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.
|
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? |
they aren't bills, they are used to clean your chopsticks.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comment. I was told on the tour that they are bills although I think they are a mix of bills, orders, and as you say, paper to clean whatever. I've seen writing on them myself - possible they are multi-purpose paper.
Delete