Search results
Results from the Tech24 Deals Content Network
Cơm trắng: Cooked white rice. Món mặn or main dishes to eat with rice: Fish/seafood, meat, tofu (grilled, boiled, steamed, stewed or stir-fried with vegetables) Rau: Sauteed, boiled or raw fresh green vegetables. Canh (a clear broth with vegetables and often meat or seafood) or other kinds of soup.
Reviews of 19th and 20th-century Vietnamese literature have found that pho entered the mainstream sometime in the 1910s. Georges Dumoutier's extensive 1907 account of Vietnamese cuisine omits any mention of phở. [10] The word appears in a short story published in 1907. [38] Nguyễn Công Hoan recalls its sale by street vendors in 1913. [39]
Noodles with snails. Bún riêu. Red River Delta. Noodle soup. Rice vermicelli in a tomato and crab broth [3] [5] Bún thịt nướng. Southern Vietnam. Noodle dish. Grilled pork (often shredded) and cold vermicelli noodles over a bed of greens (salad and sliced cucumber), herbs and bean sprouts.
Bánh mì chà bông, giò lụa, chili pepper. The word bánh mì, meaning "bread", is attested in Vietnamese as early as the 1830s, in Jean-Louis Taberd 's dictionary Dictionarium Latino-Annamiticum. [13] The French introduced Vietnam to the baguette, along with other baked goods such as pâté chaud, in the 1860s, at the start of their ...
Main ingredients. Broken rice, grilled rib, fish sauce with sugar, pickled carrots, oil garnish. Media: Cơm tấm. Cơm tấm ( chữ Nôm: 粓𥺑 Vietnamese: [kəːm tə̌m]) is a Vietnamese dish made from rice with fractured rice grains. Tấm refers to the broken rice grains, while cơm refers to cooked rice. [1] [2] Although there are ...
Bun cha. Bún chả ( Vietnamese: [ɓǔn ca᷉ː]) is a Vietnamese dish of grilled pork and noodles, which is thought to have originated from Hanoi, Vietnam. [1] Bún chả is served with grilled fatty pork ( chả) over a plate of white rice noodles ( bún) and herbs with a side dish of dipping sauce. The dish was described in 1959 by ...
The rice sheet of bánh cuốn is extremely thin and delicate. It is made by steaming a slightly fermented rice batter on a cloth that is stretched over a pot of boiling water. It is a light dish and is generally eaten for breakfast everywhere in Vietnam. A different version of bánh cuốn, called bánh cuốn Thanh Trì and bánh cuốn làng ...
Bún bò Huế (pronounced [ɓun˧˥ ɓɔ˧˩ hwe˧˥]) or bún bò ( English: / buːn bɔː /) is a Vietnamese rice noodle ( bún) dish with sliced beef ( bò ), chả lụa, and sometimes pork knuckles. [2] The dish originates from Huế, a city in central Vietnam associated with the cooking style of the former royal court. [3] The dish has a ...