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Saturday, August 29, 2015
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When to go & Weather in Vietnam

When to go & Weather in Vietnam

The climate of Vietnam varies considerably from region to region. Although the entire country lies in the tropics and subtropics, local conditions vary from frosty winters in the far northern hills to year-round, subequatorial warmth in the Mekong Delta.

*Vietnam Weather* 
 
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Free Visa to Vietnam, Vietnam Visa Exemption

Free Visa to Vietnam, Vietnam Visa Exemption


The entry Visa to Vietnam is required for all foreigners wishing to visit Vietnam except citizens of countries having bilateral agreements on visa exemption with Vietnam, of which, some can stay for 14 days such as citizens from Cambodia, South Korea, Japan, Russia, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark; and some can remain in Vietnam for less than 30 days such as Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Philippines, Indonesia, Laos.
     *Vietnam Free Visa*      
                      
Recommended Flights to Vietnam (Hanoi, or Ho Chi Minh city)

Recommended Flights to Vietnam (Hanoi, or Ho Chi Minh city)

Recommended Flights to Vietnam (Hanoi, or Ho Chi Minh city)


There are currently many airlines operating flights to Vietnam. The main ports of entry for air travel are Tan Son Nhat airport (SGN) in Ho Chi Minh City or Noi Bai Airport (HAN) in Hanoi. The number of direct routes from Australia, Europe and North America to Vietnam are still very limited and most flights departing from these regions to Vietnam involve a transit in Hongkong, Bangkok, Seoul, Tokyo or Singapore.

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Vietnam Best Adventure Tours- Free Money Exchange

Vietnam Best Adventure Tours- Free Money Exchange

Many question that where is the best place to exchange currency in Hanoi? Hello guys, What's the best/easiest way to change US$ into Dong in Hanoi? 1) if it's best to travel with $CAD or $USD?  2) best places to exchange money for dong? (airport, money exchanges, banks, etc.) 
*Free Money Exchange*      
                                               
If you are looking for reliable locals who help you to exchange the currency for you when you are in Hanoi or Vietnam.
Please come with us , we are providing a free currency service for all traveler.

                                         

We will do the same exchange rate from national bank "Vietcombank", you can view the currencyexchange rate at: Vietcombank.com.vn

Our aimwill promote Vietnamese country to international friends and believe that you will love us and come back more regularly.
                               FreeMoneyExchange.com
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Vietnam Tet 2015, Vietnamese New Year 2015, Public Holiday

Vietnam Tet 2015, Vietnamese New Year 2015, Public Holiday

Tết or Vietnamese New Year, is the most important celebration of Vietnamese culture. The word is a shortened form of Tết Nguyên Đán, which is Sino-Vietnamese for "Feast of the First Morning of the First Day". Tết celebrates the arrival of spring based on the Vietnamese variation of the Chinese lunisolar calendar, which usually has the date falling between the months of January or February.

 
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Vietnam Tet 2016, Vietnamese New Year 2016, Public Holiday

Vietnam Tet 2016, Vietnamese New Year 2016, Public Holiday

Tết or Vietnamese New Year, is the most important celebration of Vietnamese culture. The word is a shortened form of Tết Nguyên Đán, which is Sino-Vietnamese for "Feast of the First Morning of the First Day". Tết celebrates the arrival of spring based on the Vietnamese variation of the Chinese lunisolar calendar, which usually has the date falling between the months of January or February.
 
The Biggest Festival in Vietnam

The Biggest Festival in Vietnam

The Biggest Festival in Vietnam

The festival which best epitomizes Vietnam's cultural identity is Vietnamese New Year or Tet, which is the phonetic deformation of "Tiet", a Sino Vietnamese term which means "Joint of a bamboo stern" and in a wider sense, the "beginning of a period of the year". The passage from one period to the next may cause a meteorological disturbance (heat, rain, mist) that must be exercised by ritual sacrifices and festivities. There are many Tets throughout the year (Mid-autumn Vietnamese New Year, Cold Food Vietnamese New Year, etc.). But the most significant of all is "Vietnamese New Year", which marks the Lunar New Year.
TET, Vietnamese New Year, occurs somewhere in the last ten days of January or the first twenty days of February, nearly halfway between winter solstice and spring equinox. This year (2010), Vietnam celebrates Tet on Feb 14th as the first day of the Lunar New Year. Although the Lunar New Year is observed throughout East Asia, each country celebrates Vietnamese New Year in its own way in conformity with its own national psyche and cultural conditions. 
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Hanoi Team Building- Cooking Class

Hanoi Team Building- Cooking Class

To facilitate Corporate Team Building and Incentive programs, we can organize both co-operative and competitive events for groups up to 50 persons. Contact us with your requirements – we are experienced in putting together tailor-made events and can design a program to satisfy your needs. Fun, challenge, team spirit, entertainment guaranteed for your group!
     ** Hanoi Corporate Team Building Events & Cooking**      
 
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Food on Foot Tour with Vietnam Best Adventure Tours

Food on Foot Tour with Vietnam Best Adventure Tours

For my final street food tour adventure I opted for a budget-priced tour, joining a lunchtime trip with Food on Foot, operated by Vietnam Best Adventure Tours  with a great guide and plenty of stops. Tasty, but I wouldn't eat a whole one (at the start of a street food tour).

Usually pick-up is at your hotel, but given I haven’t lived in a hotel since first arriving in Hanoi three years ago, I travelled to their office, on Hang Be Street in Old Quarter. Entrance is down an alleyway and it’s not the most salubrious of surroundings, but the welcome was warm. I joined an English couple, Wendy and David, who decided they wanted some company (before they met me perhaps?) with our guide, Yen, a 21 year-old bundle of energy.
Yen was wonderfully bubbly yet also very well informed about the area, the history of Vietnam and the food. It turns out she is about to sit her final exams for her tourism degree and has always wanted to be a tour guide — I’d say she’s set for a very strong career.

 
 

Our first stop was Xoi Yen, one of Hanoi’s best known sticky rice outlets. Fortunately it wasn’t as busy as it sometimes gets, so we were easily able to find a seat inside. Yen suggested we share a couple of portions — wise advice given this was only our first stop and sticky rice is not a light dish — and ordered up xoi thap cam. Xoi thap cam is sticky rice with seven toppings, including pate, sausage, egg, pork meat, chicken, mung bean and … I forget the seventh. More on that in a later post …
Next we went for lemon iced tea (cha chanh). Yen explained that after xoi it was a good idea to have a drink to balance the heaviness of the rice. So we sipped our drinks and nibbled on sunflower seeds — “just like the teenagers do” said Yen. It was then time for a walk to the other side of Old Quarter. Along the way Yen explained points of interest — for example, why the flags at the temples display four coloured squares — and took us down an alleyway, the likes of which most tourists would never venture for fear of not knowing what awaited them at the other end. For us, fortunately it was just Ngo Gach Street, and onward we travelled to try banh cuon.

I now found myself at the same banh cuon place that I’d been to on two previous tours. Its popularity for non-locals was proven by the presence of some other Westerners, but fortunately they left quickly enough for us to take their table, as the place was busy. For those of you who haven’t read the posts on the Hanoi Cooking Centre and Urban Adventures tours, banh cuon is a rice pancake filled with pork and mushrooms and dipped in a sauce. We also tried some pork cured in cinnamon.

Time for another drink, and this time it was sugar cane juice to take away. David, who doesn’t have a sweet tooth, took one sip and decided it wasn’t for him, but Wendy and I ploughed on through, eventually admitting defeat. It’s delicious but very, very sweet.
As we walked to the next spot, Yen stopped a lady selling sweet stuff from baskets carried over her shoulder and ordered some banh do. Similar in sound and texture to the banh gio I had tried on the tour with Mark Lowerson, this didn’t have the pork filling but instead was topped with honey, leading to a sweet/savoury mix with a very strange texture. We all agreed that was one we’d not try again. The sapadilla lady was far smilier.

By now we were on Hang Dieu, and stopped at Dong Thinh Nha Hang Mien Luon for eel soup. Reminiscent of the chicken and sweetcorn soup I used to eat at Chinese restaurants in the UK, it was pleasant enough. En route to dessert of hoa qua (mixed tropical fruit topped with coconut milk and condensed milk) we stopped to try some sapadillo (hong xiem), a fruit similar in taste and texture to a soft pear. The hoa qua was delicious, but then we found out we’d next be eating fish… the other way round would have been nice, but the tours can’t dictate where the stalls are located I guess.

For cha ca we went into a restaurant (not Cha Ca La Vong) where we wrapped fish, cooked at our table, with herbs and rice noodles in rice paper and dipped them into a tasty sauce. The tour ended with caphe trung (egg coffee) — something else I’d discovered a few times on the other street food tours.

The tour lasted over the stated three hours, but Yen was very keen and explained that she didn’t worry too much about time, she just wanted to make sure everyone had a good time. Exact stops are dependent upon the start point and the tour guide; we know for example the other Food on Foot tour group running at the same time had tried crickets, duck and beef noodles. Price for a group tour is US$25/525,000VND but private tours can be organised for a higher per person rate and offer the opportunity for tailoring, for example, a seafood focused tour. It took me a few attempts to book onto a group tour as they only run as demand dictates, so you’ll need to be flexible if you don’t want to go it alone. Tours run at lunch and in the evening.

Overall this tour had a good balance of food and foot and although the stops were quite mainstream, in terms of being covered in the guidebooks (and Travelfish), I particularly appreciated the ad hoc stops that Yen initiated to buy banh do, sapadillo and water chestnuts. She was also a very lively and informative guide.
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Early Morning Walking Tour Hanoi

Early Morning Walking Tour Hanoi

Good morning Vietnam! Today I am going to explore Hanoi old quarter, joining the $1 Sunday morning tour from 

Vietnam Best Adventure Tours with my guide, Mr. Giang. The reason why the tour takes place on Sunday morning is because during that time, most of the locals are still sleeping and we can wonder around easily. Also, the traditional market turns alive in the morning. Here is my review:
 
Recommendation for your first trip to Vietnam

Recommendation for your first trip to Vietnam

Recommendation for your first trip to Vietnam

1. Visa or no visa?

Vietnam allows passport holders from the following countries to visit Vietnam without a visa:

30 days visit: Cambodia, Laos, Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand
21 days visit: Philippines
15 days visit: Brunei, Denmark, Norway, South Korea, Finland, Russia, Sweden and Japan

Other countries are required to obtain a visa. There are two ways of getting a visa to Vietnam:

You can apply for a visa at the Vietnamese embassy in your country. Each country’s requirements will vary slightly, so be sure to check the visa application procedure with the embassy beforehand – and leave enough time to get everything completed before your trip!

You can get a visa on arrival in Vietnam – as long as you have pre-registered before travelling. This can be done via a travel agency, and you will only need to fill in a form (and a fee). They will then send you an approval letter that will allow you to process the visa when you arrive into the country. Be sure to take this letter with you as you may be denied boarding if you do not have a copy! When you arrive into the country you will be able to pay for your visa and have the
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How to Make a Place Memorable

How to Make a Place Memorable



               "A guest never forgets the host who had treated him kindly”                        

                                                                           – Homer, The Odyssey, 9th Century BCE
          

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Fresh Food and a new friend in Hanoi

Fresh Food and a new friend in Hanoi

I know this is my second post of the day but I have some time to kill and am leaving dear Hanoi behind tomorrow so thought it appropriate that I should complete my Hanoi blogs before departing.

After a disappointing walking city tour provided by the hostel I started doing a little research on paid tours. I really wanted a local to tell me about the city and how the locals do life. I stumbled uponVietnam Best Adventure Tours and their Food on Foot tour.

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Hanoi Food on Foot (KellyAustria. com)

Hanoi Food on Foot (KellyAustria. com)

Lonely Planet lists Vietnam street food tour as the best walking tour for globetrotting foodies.  

Glad we included a guided walking tour in the itinerary of our recent Indochina backpacking trip.

We booked our tour with Vietnam Best Adventure Tours , which got great reviews. Our tour guide was Thanh.  Her energy was infectious, which is exactly what we needed after a full day of exploring Hanoi.

She began by saying "sidewalks are for everything - parking, eating, cooking except walking." With that we began exploring the streets of Hanoi for the best food finds.

First stop was this place that serves Mien Tron. Mien Tron is a flavorful combination of Vietnamese mint, cucumber, vermicelli, bean sprout and crunchy eel.  It was served with soup, which was supposed to be taken last, not combined with it. Calamansi and chili were also available.

What can I say? Ngon! Ngon means delicious.

Trang explains that the best food in Hanoi is family food or street food.  The families or shop owners mostly live upstairs and are assisted by relatives from the province.

After that, we walked to our next stop where we had ugly fruit, snowy ball cake or floating cake and sugarcane juice. Snowy ball is very much similar to Filipinos' palitaw.

Our next stop was southern style beef. Bun Bo is beef noodle, which has flat noodle and fried beef cooked for long hours with sauce, no soup. It also has lettuce, bean sprout, carrots, nuts and shallots. Vinegar and chili were served on the side.

Again, ngon!

Then, we went to Countryside Cafe and Restaurant, which serves exotic dishes. 

We had frogs sautéed with roasted rice, betel leaf, garlic, shallots, chili and salt. There were guys having beer and cigarette on the street. Couldn't resist. I ordered beer.

I was already full after those 4 stops, but the next was just irresistible -- barbeque chicken.

I must admit. Hanoi's chicken is also so good. 

For first time Hanoi tourists, the streets can seem a bit chaotic and difficult to navigate but Trang thought us that most Hanoi streets are named after their specialization.  

My eyes must have lighted up when she said our next stop was .....

Beer street 

I didn't care that we passed through dark alleyway just to get there.

he taught us how to say cheers. 

We begin by counting ...

Mot- Hai- Ba, then we say Zo and lift our bottles or glasses.

Then, we count again ...

Mot- Hai- Ba, then say Uong and drink!

 
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Hanoi - chaotic charm

Hanoi - chaotic charm

Hanoi - Vietnam

This was our first visit to Vietnam.  Hanoi is the capital of Vietnam and the country's second largest city.  Each new country we go to we are amazed at how different and unique it is from the last.  

We arrived around 8:00 in the evening and were very hungry so out to the street we went.  It was pure chaos in the streets!  With more motor scooters than we have ever seen in any country.  Between the overflow of the shops into the streets and the hundreds of scooters, it was difficult to even walk.  But rest assured - the constant honking of the horns made us aware that we were in the way!

Of course D could not wait to get street food.  So we stopped at this little cafe.  How about these teeny tiny chairs?  They were the norm for the street cafes.

We had a delicious beef and mango salad at Cafe Quang Minh (51 Dinh Tien Hoang) - two plates for $2.50 USD.

The two girls below were quite amused that we were eating there.  It was a very local place so not sure how many tourists actually eat there - plus D was taking photos of me.
D was still hungry so he picked up this little tidbit - grilled meat and puffy rolls - we think.

 Our hotel was located in the old quarter a perfect location.  We stayed at the Hanoi Essence Hotel.  It was a fabulous hotel and we highly recommend it.  The staff was exceptionally good.  Splurge on the suite – it is not that much more than a regular room and the extra space is really nice. 

Me cruising the street on a scooter!

The next morning we ventured out into the crazy streets.  The streets are the heart of the city - and are used as a big part of the people's living space.

 More teeny tiny chairs........

Little cafes filled the streets.  Hanoi is a coffee culture, not alcohol.

This is a very common scene - large groups of young people eating and having fun.  

We were mesmerized by the traffic.   We would just pick a spot out of the way and watch the traffic for an hour.  To see our post on all the scooters click here.

There was an art to crossing the street.  Just go!  Don't run, just walk directly into the traffic and keep an even pace.  Don't hesitate or turn around.  Amazingly, it works.  The drivers work around the pedestrians.

 You can buy just about everything in the street.

 You can even "buy" a photo of yourself carrying pineapples.

 Ancestor worship (the burning of paper) is a religious practice based on the belief that deceased family members have a continued existence, take an interest in the affairs of the world, and possess the ability to influence the fortune of the living. 
Inquisitive boys asking her about the ritual.

A nice break for a fresh coconut drink.
And later, more coconut in the form of a pina colada   :  )

Don't you love how this man is not wearing his shirt at dinner - and this was a nice restaurant!  I think this photo looks like a scene from a movie - robbers plotting their next gig.

Early Sunday morning (6 am!) we met up with Anh from Vietnam Best Adventure Tours, for a 3-hour walking tour of the city.  He only charges $1 – really!  We were the only ones who showed up so it was a private tour.  It was very interesting and we would recommend Anh for this tour or other tours he offers.  And we did tip him more than $1 )
 

The city is located on the right bank of the Red River.  The site of present-day Hanoi has been populated for at least 10,000 years.  Most Americans associate Hanoi with the Vietnam War and the tremendous conflict between the two countries. Following the war and during the ensuing U.S.-led embargo, life in Vietnam was extremely difficult.   After the U.S. lifted the embargo in 1993, the Vietnamese have come to love Americans and American products.

Hồ Hoàn Kiếm Lake:  this historic lake is the site of a foundational legend for Vietnam: Hồ Hoàn Kiếm means "Lake of the Returned Sword", alluding to the legend that a future emperor received a sword from a magic turtle at the lake's edge. The emperor later used the sword to drive the Chinese out of Vietnam.

 We were struck by the amount of construction going on all over the city and just outside of the city.  It did not appear to be as poor of a city as we thought.  But keep in mind the average income is only about $1000 per year.  We saw many large houses like the one below.  Most were very colorful.

This woman is selling phone numbers.  Anh told us this is big business in Vietnam and a good number can sell for a high amount of money.  The same goes for license plates.  What is a good number?  Ones that are considered lucky -  1, 5, and 9.  More importantly, the string of numbers must be ascending... indicating your fortune and health will ascend as well.

Anh took us through the early morning food market.
Many of them just sell the goods out of the lower floor of their house.  If you look below, you can see the stairs off to the left leading to the main part of the house.

Butchers, Fish section, Making fresh noodles, Veggies, Eggs

Anh got us both to taste balut.  What is this you ask? 

Balut is a fertilized duck embryo that is boiled and eaten in the shell. Believed to be an aphrodisiac and considered a high-protein.  Street vendors mostly sell balut.
It tasted like boiled chicken; not bad.  But I could not get over the idea of what I was actually eating, so I would say no - I did not like it!

The seniors exercise in the park every morning.  Ho Chi Minh preached that all Vietnamese should exercise each and every day.  They tend to take a social outlook on it and exercise together.

 
There was even an area in the park where you could learn how to dance.

I was surprised to see such a large traditional catholic church in Hanoi.  This is St Joseph's Cathedral built in 1886.  Of the population, 85 % are Buddhist, 7% are Catholic and 8% other.
Anh took us to his favorite PHO restaurant, Pho Gia @ 49 Bat Dan.  At 8 am on a Sunday it was packed!  That is Anh in the blue T-shirt looking at the camera. 

 

It was one busy "little" kitchen.

 We were really enjoying the soup when.......

D bit into the biscuit below and broke his tooth!  We have been very fortunate in that all the traveling we do, we have never had a major mishap……after this trip, we can no longer say this.  They look soft - but they were very chewy.

The tooth was “hanging on” but we were very concerned it was going to fall out or worse, was infected.  We had our hotel help us find a dentist that 1) was open on Sunday 2) spoke English 3) could take us immediately.  Our hotel manager called and made the appointment. 

We hopped into a cab and 20 minutes later D was sitting in the dental chair.  They took x-rays and told him it was definitively broken but not infected.  If he ate soft foods he should be okay for the next 10 days.  We were very lucky in that there was a dental student in who spoke excellent English.  The dentist did not speak a word. 

And believe it or not, they refused to take any money for the appointment.  We left them money on the desk and told them to buy lunch for the office.  His tooth hung in there and he lost 5 pounds as he could only eat soft foods – eggs and tofu!

Sights we visited

Ho Chi Minh's Mausoleum 

In the centre of Hanoi, a large area is devoted to Ho Chi Minh.  He is affectionally known as Uncle Ho in Vietnam.  The grandeur of the Mausoleum is a strange contrast to the simple house where Ho Chi Minh lived and worked.  They say he would not have been happy with the Mausoleum, in fact, he requested to be cremated.

His embalmed body lies inside a glass case in the Mausoleum.   I had not read this before my visit so I was quite shocked when I entered and saw the body laying there - looking like he was asleep.  An interesting fact…..the embalming process was done by Russian experts and each year in early autumn, his body is flown to Moscow for three months for maintenance. 
 Hoa Lo Prison infamously known as Hanoi Hilton

There is not much left of the prison as it was demolished in the mid-1990s to build a hotel complex.   Regardless, it still has an eerie feel when you walk through it knowing that it held thousands of inmates over the years.   You can view the original cells and there are illustrations of life in the prison interestingly enough, showing the American prisoners having a grand old time playing cards, having parties, eating well, etc
The prison is known as one of the most unjust and cruel prisons in Vietnam.   Previous prisoners included numerous American pilots including U.S Senator John McCain (see his uniform below).

The Temple of Literature
The Temple of Literature is one of Hanoi's most popular landmarks.  Despite the “temple” in the name, it is not a religious site.  The temple was built in 1070.  It is one of several temples in Vietnam, which are dedicated to Confucius, sages and scholars.  Shown below, Khuê Văn Các, the red tower at the Temple of Literature is the symbol of Hanoi.


This young lady was posing for her friends.  So pretty in the traditional Vietnamese dress..

We took a day trip to Duong Lam, an ancient village on the outskirts of Hanoi, home to many houses built three or four centuries ago. It is also the birth village of two Vietnamese kings.  Duong Lam was recognized as a national relic in 2005.
Many centuries ago the Chinese dominated Vietnam and this is seen heavily in the architecture and the written words on older buildings.
There are around 300 houses still standing in Duong Lam, 50 of which date back 300 years.   

Our guide explained that when a person dies, they bury them in the rice fields for three years then there is a ceremony and the body is cremated.  We saw many gravesites in the rice fields.

We visited several temples, pagodas, and shrines during our day tour.  We had both a driver and a guide.

We ate lunch at a local house that was over 800 year old.  It is considered a National treasure in Vietnam.


When D was done with his conference, we took a three-day trip to the beautiful Ha Long Bay, which is a four-hour drive from Hanoi.  To read all about this trip click here to visit this stunning place.


On the way back to Hanoi we visited Yen Duc, an agricultural village producing primarily rice. 
We walked around with a guide and learned about the environment and the rice fields.

 We met friendly locals like the barber - with his outdoor shop.
This gentleman was looking at the photo D took of him.

 This young lady stopped to show us what was in her little baskets - crabs.  They were so tiny and scooted so fast, it was impossible to get a photo of them.
Last but not least, we were given a singing performance called Quan Ho. 
This type of singing is  Vietnamese folk music with songs about love with young adults.

The Quan Ho singing style originated was first recorded in the 13th century.  In 2009, Quan Ho singing was recognized as a UNESCO Cultural Heritage.
The tour was a little hokey - but it allowed us to see a local village outside of Hanoi.  And we did get to meet a few locals.  All who were very friendly and enjoyed having their photos taken click here to see more photos of the people. 
We look forward to our next visit to Vietnam!

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A Food Tour in Hanoi’s old quarter

A Food Tour in Hanoi’s old quarter

Ditch your map and guidebook, grab your appetite and allow yourself to get lost in Hanoi’s Old Quarter.  The hustle and bustle of the shopping district will keep you visually stimulated, but the local restaurant owners and street food vendors will welcome you with open arms and treat you like family as you indulge in sampling the local cuisine. 

Hanoi’s Old Quarter wakes up around 5:30am.  Shop owners and their families begin their day with a hot, savory breakfast on the sidewalk outside of their homes, which also doubles as their storefront.  These traditional long and narrow homes, or “tube homes” as they’re called, have limited frontage, so seating is usually pretty restricted.  

Due to the limited space, you’ll quickly notice the use of child-sized plastic stools and tables.  This miniature, inexpensive furniture is perfect given the limited space.  More importantly, it’s easy to quickly move the furniture inside, especially when the police decide to enforce the local laws that prohibit restaurant patrons from eating on the sidewalk.  

The Old Quarter, comprised of about 40 narrow streets, is teeming with over 300 traditional Vietnamese restaurants.  The majority is run by individual families, and while many have expanded their menus over the years, each family, or restaurant, is known for a specific specialty.

We had a chance to partake in a lunchtime food tour with Vietnam Best Adventure Tours.  Here are a few must-try dishes from Hanoi’s Old Quarter.  Enjoy!

Green mango salad is ubiquitous in the Old Quarter. This particular salad calls for an unripe mango that has a green exterior and is firm to the touch.  At this stage in its ripening, it has a mild, neutral flavor along with a fresh crunch, similar to the crunch of fresh jicama.  The salad below incorporated finely shredded carrots as well as fresh mint, cilantro, basil and chopped roasted peanuts.

Fresh herbs play an especially important role in both cooked and raw Vietnamese cuisine.  They’re aesthetically pleasing and add a nice burst of bright color to a dish, but their significance extends beyond their role as a basic garnish.  There are multiple varieties of mint, basil and cilantro (or coriander), each offering a slightly different sweet, sour, bitter or salty flavor profile.  The freshness of these herbs is essential to achieving a well-rounded, balanced Vietnamese raw vegetable salad, phở (soup), bún (rice noodle dish) or fresh rolls.

 

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IETNAM – Food on Foot tour, different tastes!

IETNAM – Food on Foot tour, different tastes!

Vietnam - Hanoi - Food Tour Vietnam - Hanoi - Food Tour (BY CHRIS, APRIL 28, 2014)

Vietnam, Hanoi is probably heaven for addicts for special food. We like to try a lot of things too and because we had only little time we hired some experts to show us around! After a short search on the internet we came to only one who could assist us on short notice (one day before we booked): www.VietnamAwesomeTravel.com. They where just great, our guide Ms. Lily walked us around the old quarter to taste the various things Hanoi has to offer with great explanation what it is. At the end we went to Snake Village (on our request, not standard), read about that here: VIETNAM – Live snake in Vietnam, a beating heart! (do not open if you have a weak stomach).
  
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Hanoi Violin Village, Violin Village Day Tour from Hanoi

Hanoi Violin Village, Violin Village Day Tour from Hanoi

If you do not have much time in Hanoi or just prefer a short day trip around Hanoi, it is nice to visit 3 villages "Violin, Wooden, Ancient villages", just enjoy the transfer by local train for an hour and car for 2 hours. Especially make friends with locals and enjoy the lunch with hosts.
*Hanoi Violin Day Tour* 
                                                          
                                                  "Tour from 9.15 AM- 17.00 PM"At 9.15, tour guide and car driver will pick you up in your hotel lobby, then transfer 10 minutes to the railway station where you will get on the train for a rid60Km (~1 hour) to the countryside tour
. It is quite interesting to view the farming from the window. Ride like a local.
 

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