How do I rate his tour? The tour was a lot of fun and Neville Dean was a good presenter although it felt a little weird listening to an Australian accent give us the lowdown on Vietnamese food. He had an excellent rapport with the vendors and definitely showed us some excellent sources, including the best Pho we have ever had. He guaranteed that he had checked all his vendors, that the food we ate was "safe". In a way, he enabled us to try street food without having to run the risk of getting bad food, so for that we were thankful. What I'd found missing was the inherent cultural background behind some of the foods and customs - not something a foreigner could learn in a few years even if he could learn the names of all the foods and dishes. In North America, there would have been protests of cultural misappropriation...
It was an early start to the day with a breakfast drink at this roadside stall, loaded with fresh fruit and in a non-tourist area of Hoi An.
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Fruit shake with crispy coconut in side to give the shake a distinct crunch. |
Tofu dessert, basically Chinese origin |
According to Neville, the white bits of paper under the tables would tell how popular the place was - the more there were, the better the food because the bits of paper were actually the bills. |
The best black sesame paste dessert (also Chinese in origin) |
The vendor showing us the bottom of the ice maker |
Snails - no no's, because of possible parasites - Neville Dean would not recommend us even trying it |
BBQ pork - apparently there was milk in the marinade |
The best Pho ever at this restaurant |
The best Banh Mi prepared by Banh Mi Queen - crunchy baguette with Vietnamese mint |
We had what looked very much like a tasting menu at a restaurant - this was still breakfast, slowly turning into lunch |
Most of these looked quite familiar since we had been eating our way down the country. |
Vegan too - although we didn't try anything here |
Vietnamese new year treats |
The only thing I remembered was this most memorable spring roll, made with an unusual rice paper that looked like it was doillie - the holes made the texture crunchy but soft |
Iced Vietnamese coffee - just what we needed |
tequila? |