Showing posts with label Classic Vietnamese. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Classic Vietnamese. Show all posts

Sunday, August 23, 2020

Colourful Summer Rolls

Colourful Summer Rolls

We harvested some of our fresh herbs and flowers from the garden and had fun with decorating our summer rolls. It was a simple cooking, boiled pork, prawns and noodles. The rest were fresh vegetables and rice paper. Served with fresh homemade dipping sauce (lime juice, chilli, water, fish sauce, sugar and garlic) or hoisin sauce. A plate of beautiful summer rolls are ready. Credit to Sarah.

Wednesday, July 12, 2017

Vietnamese Pizza -Vietnamese Cooking

Vietnamese Pizza- Banh Trang Nuong




Vietnamese Pizza- Banh Trang Nuong

Vietnamese pizza! Yes, you read it right Vietnamese pizza? It is one of popular street foods in Vietnam, especially for the young generations. It is quite a modern snack and I like it, no, I should say I love it very much. Not just because the pizza is so delicious but also the creativity, adventure way of cooking and serving it.

On Saigon’s street, I loved watching vendors cooking, husband and wife working together. The wife cooked on a small charcoal grill while the husband looked after the charcoal, took the orders and payments. Using the tiny and movable grill stove with the love of cooking proves to earn enough to put food on the table. It brought back my childhood memory when my little hands helped my late grandparent to look after the fire in their home commercial kitchen. In old days, grandfather used the traditional method of selling food by plying from village to village. 

Well, back to Vietnamese pizza – how to cook? Unlike normal pizza which you normally use dough, you have to use a thin rice paper sheet, top with butter, quail eggs, dried pork, dried shrimp, spring onion, fried shallots, chilli sauce and tomato sauce. It is crispy, spicy, porky, savory and very delicious.

You can use gas barbeque on low flame if you love BBQ outdoor. I use gas stove with a small grill support on top (watch out, make sure not get rice paper burn!) and it turned out pretty good except without the charcoal smell. 

Here is the Vietnamese pizza recipe: 


Vietnamese Pizza Recipe- Banh Trang Nuong
(Chargrilled Rice Paper with Quail eggs, dried pork and dried prawns)

5 rice papers
Butter/oil
10 quail eggs or 5 small chicken eggs
5 spring onion, thinly sliced
½ cup pork floss or dried pork
½ cup dried shrimp (wash and drain well)
Fried shallot (optional)
Chilli flake (optional)
Chilli sauce/ Sriracha sauce
Tomato sauce

Heat the grill to low heat. Place one rice paper at a time. Add a bit of butter, two quail eggs, dried shrimps and pork floss in the center. Use the spoon to spread well all ingredients around and grill for one minute or until the eggs are cook though.
Sprinkle with spring onion, friend shallot and grill until the rice paper is crispy. Drizzle with chilli and tomato sauce.

Fold the rice paper. Serve hot and wrapped in a paper.






As a pizza, you can use any topping as you like, like cheese, bacon, salami, olive...be creative the way you like your pizza to be.

I used our homemade fish mince instead of pork floss as in the picture. Kids enjoy it very much, the hot one with the chilli sauce was for my youngest kid and the BBQ sauce was for my eldest who doesn’t like hot food.



Vietnamese Pizza- Banh Trang Nuong


Thursday, March 19, 2015

Jean's Asian Cooking Classes, Melbourne

Dear valuable customers,

Finally, we are open our cooking classes in Melbourne as restrictions have been eased. Please contact us via contact details below for further information. 

Please visit our new website for the latest update.

Email: jeancookingclass@gmail.com

Phone: 0434 895 893

Update: 1212/2020

Stir- fried Choko with Prawns


Choko (chocho) or Chayote, when did I start to love this funny looking shape vegetable/fruit (I did ask myself when I first saw it many years ago)? It is to native of Central America. But it has become one type of popular vegetables in Vietnam and Cambodia. It provides a good natural sauce of fibre and vitamin C, especially where there is a lack of supplements.

Back to Melbourne, I need to wait for the season to cook. Yes, yes, there are a lot in the market now. Thus, ya! Time to cook choko! I love to use it for simple stir-fry, like normally used in Vietnamese and Cambodian cooking. I love its natural flavour that surprisingly matches well with other ingredients. Here a simple recipe called “stir-fried Choko with prawns”.




1 tablespoon vegetable oil
1 clove garlic, finely chopped
120 g prawns, peeled and de-veined (if use large prawns, diced)
1 choko (400 g or 14 oz), peeled, deseeded, cut into strips

Soy mixture (mix in a bowl):

½ tablespoon fish sauce
1 tablespoon soy sauce
Dash ground white pepper

     Heat the oil in a fry-pan, add the garlic and prawns stir-fry for 1 minute or until the prawns are nearly cooked.

     Add the choko and the soy mixture and stir well. Cover the fry-pan with a lid and cook for a minute. Add two tablespoons of water and have a quick stir, cover it again and keep cooking over medium heat for about 2 minutes or until the choko is softened (if you like it crunchy and tender you can cook for just a minute instead). Serve hot with rice.

Prep & cooking time: <15 minutes

Serve: 2-4


I grew a couple of choko plants a few years ago in my back yard and it was very easy. You may think about doing it.

Sunday, October 19, 2014

Vietnamese Crispy Pancake- Banh Xeo


                                                Vietnamese Crispy Pancake- Banh Xeo

Sunday, July 6, 2014

Vietnamese Cooking Class

How do you like your Pho? I love to have it with beef bone (I love the juice of the bone) and extra paddy mints.

Sunday, May 11, 2014

Vietnamese Cooking Class, Melbourne

We harvested some of our bananas and fresh herbs last weekend. We decided to use those fresh ingredients to make a beautiful and classic Vietnamese meal for Mother’s Day dinner called Nem Nuong or Vietnamese Grilled pork patties skewers. This meal serve with rice paper parcels, on top with  lettuce, vermicelli noodles (after steam), pork patties,  fresh herbs, fruits (sliced green banana and pineapple), beansprout (optional), dip with Nuoc Chem (sauce) with glutinous rice porridge and ground roasted peanuts. This is a mouth-watering dish.


Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Sunday, July 28, 2013