Banh mi Hoi An (Hoi An-style bread rolls) has been listed among the world’s Top 10 sandwiches by Austrian travel website Traveller, together with well-known American cheeseburgers, English bacon butties, and Japanese Katsu Sando.
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The site also recommended addresses selling the best banh mi in town: Madam Khanh - the Banh Mi Queen (115 Tran Cao Van Street), who it says lives up to her billing, and Banh Mi Phuong (2B Phan Chu Trinh Street), which has Hoi An’s best pork roll. Banh mi is tasty everywhere in Vietnam, not just Hoi An. Earlier this year, it was selected as one of the best street food in the world by the UK’s Rough Guides.
Last year, together with pho and bun cha (rice noodles with grilled pork), banh mi was listed among the world’s Top 100 most delicious food by the World Records Union (Worldkings). Banh mi is found literally everywhere. It was street food long before street food became an obsession.
Readily available, convenient, and a bargain at VND10,000-25,000 (about a dollar), banh mi is now the most common breakfast in the country. It can also be a yummy midday meal or even dinner for those too busy to cook at home and it also makes a nice change from rice.
Fillings include roast pork, grilled chicken, or beef meatballs together with homemade pate, cured ham, shredded pork, cheese, thin layers of radish and carrot, slices of cucumber, a generous sprinkling of cilantro leaves, and pepper and chili sauce mixed with a little mayonnaise.
It might sound as though everything lying around is used, but it strangely blends together in a delectable way. Another type of banh mi now popular is pure bread served with French-style beef au vin. The savory beef mixed with spices and especially wine goes perfectly with the bread, especially on winter days.
Travelling to Vietnam, whatever type you may eat you’re sure to have a moment of heaven from each bite into a well-stacked banh mi that is at once crunchy, soft, aromatic, spicy, salty, sour, sweet, and savory.