Vietnam’s 1st banh mi festival: Event of impressions

Vietnam’s First Banh mi (bread) Festival, aimed at celebrating the values of banh mi in Vietnamese cuisine, has left a great impression on visitors during the four-day event that ended today [April 2].
With 120 pavilions set up by bakeries, restaurants, and leading food suppliers, the festival held in the southern economic hub of Ho Chi Minh City drew a large crowd.
The festival showcases a variety of bread loads made in different shapes and flavors regardless of traditional and inventive ingredients with the goal of promoting the virtues of banh mi to foreigners.
Visitors can experience firsthand the steps involved in making bread and sample bread made with a variety of ingredients and flavors.
Some typical kinds at the festival are Banh mi thit nuong based Hanoi (bread filled with baked meat), Banh mi xiu mai based Dalat (bread filled with ground pork meatballs), Banh mi pha lau from Ho Chi Minh City (bread with braised pork meat and offal), Banh mi ep from Thua Thien-Hue (pressed bread), Banh mi que Haiphong (crispy and spicy breadstick), Banh mi cha ca in the central region (bread with grilled fish).
The prices vary from VND15,000 (US$0.65) to VND50,000 ($2.2)/loaf.
In Vietnam, a banh mi is usually consumed for breakfast or as a snack.
On March 24, 2011, the entry banh mi was added to Oxford Dictionary. It’s described as “a type of Vietnamese baguette sandwich filled with cold meats, pâté and vegetables”.
According to the Oxford Dictionary, the baguette was introduced in Vietnam in the mid-nineteenth century when Vietnam was under French colonial rule. The banh mi is believed to have been invented in Saigon much later in the 1950s, and it has since become one of Vietnam’s most iconic specialties.
On March 24, 2022, a Vietnamese banh mi loaf appeared on Google Doodle.
In September 2022, the term banh mi was added to the world’s leading dictionary Merriam-Webster. It appears to be “a usually spicy sandwich in Vietnamese cuisine consisting of a split baguette filled typically with meat (such as pork or chicken) and pickled vegetables (such as carrot and daikon) and garnished with cilantro and often cucumbers.”
| Vietnam’s 1st Banh mi Festival draws the crowd. Photo: Tuyet Nguyen/Mekong Environment Forum (MEF) |
| An array of bread in different shapes and flavors. Photo: Tuyet Nguyen/MEF |
| From a kind of traditional taste. Photo: Tuyet Nguyen/MEF |
| …to those full of creativity. Photo: Tuyet Nguyen/MEF |
| Each loaf of bread varies from VND15,000 (US$0.65) to VND50,000 ($2.2). Photo: Tuyet Nguyen/MEF |
| Diverse options are available for visitors. Photo: Tuyet Nguyen/MEF |
The post Vietnam’s 1st banh mi festival: Event of impressions appeared first on Vietexplorer.com.
View more from VietExplorer:
In Vietnam, elderly woman donates own skin to save son’s lifeExhibition spotlights tigers in Vietnam’s ancient art
EXPO 2020 Dubai
Exhibition welcomes upcoming Lunar New Year
Outstanding art recordings on pandemic prevention and control honoured
Preservation and promotion of Xam singing strengthened in modern life
Nguyen Hue Flower Street near finish line to celebrate Tet in Ho Chi Minh City
Vietnam artist marks Lunar New Year with hundreds of carved tigers
So-called fortune market in Ho Chi Minh City brilliant in red ahead of Tet
Ho Chi Minh City eager for 2022 Tet Flower Festival
Hot-air balloons color sky over Ho Chi Minh City tourism fest
Artistic lighting designs completed for ‘River of Light’ project in Da Nang
Monkey bridge, ‘banh chung’ making at spring festival attract people in Ho Chi Minh City
Award to entertainer convicted of child molestation in US sparks fury in Vietnam
Ho Chi Minh youths pose with yellow apricots as Lunar New Year approaches
2022 Vietnamese Tet festival launched in Ho Chi Minh City
Sketches of Vietnam’s national emblem on display
Hanoi proposes full reopening to tourism from April 1
Tet delicacy: Vu Dai Village’s slow-cooked fish
Ambassador of Israel sings Vietnamese song to celebrate Tet

.jpg)
.jpg)

.jpg)
.jpg)

.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)

Nhận xét
Đăng nhận xét