Banh khuc is a traditional cake of Vietnam and so delicious!
The cake is a rice ball made of glutinous rice mixed with cudweed (khuc)-most important ingredient and filled with green bean paste, pork, and spices.
Cudweed
grows during lunar January and February, when the drizzling rain lasts
all day, and it can be found along the edges of rice fields. There are
two kinds: “nep” and “te”. The latter is more flexible and fragrant and
is preferred for making the cake.
“Ô mai” – a dilicious nosh!
First,
the cudweed is washed, ground and then mixed with husked glutinous
rice. Green beans, that are flayed and turned into paste after being
cooked, are then added to the mixture. Finally, the cakes are sprinkled
with grains of glutinous steamed rice.
As
time goes by it is increasingly difficult to find cudweed as fields are
eaten up by development. For now, you still can find “banh khuc” in
Hanoi. However, some bakers may not be using cudweed and may substitute
it with cabbage or water morning glory.
Wishing
to have the chance to satisfy your hunger for “banh khuc”, you can
visit cake stall at 69 Nguyen Cong Tru Street, that has been churning
out “banh khuc” for years. Ms. Nguyen Thi Lan, the seller, has to hire
locals in rural areas in Hanoi or in neighbouring provinces to seek out
the elusive cudweed. In winter, it grows in abundance so enough has to
be collected to last the summer. The surplus will be dried and stored.
If you are in the old quarter of Ha Noi,
you might hear someone cry “Ai banh khuc nong day?” (who wants hot
“banh khuc”?). You can stop them and ask if the “banh khuc” is from
Ngoai Hoang village in Ha Noi, a place that is famous for having the
most delicious and tasty “banh khuc”. Then, you can buy one for tasting.
The cake should be served hot and dipped into a mixture of roasted and
crushed sesame seeds and salt...
Vietnam Beauty
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