Hue royal dainty table for Tet holiday

Thứ hai, 13/03/2017 08:38

People in Hue city prepared hundreds of dishes for Tet holiday, and how they preserved all of them from before Tet until 15 days later was a piece of art.

Viet Nam shaped as an S from North to South, and the central got both influences of the North and the South, which was clearly showed in their culinary culture. Hue city is a cradle of culinary arts since it once was the capital of Viet Nam, where both royal and common cuisine had thrived.


A meal slaver made by royal culinary artisan Ho Thi Hoang Anh – Photo: Hoang Thuy

The mixture of royal culinary and common cuisine

People in Hue city prepared hundreds of dishes for Tet holiday, and how they preserved all of them from before Tet until 15 days later was a piece of art.

A meal slaver divided into several types of food, such as main course (pork in fish sauce, fermented grounded pork, gelatin pork, fried rolls, stewed pork with duck eggs, boiled pork and sour shrimps), soups (stewed pork legs with dried bamboo shoot), salads (fig, bamboo shoots, young jack fruit), and side dishes (stir-fried bamboo shoot, stir-fried bean sprout).

Most of the dishes were meticulously and carefully made as a latent competition of talented housewives. One example was how to make Hue sour pork: they chose fresh hot pork shank and chopped it without cold water cleaning; they added a bit salt, well kneaded then mix thinly sliced skin in with roasted rice powder, cooked fish sauce, garlic, sugar; the dough would be hand-shaped into small balls, squeezed, then wrapped by Dong leaves and banana leaves; the leaf packs would be hung from 2 – 3 days until ready to eat.

Tet and other traditional holidays in Hue have to have plenty of sweets and sugared fruits. Properly any produce could turn into sweets as oranges, kumquat, ginger, lotus seeds, or even squashes.

The most featured item of Hue was sugared ginger. In that city, ginger were grown up on hills so ginger roots were small and dark yellow. People chose all young roots, shaved off skin then skived. They boiled ginger twice or triple, drained water off, sugared them then cooked on charcoal. The aromatic yet pungent flavor made Hue sugared ginger so remarkable.

On the other hand, cookies and dried sweets were also diverse in ingredients and shapes, from hieroglyphs to flowers. The most popular is many small cakes put together in pyramid shapes. All were to place on altars for ancestors.

According to culinary artisan Ho Thi Hoang Anh, who is known as an ambassador of Vietnamese cuisine at international culinary conferences, traditional meal slavers are different from each region but basically, they always have rice and sweet rice (Bánh-chưng and Bánh-tét which symbolized the ground and the sky as ancestors’ belief).

In the central of Viet Nam, Tet sweet-rice cake (Bánh-chưng and Bánh-tét) always go with pickled sun-dried vegetables like pineapples, daikon, papaya, carrots, and chili. The side dish has to be done weeks before Tet for dried vegetables absorbing fish sauce and swelling. The absorbed salty dried vegetables do enrich the taste of Bánh-chưng and Bánh-tét.

Furthermore, Buddhist families usually prepare a vegetarian slaver in the very first day of Lunar New Year for the ancestors. Just from common ingredients, such as banana flowers, straw mushroom, peanuts, and tofu, Hue talented housewives can cook plenty of delicious and eye-catching dishes.

Another special type of Hue cuisine is fermented food, both vegetarian and non-vegetarian food. Indeed, fermented food is good for digestive system and they can be preserved for a long time.

Talking about culinary culture in Tet meal slavers, Mr. Nguyen Dac Xuan – researcher about Hue, member of Advocacy Committee to establish Vietnamese Culinary Culture Association, said, “We might say that Hue cuisine is a combination of royal and rural cuisine. That’s why Hue food is so diverse. Nowadays, we still can see the imprint of royal cuisine in daily meals, especially on meal slavers, through dainty decoration and delicate decorative dishes and small bowls.”


Careful and meticulous

Hue people display their meal slaver as they decorate a piece of fine art. For examples, let’s take a look of a dish of vegetables, which has white sliced banana round outermost, a round of crescent-shape sliced figs, a round of sliced fresh yellow star fruits, a pinch of herb above, and some slices of red chili on top.

A small dish is painted with many colors (white, pink, yellow, green, and red) and many shapes (sun, crescent, stars, and clouds).

Taste and appearance are not enough; food needs to be nutritious, too. Researchers have claimed that Hue cuisine carries scientific and modern characteristics. Basing on relentless practices for lives, Hue cuisine had gone through a selecting process and what could last obviously became elite cuisine. For examples, let’s look at a daily meal and see: if there is boiled pork, sour shrimps and side vegetables have to come along.

Sour shrimps are made from fresh water prawns, which are still alive and crackling. They soak cleaned shrimps in rice wine, fish sauce, galangal, and sugar then cover and placed under sunlight about 5 days. The fatty pork, sour shrimps, and the acrid young banana or figs all combine into a flavorful bite. The meal is not only tasty but also healthy in a scientific way.

The carefulness, meticulousness, and delicacy in how Hue people cook and display Tet meal slavers clearly reflect their royal customs and folk, even in each common family.

By My Hanh/ Thanh Nien


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