Eating Dalat with Chef Peter
Peter Cuong Franklin is the executive chef of Anan Saigon, a modern Vietnamese restaurant tucked inside the Cho Cu wet market. A graduate of Le Cordon Bleu, Peter studied food anthropology and gastronomy in America, and honed his skills at restaurants such as Chicago's Alinea and Caprice in Hong Kong, before returning to Vietnam where he's on a mission to reimagine Vietnamese cuisine. Here he shares memories and favourite dishes his hometown, Dalat.
My mom emigrated the central province of Quang Nam to Dalat when she was a teenager. When I was a young boy, I remember going to the Dalat market with her to buy ingredients for making her mì Quảng, a classic pork noodle soup with yellow turmeric rice noodles. The market was a special place full of strange meats, seafood, colourful vegetables and busy activities of people buying and selling things.
Today, the best Dalat dishes are made with fresh produce and meats that are sourced the farms surrounding the hill town. The city is blessed with fertile land and a cool highlands climate, so just about anything can be grown here. Some of the best ingredients in Vietnam can be found in Dalat, such as avocados, strawberries, asparagus, artichokes, grapes, tea, coffee, flowers and wild mountain mushrooms.
During the colonial period the French established Dalat as a hill station to escape the sweltering Saigon heat and as a wellness center for soldiers and civil servants. From small numbers of ethnic minorities in the early days, Dalat’s population has increased dramatically. Most new residents like my mother come other parts of Central Vietnam. Because of this, many famous dishes the central region such as bánh bèo, bánh xèo, and bún bò Huếcan be found in Dalat. Dalat offers some of the most diverse food in Vietnam, thanks to its temperate mountain climate and mix of culinary traditions, different regions of Vietnam, as well as Europeans, Chinese and ethnic minorities.
Here are five dishes I always eat when I find myself back in Dalat.
Mì Quảng
One of my mom’s specialty dishes is mì Quảng. I’ve eaten my mom’s version and many other versions before, but I recently enered a flavorsome and rich version of this dish, deep inside Dalat’s wet market. The broth was enriched with so much pork knuckle that it resembled a thick, rich tonkotsu ramen rather than the light and sometimes watery version you find in many places. This bowl of pork knuckle broth with turmeric noodles was a revelation.
Try it: Mì Quảng Thành, 58C Phan Đình Phùng, Dalat
Bánh Bèo
Bánh bèo is one of my favorite dishes because of its simplicity and purity. The original version comes Hue, and is a spoon-sized bite made of rice and tapioca flour, steamed in a small ceramic bowl. After steaming, the bánh bèo is scooped gently out of the steaming bowl, and served with a light fish sauce, fried shallots, fresh chili and crispy pork skin simply delicious! Try it as a snack in the morning or afternoon.
Try it: Banh Beo so 4 Ba Huong, 402 Phan Dinh Phung, Dalat
Phở Bò
The Dalat-style phở is quite different other regions. It’s Hanoi-style phở meets the bountiful, fertile mountain climate of Dalat with the inclusion of a plate of fresh herbs and crisp European lettuce greens introduced by the French during the colonial era. Is this fusion? If I were to include Dalat lettuce with the phở at my restaurant Anan Saigon, most people would probably scream “fusion.” This is the way the local people eat phở everyday here in Dalat. It’s only natural to include the beautiful lettuce greens that they have available.
Try it: Quán 1C, 1 Tăng Bạt Hổ, Dalat
Bánh Mì Xiu Mai
Unlike the cold cuts Saigon-style bánh mì, the Dalat-style bánh mì xiu mai is served hot. Due to colder climate in this mountain city, the sandwich is served as a bowl of warm pork meatball broth, a warm grilled baguette, and a mixture of shredded papaya and fresh herbs. Most locals eat one but this lady knows I usually order two with extra chili because it’s so delicious and I love a little heat with my bánh mì.
Try it: Bánh mì xíu mại BH, 16 Nguyễn Chí Thanh, Dalat
Bánh căn
Bánh căn is a Dalat dish that evolved the Hue bánh bèo steamed rice cake. Due to its cooler climate, in Dalat bánh căn is grilled over a charcoal brazier with a quail egg or duck egg on top. This is a specialty Dalat dish that’s best enjoyed in the early morning hours as a breakfast or light snack. Bánh căn is becoming more popular in Dalat, and you can now find it in many places in the centre of the city, especially around the Hoa Binh area.
Try it: Bánh Căn Cây Bơ, 56 Tăng Bạt Hổ, Dalat (open 6am-10am)
Posts same category
- CNN to beam Vietnam’s cultural heritages to global audiences(03/07)
- Hawkers on bicycles peddle fragrance on the go(25/06)
- Vietnam emerges top Asia-Pacific travel choice for Russians(18/06)
- Red blossoms light up northern Vietnam city(18/06)
- Saigon specialty market caters to pest killing festival(18/06)