After trying, Vietnam Heritage Travel Company would like
to recommend top 5 hotpots in Hanoi for food adventurers
The biting cold of Hanoi winter makes for a great chance
to gather up around a steaming hotpot - a favorite of locals in the winter
time. The most common types of hotpot involve beef and chicken, but following
are some of the more exotic types that offer a different taste of Hanoi
1. Pigeon hotpot on Hoe Nhai Street
A rather unforeseen consequence of having too good of a
dining menu at the local pub!
Nam Duong Tuu Quan is better known for its pigeon hotpot
than for its selection of home-made liquors. As one may soon notice, a good
number of patrons at 21 Hoe Nhai are female, which is very untypical for local
pubs that are often crowded with overzealous male bingers. They do come for the
birds!
The standing-out feature of pigeon hotpot is its broth of
very liquid porridge, which has been long boiled with some birds earlier. Most
other hotpots don’t use porridge, and that only makes for two birds with one
stone. The hot steamy rice soup that has extracted that sweet essence of
marrow, together with the white tender meat, blended in all the sense-awakening
glory of various types of herb, vegetable and mushroom, make one wanting to
swim in all that goodness, if it is not for the boiling bubbles that poke fun
of the noses that can’t hold out far enough. Or at least wanting to gulp them
all down!
Either way, it will probably be an experience one never
forgets.
Four diners can chip in for an estimated total of
350,000vnd for one pot. We doubt you are going to eat so little though!
2. Snail hotpot on Truong Chinh Street
These are hard to come by in Hanoi, and when it does, the
original is still the one that rules. The street stall in little Khuong Thuong
alley, off Truong Chinh avenue, has been serving the exotic pot for over 40
years. That is the time when bombs still fly over both men and snails!
Besides the intriguingly hot and sour broth, snail hotpot
also features some very interesting ingredients. There are snails (!!!),
dumpling, wonton and roll, all made from the crawling creature. The hotpot also
sees to the attendance of locally typical fried tofu, unripe banana and pork
belly slices. They combine to make for an unmistakable dish of beautiful aroma
and craving taste that is nowhere else to be found.
A pot will likely set the four of you back some
300,000vnd. It is definitely not cheap though, considering the thing is more or
less a peasant’s food.
3. Mudskipper hotpot in Van Cao street
The fish and indeed the hotpot are rather common in the
south, but it has only recently made way into the northern dining table.
Mudskipper hotpot has a stable devoted fan base, but it is rare to come by in
Hanoi, and thus fairly strange to some. One of the few restaurants that carry
such is Mrs. Sau’s Hotpot, at 65 Van Cao. Come no further for an authentic
taste, because even the name screams a southern accent!
The distinguished feature of mudskipper hotpot is the
presence of the exclusive river leaves which add a lightly bitter yet strangely
aromatic taste. Its broth is a mouth-watering sweet and sour mix. The
mudskippers themselves are small but have soft texture and very tender meat.
The fish often soak up with broth nicely, which makes for a compelling crave.
The must-have vegetables that come with this hotpot is water hyssop and sliced
banana flower. Water spinach has also proven to be a nice addition.
For VND 350,000 a steaming pot, this is fairly pricey,
especially when the fact that it barely serves 2 persons each comes into
account. But as one comes to think about it, as all the ingredients are shipped
all the way from the southern land, it is a reasonable charge.
4. Chicken-in-vinegar hotpot on Tran Nhan Tong street
Itself being a typical sidewalk street shop with the so
very typical menu of mostly chicken-deprived dishes, however the 52 Tran Nhan
Tong restaurant brings about nice touches of uniqueness with really different
takes on the classics. An example of which will be the chicken-in-vinegar
hotpot.
The specialty at 52 Tran Nhan Tong is the hill chicken –
free hill-roaming birds that develop tender, thick and juicy meat, with a
full-textured skin that makes for a delicate taste never to be found in
rubbery-skinned farmed birds. Many diners also complement the great broth. The
owner proudly boasts of his recipe: “Other than the normal ingredients that
come with every hotpot’s broth, we also add a special type of home-made rice
liquor that is brewed exclusively for the purpose”. The myth stands
uncontested, but 52 does indeed produce some extraordinary out the average
ordinary chicken hotpot.
A pot for 5 to 6 persons should run for about 350,000vnd.
The proud owner is a nice person to talk to, and the service is reasonably
quick.
5. Frog hotpot on Truc Bach Street
The small road that veers out of the famous Thanh Nien,
runs the shore of Truc Bach lake, in which it takes its namesake from, is
widely known for its now all too famous specialty. There are numerous vendors
around selling frog hotpot, but Ngân Béo at 43 Truc Bach (Fat Mama Ngan – so
named after the owner. Now take that!) is perhaps the most famous and also
voted the best.
Frog hotpot is rather on the spicy side. It is much more
labor-intensive to make, as the animal has to be carefully butchered and only a
few of the cuts qualify for the honor of the boiling pot. The meat is deeply
marinated and, as typical with other frog dishes, later half cooked with bamboo
sprouts. Diners will dip the ingredients in the pot. A fine frog hotpot has a
rich, deep and spicy flavor. The aroma is nose bleeding and the meat can hardly
ever overcook. It serves with water spinach and sliced bamboo sprouts. The frog
hotpot is one of the hottest most sought after in the winter days for many
Hanoians.
A typical pot for two will run around 350,000, which is
relatively high compared to other types. But its strong flavor, exotic
ingredients and fine taste will leave diners soon longing to come back.
Caution: frogs are known to host a number of parasites
that can severely affect human health. Make sure that you cook the meat
throughout before eating. Also, customer service at Fat Mama receives some very
unfavorable rating. The neighbors, even though rated a bit below Fatty when it
comes to taste, invest more in customer satisfaction.
Happy feasting!
This article is written by Ha
Nguyen from Vietnam Heritage Travel Company for pictures and more
recommendation, please visit
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