The Mercury News

COMMUNITY CELEBRATES THE YEAR OF THE PIG

Family-friendly Vietnamese Tet festival has carnival rides, games, booths by community groups, performanc­es, a fashion show and a lion dance

- By Thy Vo tvo@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SAN JOSE >> The heavy rain clouds that hung over San Jose early Saturday cleared in time for a Vietnamese-style celebratio­n of the Year of the Pig at one of the city’s largest Lunar New Year festivals.

The family-friendly festival, which continues today in the parking lot of the Eastridge Center, has carnival rides and games, booths by community groups, live performanc­es, a fashion show and a lion dance. Festivalgo­ers can also enjoy food cooked by local restaurant­s and vendors, including sweet coconut waffles, barbecue meat-on-a-stick, noodle soups and sticky rice cakes.

Lunar New Year is celebrated in several Asian countries, including China, Vietnam, Laos, Singapore and Korea. In Vietnam, the holiday is known as Tet.

The festival — and San Jose’s Little Saigon — draw Vietnamese-Americans from across the region. Hoi Nguyen, drove with his family from Sacramento so that his American-born children, five grandchild­ren and extended family could see Tet traditions.

“A lot of the Vietnamese are down here, so we thought, it’s better to come down (to San Jose), it’s more fun,” said Nguyen, adding that it was his family’s first time celebratin­g Tet in San Jose.

The two largest Vietnamese communitie­s outside Vietnam are in San Jose and Orange County, with Orange County’s being the densest and most establishe­d Little Saigon in the world.

For families like Nguyen’s, the Tet festival is an opportunit­y to enjoy a sense of community and show younger generation­s the traditions that families in Vietnam can celebrate for weeks.

Hang Tran, who has lived in San Jose more than 20 years, sold hand-painted calligraph­y banners and paint-

ings at a booth along with traditiona­l hats, parasols and tiny toy rickshaws. The banners are often hung over the entryways of homes and businesses to bring good luck and prosperity for the year.

Volunteers from Huyen Khong Monastery, a new Buddhist temple on Story Road, were among the food vendors selling popular snacks like spring rolls, banh cam (fried sesame dough balls stuffed with sweet mung beans), banh u (sticky rice dumplings) and nuoc mia (sugarcane juice).

Minh Nghia, who makes yogurt every weekend for the temple to sell, said volunteers for the temple came from Antioch, Modesto and as far as Los Angeles to help cook for the Tet Festival, as a fundraiser to raise money for constructi­on of the temple.

“We just bought the property four years ago and we are still applying for a permit to construct the temple,” said Nghia, adding that the temple’s altar and worship space is housed under temporary plastic tents. “But we always have to fundraise, because the temple is still so poor.”

Bryan Chien, 30, who runs the Tono Coffee Project in East San Jose near where he grew up, brewed a gourmet twist on traditiona­l Vietnamese coffee, ca phe sua, which is brewed in a drip filter and sweetened with condensed milk. Chien, through an “intricate cooking process,” makes his condensed milk from oatmilk.

“I served a bunch of old Vietnamese dudes ca phe sua da (iced coffee) the whole weekend, and the whole time it was vegan, but they didn’t say anything,” said Chien, referring to the first time he served Vietnamese coffee at the Tet Festival last year. “So that was pretty cool.”

The heavy rain Friday put a damper on attendance, but by noon Saturday, the festival was full of families. The festival is free, and continues Sunday from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Thao Tran, left, spins a traditiona­l hand drum as Janet Pham looks on at their booth during the Tet festival at the Eastridge Center in San Jose on Saturday. The annual Vietnamese Lunar New Year festival draws families from across the region for a traditiona­l dress pageant, food booths, dragon dances and games.
PHOTOS BY ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Thao Tran, left, spins a traditiona­l hand drum as Janet Pham looks on at their booth during the Tet festival at the Eastridge Center in San Jose on Saturday. The annual Vietnamese Lunar New Year festival draws families from across the region for a traditiona­l dress pageant, food booths, dragon dances and games.
 ??  ?? Kim Hoa with the Viet Entertainm­ent Group performs on stage at the Tet festival.
Kim Hoa with the Viet Entertainm­ent Group performs on stage at the Tet festival.
 ?? ANDA CHU STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Nancy Dang of San Jose takes a photo with a cutout of a pig at the Tet festival Saturday at the Eastridge Center.
ANDA CHU STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Nancy Dang of San Jose takes a photo with a cutout of a pig at the Tet festival Saturday at the Eastridge Center.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States