TRAVELLIVE MAGAZINE Travellive 01-2016 | Page 88

VISIT TRADITIONAL VIETNAMESE MARKETS: REMEMBER TO BUY FLOWERS! o matter if I'm travelling around my country or visiting a new land in the world, the very first place I go isn't a landscape, but a market. Nowhere else can give you more real images of locals than in a market. And, of course, shopping at traditional Vietnamese market is always my choice on the first days of the year. Foreigners find it quite weird when realizing that in these markets, there are hundreds of flowers and greens which are just used to ... eat. A friend of mine has shared that culinary culture is a door to the soul of a land. When wandering around Vietnamese markets, I feel our "soul" is so beautiful and harmonious as we eat plenty of flowers and greens. Try it, and after the trip, when looking at a flower or a leaf, you will likely ask yourself whether it is edible or not. N Aside from tasting scrumptious dishes, there is a greater way to explore culinary world: cook a dish as a local do! In any Vietnamese kitchen, you can find so many {toys} such as a plastic tube used for removing water morning glory (spinach)'s leaves, a pig-iron knife or a tool to prepare banana blossom. Surprise yourself by cooking pho (Vietnamese noodles), rolls, beef roll with piper lolot or lotus salad - the dishes that you often admire on newspaper and travel magazines. Especially, try to make goi cuon (translucent fresh spring roll) - one of the 10 most delicious Vietnamese dishes. You only need to roll all ingredients including prawn, pork, vegetables, small spring onion and shallot together inside a girdle cake named banh trang. Fast and yummy! It is also the reason why this dish is favored on special occasions as hostesses do not need spend much time preparing for large meals. If you want to reduce the amount of glucose, then take cabbage, or other leaves to roll with shrimp, meat and all sorts of vegetables. Easy and pleasant! Don't worry if you don't cook well, just }roll} to the kitchen and enjoy your "work of art"! LEAVES AND FLOWERS: EVERY DISH IS DELICIOUS! Japanese people fry marble leaves to eat, French cook beef with artichoke flower, but no country uses as many kinds of flowers in cooking as Vietnam. In the past, almost all Vietnamese people didn't have enough money to buy white rice and fresh meat, so they used leaves as spices and got flowers and fruits served as side food. Tet was the only time they ate meat and eggs. Pork simmered with eggs became a traditional dish on this celebration. Nowadays, foreign visitors usually "oh" "wow" when noticing Vietnamese people use a dozen kinds of leaves in a meal or stir-fry flower to eat instead of ice cream on hot days. VIETNAMESE 88 TRAVELLIVE