Dining


Wednesday, 26/10/2016 14:49

Let’s enjoy abundant flower dishes

A bowl of thien ly and crab soup, a favourite food for cooling down in the summer heat. — Photo dulichvietnam.com
Viet Nam News

By Ha Nguyen

Viet Nam is among the leading countries in the world in terms of dishes cooked from different flowers, such as thien ly (Telosma cordata), ban (Bauhinia variegata) flowers and many others.

In several nations, flower foods are considered delicacies for special guests, but in Viet Nam many are popular dishes in daily meals and can also be used as elegant food that provide nutritious dishes.

Blossoms: A plate of fresh thien ly flowers. — Photo dulichvietnam.com

Thien ly flower dishes

For master chef Pham Tuan Hai, the flower is not only an ingredient to cook many kinds of dishes but the thien ly trellis is the beloved image of Viet Nam’s rural area for hundreds of years.

Vietnamese legend has it said that a rattle snake fell in love with a young married man, attracted by his excellent flute playing, that it conjured into a young woman who looks like the man’s wife as if they are a twinborn.

On being discovered, the snake left the man’s home without a word. But the next morning the couple saw a creeper with a green-yellow flower at the window. The elderly of the village named it Thien Ly.

In the old days, Hai’s grandmother often asked him to help her pick flowers from the trellis to cook dinner.

“I still remember a full basket of the fresh green yellow flowers picked for my grandmother to cook during a hot summer day. I felt very happy and comfortable about what the dish brings us,” said Hai.

In modern times, the flowers became one of most sought after vegetables by locals during hot  summers because apart from being tasty, it helps to cool down body heat and is also a medicine to treat many ailments.

Nguyen Thi Xuyen, 65, who lives in the northern province of Ha Nam, often fries the flowers with beef, seafood or freshwater crabs.

“I often wake up early in the morning to go to the market to buy the flowers and crabs to ensure that the dish is sweet, tasty and delicious,” said Xuyen.

To cook the dish, she soaks the crabs in clean water for an hour and then uses a pair of chopstick to stir it until the water is pure. It means that the crabs are already cleaned.

She then shells the crabs and puts the crabmeat into a stone mortar to grind it until it becomes thick paste and then filter it and let the crabs’ ground away.

“We have to cook the food over a low flame to ensure that it is not be broken before putting the thien ly flowers into the pot,” said Xuyen.

In his book,  Professor Do Tat Loi wrote that apart from being  a tasty food ingredient, the flowers can treat many ailments such as improving the immune system, helping children with healthy development and the elderly with sleeping problems.

Local specialty: Ban salad is a valuable and nutritious Thai ethnic specialty dish. — Photo dulichvietnam.com

Ban flower dishes

Ban flower is a special flora of Viet Nam’s northwestern region. It has been associated with the life of Thai ethnic group for hundreds of years and is one of their most distinguishable specialties.

Visitor to the region, especially the Dien Bien and Lai Chau provinces, in March will enjoy forests with the flowers blossoming en mass.

Writer Nguyen Van Toai, 75, describes the flower as a beautiful young girl who is shy and modest.

Toai has lived some 20 years in the region. He loves the flower for its beauty and its special flavour.

“I still remember when spring comes and ban flowers bloom far and wide across the region. Thai women often pick the flowers to cook special dishes to welcome guests,” he said.

He relates a story, from the 1970s, when he was assigned to work in Dien Bien Province. Right on the first day, the elderly told a folk story about ban flower.

A young beautiful girl named Ban fell in love with a poor handsome man near her village. But her parents didn’t agree to their union, forcing her to marry a rich old man.

Ban protested her parents’ decision by leaving her home to seek her love. But she died of exhaustion on the way to find her man.

At the very spot where she died, a tree with white  flowers which bloom in spring grew. Locals took the name of Ban for the flower since then.

Hoang Thi Toong, 65, a Thai ethnic woman, who is the owner of Tay Bac Restaurant in Lai Chau Province, said there are many dishes from ban flowers. They include xoi ban (sticky rice with ban flower), ban salad, fried ban with bamboo shoots and ban soup.

Toong said most guests at her restaurant like food cooked with ban flowers, but many are often interested in ban salad, which is a mixture of many ingredients such as chilli, peppers, doi (talauma) and mac khen (Zanthoxylum rhetsa), wild seeds that the Thais use to makes spice.

“The salad is rich in aroma and is delicious. I enjoy it so much,” said writer Toai, who often returns to the region once a year. – VNS

 
 

 


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