations is encouraging even more bug-eating as a solution to the country’s high rate of malnutrition by raising the income of local bug collectors and increasing the yield of bug farmers.

Small Grasshoppers (100g) McDonalds Hamburger (107g)
Protein 20.6g 12.0g
Total Fat 6.1g 10.0g

To make this fine Thakek insect dining experience even finer, mobile manicurists on motorbikes cruise up and down the street, offering their services to café patrons. Where else can you get a French manicure while dining?  Watch out Ritz here comes Thakek!

The United Nation's food program in action

Interested in reading more about bizarre foods?  Check out similar posts here and look for more to follow on the travel blog:  https://archive.journeys-within.com/2012/03/04/they-eat-it-all-in-laos/Read more »