Bangkok Post

First restaurant­s in Vietnam awarded Michelin star

-

Vietnam’s booming food scene was awarded its first ever Michelin stars on Tuesday, with four restaurant­s selected by the prestigiou­s dining guide.

Three eateries in Hanoi — Gia, Tam Vi and Hibana by Koki — and one in Ho Chi Minh City — Anan Saigon — were each awarded one Michelin star.

Although there were no stars handed out to traditiona­l street food eateries serving classics such as pho or bun cha, Vietnamese flavours feature heavily among the winners.

Tam Vi largely focusses on northern Vietnamese dishes including ham with periwinkle snails served with fresh herbs, rice vermicelli noodles and fish sauce, and crab soup with spinach, a popular summer meal in the country.

Nguyen Bao Anh, whose mother Tam owns the restaurant and named it after herself, said her mum “had a dream of opening a restaurant where customers could come and feel like they were eating a home-cooked meal”.

“The restaurant serves traditiona­l food and I think now not many restaurant­s serve that kind of food that remind people of familiar flavours,” Bao Anh said after the awards ceremony in Hanoi.

“This award is for my mum and I’m proud of her,” she added.

Sam Tran, the chef and co-founder of high-end contempora­ry restaurant Gia, spent 10 years studying in Australia before returning to Hanoi, her home city, to push the boundaries of Vietnamese cuisine.

“Through each dish at Gia, I want to tell the story of Vietnamese culture,” she wrote in a guide to the ceremony.

“I want to tell the story of each stage of my life, the regions I have visited, the flavours passed down from generation to generation that I have tasted.”

In Ho Chi Minh City, Anan Saigon was recognised for its modern take on Vietnamese classics, including a bone marrow Wagyu beef pho.

Gwendal Poullennec, internatio­nal director of the Michelin Guide, said Vietnam’s two biggest cities, Hanoi and commercial centre Ho Chi Minh City, offered a vibrant and varied dining experience.

“Hanoi has a laid-back and relaxed vibe, with small shops and restaurant­s mostly from the Old Quarter,” Poullennec said.

“Ho Chi Minh City on the other hand is a bustling and rapidly growing city, which offers a unique energy to all travellers and a very diverse food scene.”

Hibana by Koki, which serves Japanese cuisine, was the only non-Vietnamese restaurant to receive a star. afp

 ?? ?? Restaurate­urs at the Michelin Guide ceremony in Hanoi, on Tuesday.
Restaurate­urs at the Michelin Guide ceremony in Hanoi, on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand