Flavor Boulevard

We Asians like to talk food.
Subscribe

Sandwich shop goodies 3 – Bánh ú tro (Vietnamese-adapted jianshui zong)

July 01, 2010 By: Mai Truong Category: California - The Bay Area, Chinese, Comfort food, One shot, sticky rice concoctions, sweet snacks and desserts, Vegan, Vietnamese

It’s been two weeks, but better late than never. After I read Jessica’s zong zi post on Food Mayhem, images of amber tedrahedra just wouldn’t leave me alone. I talked to my mom about them, and I could hear her voice crackle with sweet memories over the phone. We haven’t had these sweet little things for years. We used to eat them by the dozens every lunar May. Like most Saigonese, we didn’t do anything huge to celebrate Tet Doan Ngo, but bánh ú tro was too scrumptious a tradition to pass.

Each pyramid is just a little over an inch tall, whichever way you roll it. It’s unclear whether the traditional zongzi grew smaller when Chinese immigrants share the recipe with their Vietnamese neighbors, or only the dessert zongzi (jianshui zong) is favored by the locals over savory types. Most Vietnamese have also long dissociated this sticky rice snack with the Chinese reason behind Duanwu festival, if not to assign the Fifth of Lunar May to commemorate the death anniversary of Vietnam’s legendary Mother Âu Cơ, kill off bad bugs, make ceremonial offerings to family ancestors, or simply bathe in the summer solstice’s endless sunlight. Whatever meaning someone chooses to celebrate (or not celebrate) Duanwu (Đoan Ngọ in the Vietnamese language), he can enjoy bánh ú tro all the same. And if he lives in Hội An, there’s a big chance he actually participates in making them too.

The people of Hoi An don’t make a living with bánh ú tro year round, but they keep the tradition with earnest. Within four days, 1st-4th of lunar May, everybody makes bánh ú tro. The fifth day, everybody eats bánh ú tro. The sixth day, things get back to normal. In Saigon’s markets, bánh ú tro start showing up a week or two before the Fifth, and disappear right after, my mom recalled. So when I told her that I was going to search for them after I read Jessica’s post, she said “fat chance”.

Why such rarity? After all, bánh bía, also adapted from the Chinese and also originally made just for one specific festival, shines its face all year long in every bakery and sandwich shop these days. Well, the recipe for bánh ú tro turns out to be real hard, and it’s not just the wrapping stage. The best bánh ú tro, according to Hoi An banh makers, must be wrapped with “kè” leaves from the mountains of Huế. The cleanly washed sticky rice is soaked in sesame ash water overnight (sesame plant burnt into ashes, mixed with water and sifted through sand). The ash water turns sticky rice grains into semi-powder form, giving bánh ú tro a clear amber look and a strangely light texture, unlike any other sticky rice concoctions. No wonder “ash” (tro) is part of the banh’s definitive name. (If you look at jianshui zong recipes, you’ll find lye water or alkaline water listed. More correct terms perhaps, but the horrid image on Wikipedia’s page on lye takes away my appetite. “Ash” even has a romantic ring to it, and this banh is made for a poet after all.) A bit of alum is put in the ash water to somehow keep each banh from falling apart.

Now of course sesame plants aren’t growing in everyone’s backyard to burn, so just any coal ash would do, as long as you sift the ash water carefully to avoid big pieces of charcoal in your sticky rice. Some different source suggests ash from mangrove firewood, dissolved in water for a month, but it seems to be just another grandmother’s special recipe varying by the regions. After soaking the rice for 1-3 nights, take it out and wash with cold water again.

The wrapping leaves, too, vary from place to place. Kè leaf is obviously not the most popular, as bamboo leaf and reed leaf, in their slender shape and earthy fragrance, do the job just as well. Banana leaves can be cut into wide strips to imitate bamboo leaves. Skilled banh makers can also control the colors: older leaves give darker hues,  substituting ash with white lime paste(*) lets bánh ú tro have the natural green shades from the leaves, while red lime paste causes a reddish amber shine.

Nonetheless, there exists a common wisdom regardless of ingredients: burn an incense stick when you drop the banh into water for boiling, when the incense burns out, the banh is done. Usually that takes four hours.

Let cool, bánh ú tro is more firm than chewy. There you can still see silhouettes of individual grains on the outside, but each banh is a solid tedrahedron of defined edges and uniform texture. It unwraps easily, parallel thread marks of bamboo leaf veins imprint on the smooth and fulfilling surfaces. It’s hardly sticky, unlike bánh ít and bánh dầy (also made from sticky rice). And it’s light. The banh’s are tied together in bundles of ten, and I can eat all ten in one sitting. (I can hardly finish one bánh ít in one sitting.) Funny, “ít” means “small in quantity”, and “ú” means “chubby”.

The traditional bánh ú tro of the North and Central Vietnam is just that, a plain chunk, good by itself to some and must be accompanied by honey or sugar to others. Then with time it got a sweetened red bean paste filling. Then a sweetened mung bean paste filling. Then a sweetened grated coconut filling. I grew up eating the red bean kind every year and thought it was the only kind. So I jumped at the first bunch I saw at Kim’s Sandwiches last Sunday, twelve days after the Fifth of Lunar May. The bunch was tied together by green nylon strings. I hurried home, unwrapped, took a bite. My mom called.
– Mom, I found them!
– Really?!?! How are they?
– Good, but why’s there no bean paste?!

Should’ve gotten the red string bunch instead.

———————————————————————-

Bánh ú tro ($3.75/10 pieces) from Kim’s Sandwiches
(in the Lion Supermarket area)
1816 Tully Rd 182, San Jose, CA 95111
(408) 270-8903

(*) Lime paste is used to eat with betel leaves and areca nuts.

Click here for a recipe of bánh ú tro (Vietnamese zong zi)

———————————————————————–

Previously on Sandwich Shop Goodies: bánh bía (Vietnamese adapted Suzhou mooncake)

Next on Sandwich Shop Goodies: corn xôi

0 Comments to “Sandwich shop goodies 3 – Bánh ú tro (Vietnamese-adapted jianshui zong)”


  1. F*ckin’ tremendous things here. I’m very glad to see your post. Thanks a lot and i’m looking forward to contact you. Will you kindly drop me a e-mail?

    1
  2. It’s really a cool and useful piece of info. I’m satisfied that you shared this useful info with us. Please stay us up to date like this. Thank you for sharing.

    2
  3. Thanks for your marvelous posting! I certainly enjoyed reading it, you can be a great author.I will be sure to bookmark your blog and will come back in the future. I want to encourage you continue your great job, have a nice morning!

    3
  4. Some genuinely nice and useful info on this website , as well I believe the style holds wonderful features.

    4
  5. Have you ever thought about publishing an e-book or guest authoring on other websites? I have a blog based upon on the same subjects you discuss and would really like to have you share some stories/information. I know my audience would value your work. If you are even remotely interested, feel free to send me an e-mail.

    5
  6. I conceive this internet site contains some really good information for everyone :D.

    6
  7. I like the efforts you have put in this, appreciate it for all the great posts.

    7
  8. This design is spectacular! You most certainly know how to keep a reader amused. Between your wit and your videos, I was almost moved to start my own blog (well, almost…HaHa!) Fantastic job. I really loved what you had to say, and more than that, how you presented it. Too cool!

    8
  9. I love what you guys are usually up too. This sort of clever work and reporting! Keep up the terrific works guys I’ve you guys to our blogroll.

    9
  10. I believe this site contains some very wonderful information for everyone. “The penalty of success is to be bored by the attentions of people who formerly snubbed you.” by Mary Wilson Little.

    10
  11. Its like you learn my mind! You seem to know a lot approximately this, like you wrote the e-book in it or something. I think that you could do with some percent to force the message home a bit, but instead of that, this is fantastic blog. A great read. I’ll definitely be back.

    11
  12. Definitely consider that which you stated. Your favorite reason appeared to be on the net the simplest thing to keep in mind of. I say to you, I definitely get annoyed at the same time as people think about issues that they just don’t recognize about. You controlled to hit the nail upon the highest as well as outlined out the entire thing with no need side effect , people can take a signal. Will likely be back to get more. Thank you

    12
  13. You are my inhalation, I own few web logs and occasionally run out from to brand.

    13
  14. hello!,I like your writing so so much! percentage we be in contact extra approximately your post on AOL? I require an expert in this house to unravel my problem. Maybe that is you! Looking ahead to peer you.

    14
  15. I truly appreciate this post. I’ve been looking all over for this! Thank goodness I found it on Bing. You have made my day! Thx again

    15
  16. Pretty nice post. I just stumbled upon your blog and wanted to say that I’ve truly enjoyed surfing around your blog posts. In any case I will be subscribing to your feed and I hope you write again very soon!

    16
  17. It is really a nice and useful piece of info. I am satisfied that you just shared this useful information with us. Please stay us informed like this. Thanks for sharing.

    17
  18. I truly appreciate this post. I have been looking everywhere for this! Thank goodness I found it on Bing. You have made my day! Thx again

    18
  19. At this time it sounds like BlogEngine is the best blogging platform out there right now. (from what I’ve read) Is that what you’re using on your blog?

    19
  20. I’m impressed, I must say. Actually hardly ever do I encounter a weblog that’s each educative and entertaining, and let me let you know, you may have hit the nail on the head. Your concept is outstanding; the problem is one thing that not sufficient persons are talking intelligently about. I’m very joyful that I stumbled throughout this in my seek for something referring to this.

    20
  21. Some genuinely prime content on this internet site, saved to fav.

    21
  22. Thanks a bunch for sharing this with all of us you really know what you are talking about! Bookmarked. Please also visit my website =). We could have a link exchange arrangement between us!

    22
  23. Very interesting topic, thankyou for putting up. “All human beings should try to learn before they die what they are running from, and to, and why.” by James Thurber.

    23
  24. I was reading through some of your content on this internet site and I believe this internet site is rattling instructive! Keep putting up.

    24
  25. Some genuinely nice stuff on this web site, I love it.

    25
  26. Thank you for the good writeup. It in fact used to be a amusement account it. Look complicated to more added agreeable from you! By the way, how could we keep up a correspondence?

    26
  27. I have recently started a web site, the info you offer on this website has helped me tremendously. Thank you for all of your time & work.

    27
  28. of course like your website but you have to check the spelling on several of your posts. Many of them are rife with spelling problems and I find it very bothersome to tell the truth nevertheless I’ll surely come back again.

    28


Leave a Reply