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Robert
Danhi invites local kids to try his new dish, chicken with bamboo sprouts.
Robert
Danhi (R) grills a trout in lotus leaves with a local right on the field.
Robert
Danhi (L) learns how to make banh chung (rice glutinous cake), a Vietnamese
Tet delicacy, in Phu Tho province.
Robert
Danhi delighted at the shellfish he catches. Tuoi Tre
During his seven tours across
Love-struck
In 2000, the head of the New York-based Culinary Institute of
America suggested that Danhi design a course on Vietnamese cuisine, but Danhi
turned down the suggestion, as he had never visited
Danhi made his first trip to
Danhi also joined the “Go Eat Give” program, initiated by a
NGO. He taught deaf people how to cook, giving them useful skills to earn a
living. From that experience, the expert realized that cooking isn’t just
about making good and aesthetically pleasing food.
Danhi shared that the question he finds most difficult to
answer is “In your opinion, which is the most delectable Vietnamese dish?”
“Over the past 13 years, I’ve tried some hundred Vietnamese
delicacies. I have learned that even with the hugely popular “pho” (noodle
served with beef or chicken), people in different regions have their own ways
of seasoning, cooking and appreciating it,” Danhi elaborated.
However, he cited “bun thit nuong” (rice noodles served with
grilled pork and/or spring rolls) as his favorite Vietnamese dish.
The expert explained why he enjoys the dish so much. The
grilled seasoned pork is unique in its taste and aroma, and is especially
delicious when grilled over charcoal. Also, the dish is eye-catching,
featuring an array of colors: green vegetables, brown pork, white rice noodles,
red chilies, and pickled carrots, which together symbolize the “ngu hanh”
(the five basic elements according to Eastern philosophy: metal, wood, water,
fire, and earth.)
“I’ve been to many places the world over, but few delicacies
hold such special meaning and taste as good as “bun thit nuong” does,” Danhi
noted.
Kids - first tasters
One day in late 2013, the American chef crossed hundreds of
kilometers in precipitous terrain to Sung La Valley in northern Ha Giang
province. The temperature was 9 Celsius degrees.
In a kitchen typical of the H’Mong ethnic minority, which
served as the setting of the critically acclaimed Vietnamese film “Chuyen cua
Pao” (Pao’s story), Danhi prepared “ga H’Mong xao mang rung” (H’Mong chicken
cooked with forest bamboo sprouts).
After his hosts approved the dish, he invited the local
children to try it.
“The kids really loved my dish, which brought me to the verge
of tears. I felt I was cooking for my own children,” Danhi shared.
He also visited a Lo Lo ethnic minority woman in the
province’s Lung Cu commune to learn how to make the people’s signature corn
wine.
Though Danhi doesn’t drink, he took several sips of corn wine
as he didn’t want to upset his hospitable host.
On the way across the country, Danhi asked to stop from time
to time so that he could take snapshots of the stunning landscape and rustic
dishes.
He recruited a Vietnamese student who was studying in
Danhi said that in his cozy kitchen in the
He has turned down several tempting offers to work with
prestigious restaurants and hotels in order to have time to travel around the
world.
He is the only cuisine expert to be selected by
Danhi is currently working on finding a way to minimize the
amount of sodium in
For this project, Danhi will likely return to
TUOITRENEWS
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Thứ Năm, 6 tháng 2, 2014
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