March 14
Today is foodie day. We've got a walking tour of a neighborhood in Hoi An where food is prepared, followed by a visit to a local vegetable market and ending in a cooking class. We are picked up by Vu and driven to a Hoi An neighborhood quite close to our hotel. There we meet Chef Ngoc. Ngoc is a chef at the Four Seasons Resort on the Five Star boulevard. He takes us to his family neighborhood to show how local ingredients get to our tables. The first stop is to a farmer who grows mung beans. We see a big pile of reddish sand in his backyard, but when Ngoc pushes away some of the sand, we see mung bean sprouts underneath. He scoops out a double handful and the farmer washes the sand off:
Apparently, the mung beans impart some sort of toxin into the soil, so they only use the dirt once, then they sell the dirt as landfill.
The second stop is a place where they make the yellow rice noodles that Hoi An is famous for. We've seen how rice slurries are made and also how noodles are cut, but the key to the process is burning a mixture of herbs and dumping the ash into the slurry to produce the yellow color. Here is what the finished product looks like after sitting out to dry:
Next, we head to a local market to pick up some of the ingredients for the dishes that we will make. Chef Ngoc says that he will meet us there and hops on his scooter. He tells us later than he is very proud to have been the first person in Hoi An with an electric scooter.
As we walk along, Chef Ngoc quizzes us on what the various fruits and vegetables are and is surprised when Beth is able to identify most of them. She explains to him that it is because she goes to so many Asian grocery stores when looking for dinner ingredients. Here are some of the pictures I took:
In addition to the mung bean sprouts that we already have, Chef Ngoc picks up some Chinese eggplants, lemongrass, chives, lettuce and cucumbers for later. As I'm walking around, I'm wondering how any of these market people make any money. They are surrounded by people who are selling exactly the same produce. My only thought is that there is a difference between people who are growing organic produce versus those that use pesticides or that there are differences in what it costs them or their suppliers to produce items for sale. But it is not clear. We get back in the van and head to our final stop, which is some sort of resort that also includes rooms for cooking classes.
Chef Ngoc starts by taking blocks of white fish filet and pouring oil and soy sauce on it to marinate. Then we start on the first dish, spring rolls. He shows us how to ladle the rice slurry onto a fine fabric mesh above a pot of boiling water and move the slurry toward the outside to produce a thin rice pancake. Everyone is surprised when I manage to make the best one - Beth says that I obviously do not do enough cooking at home! Next, we get cooked shrimp that have been cut lengthwise, chives, mint leaves and cucumbers to use as filling. Along the way, I discovered why my burritos always explode. Chef Ngoc tells us to put the filling on the outside of the rice pancake while I had always put it in the middle. This makes it much easier to roll up! We dip the finished rolls into a mixture of chili oil, garlic and fish sauce. Yum!
Chef Ngoc coats the marinated fish in turmeric and wraps it in banana leaves along with some spring onion, oyster sauce, salt, pepper and a pinch of sugar and puts the banana leaves on a charcoal oven to cook while we work on the second dish: Hoi An pancakes. We had really enjoyed the Hoi An pancakes we'd had the previous evening at the resort and were anxious to see how to make them. The pancakes themselves are easy to make. It is a mixture of rice flour, water, salt and turmeric. We each have miniature hot plates to cook the pancake mixture. When they are ready, we add precooked pork belly, small shrimps, mung bean sprouts, spring onions, mint, coriander, basil and cucumber, fold the pancake in half and hold it down while still on the heat until it stays folded.
The next dish is braised eggplant in a clay pot. For this one, we didn't have to do anything. We each had little burners with clay pots. Chef Ngoc starts with oil and garlic then adds quartered tomatoes and lemongrass and a little water. Next, he adds fish sauce and sugar. Finally, he adds the chopped eggplant, a little more sugar, turmeric, pepper and lemongrass stalk. Then we simmer the mixture until the eggplant is tender and then eat it with rice while trying unsuccessfully to avoid burning our mouths.
Beth has realized that the tops that she brought with her are probably going to be too hot for the temperatures in the upper 90's with high humidity that we expect in Cambodia and Thailand, so we head out for some shopping. At first, we see only dresses and skirts, but eventually, we realize that almost every shop has some shirts hidden inside. Beth manages to find two lightweight shirts and paid ridiculously little for them.
We are still pretty bloated from lunch, but eventually we start to get a little hungry. We debate trying someplace new but decide that we would rather go back to Morning Glory Original a second time. The only problem is that we don't have reservations, and we remember that there was a long line for a table when we were there before. There is a smaller line, and we were told that we would have to wait for about 20 minutes. Instead of just hanging out, the maître 'd takes us to a bar across the street which turns out to be an historic building from the time when Hoi An was a major seaport. Apparently, Ms. Vy bought this bar as an overflow from her restaurant. This is an advantage because anything we order to drink will be transferred to our bill at the restaurant. We decide to pass on wine tonight and go with lime juice.
One end of the bar faces the restaurant while the other door faces the night market. While we are sitting in the bar, a woman comes up to us from the night market side and begins placing intricate 3D folded paper objects on the table similar to what we had seen outside the Temple of Literature in Hanoi. Chris, who loves to shop, takes an immediate interest in them, which prompts the woman to bring even more out. Meanwhile Beth has discovered a sign on our table that says please do not buy from the street vendors. She shows the sign to Chris who tells the woman that she is not interested, but it takes a few minutes before the woman is convinced that we are not buying anything and tries her luck at another table.
About this time, we are starting to wonder whether the maître d' has forgotten about us since she never asked for a name or wrote anything down. But a few minutes later, she arrives to take us to our table. We are not super hungry, so we order a curry, a stir fry and another plate of morning glories marinated in garlic and top it off with a mango sticky rice and fried banana sticky rice. Yum!