Vietnamese cuisine is immensely popular worldwide, pulling a little from French colonial-era cooking, street food, and more contemporary, modern influences.

Perhaps the most popular Vietnamese food is pho – otherwise known as a soup with broth, rice noodles, herbs, and beef, chicken, or another source of protein. Another preferred Vietnamese food is banh mi which is a baguette filled with the most savory ingredients.

There are other Vietnamese dishes though, slightly less popular, which are just as delicious. They are as common as the ingredients they pull from – usually lemongrass, ginger, mint, coriander, cinnamon, chili, lime, and basil. If you’re looking to continue delving into Vietnamese cooking without the usual following you around, try any of these Vietnamese meals.

Bun ca

Bun ca translates to ‘fish noodle’. In different regions of Vietnam, bun ca takes on a different meaning in terms of preparation. For most, it’s a soup noodle dish served with fried fish. The fish is fried – sometimes deep fried – to a golden perfection. It’s then added to a broth sometimes containing things like pineapple and a fish base.

Bun cha

Bun cha is a Vietnamese dish similar to Japan’s dip ramen. Consisting of rice vermicelli, bun cha is served with pork patties, vegetables, and usually a dip sauce which could pull from vinegar, green mango, salt, and pepper. Some Vietnamese restaurants soak up oil from serving bun cha in sauce which makes them even tastier!

Read more: 5 Vietnamese Dishes You May Not Have Ever Heard Of But Which Are Absolutely Delicious

Flan, otherwise known as ‘banh flan’ or Vietnamese custard, is an underrated silky sweet treat and, for a lot of Vietnamese families, it’s their favourite dessert. It’s relatively easy to make and is absolutely delicious.

Flan, for those who don’t regularly splurge on it, is a type of custard made from a mix of milk, cream, egg yolks, and sugar. Baked in ramekins oftentimes lined with caramel sauce, the flan is removed from the oven once it has a soft texture. Flan requires heavy knowledge and careful detailing to make as the texture is very specific.

Vietnamese-style flan as is usually served in many Vietnamese restaurants does not pull from a pure Vietnamese background. What we mean by this is that flan did not originate in Vietnam. Flan’s origin story begins in ancient civilizations.

Egg was its main ingredient and at the time of Greeks, Romans, and ancient history, it was believed the consumption of eggs could help with preventing illnesses relating to the liver and kidneys, increase fertility, and resolve urinary tract problems among other health benefits. Although in this time period flan was never made, this philosophy as it came down through centuries of living was responsible for the development of the dessert.

During the Middle Ages, eggs rose in popularity as during Lent the obligation to fast prohibited consumption of certain foods while allowing participants to enjoy others. This further built on prestige given to eggs over centuries. It was during the Middle Ages that the first flan recipes originated – evidently having nothing to do with Vietnam. That said, flan made its way to the Vietnamese in early French colonization. As one will notice in a lot of aspects of Vietnamese cooking, French influence is evident. This is obvious in some of how pho was developed and common dishes just like it.

Read more: Where Does Vietnamese Flan Come From – See How This Silky Sweet Treat is Made

Trending worldwide, Vietnamese cooking has won a lot of attention for healthy, broth-based dishes like pho as well as for having philosophies prioritizing balance over oils, meats, or otherwise. For beginners in Vietnamese cooking or Torontonians who have recently fallen in love with Vietnamese from a restaurant outing, you can easily prepare some of the cooking on your own at home with the right guidance.

The rise in popularity of Vietnamese cuisine has meant a half-dozen very highly rated cookbook coming to market. These cookbooks are written by experienced Vietnamese chefs and usually focus on one of two approaches – either sharing traditional family recipes or adapting some Vietnamese classics to modern family kitchens in North America. From TorontoPHO, the best Vietnamese restaurant in the GTA, here are some of our favourites.

Vietnamese Food Any Day – Andrea Nguyen

Andrea Nguyen’s Vietnamese Food Any Day: Simple Recipes for True, Fresh Flavors is a recommended read for any dedicated starting Vietnamese chef. The New York Times featured cookbook contains 80 easy Vietnamese recipes that hinge on both tradition as well as cooking hacks. Andrea Nguyen is one of the world’s most critically acclaimed Vietnamese chef authors and in this arguable masterpiece, you will find takes on banh mi, rice paper rolls, classic Vietnamese pho, honey-glazed pork riblets, garlic chicken wings, turmeric coconut ice, and more.

Vietnamese Home Cooking – Charles Phan

Vietnamese Home Cooking is the first cookbook from award-winning Vietnamese chef Charles Phan. This cookbook shares fundamental techniques and ingredients in Vietnamese cuisine, inspired by traditional Vietnamese cooking. For home cooks, this is a fine exploration of robustly flavored, authentically prepared, and nuanced meals. Some of what you’ll find in Vietnamese Home Cooking includes crispy rolls, steamed dumplings, delicately flavored whole fish, and lemongrass beef stew.

Read more: What is the Best Vietnamese Cookbook for Beginners to Vietnamese Cooking – read here!

Fake meat and imitation meat have been making a lot of headlines lately. Brands like Gardein, Beyond Meat, Boca, Impossible Foods, Lightlife Foods, Incogmeato, and so many others are generating big business on the stock market. In grocery stores, we’re seeing a bit of a boom for meat alternatives.

In Vietnamese cooking, this imitation meat craze isn’t something we’re not privy to. That said, Vietnamese restaurants like TorontoPHO have been providing vegetarian and vegan options for a long time. Using tofu, aka bean curds and a form of protein alternative that’s been around fo decades, we use this sort of imitation meat in many dishes we make.

Tofu originated in China but has been used in Vietnamese cooking as well as Filipino, Korean, Indonesian, Japanese, Malaysian, Singaporean, and Thai. The main ingredient to tofu is soy milk, which coagulates and is then pressed into solid white blocks. These blocks can be silky, soft, firm, or extra firm.

Tofu itself has a very subtle flavor and to many, tofu on its own pretty much has no flavor. This makes it an ideal imitation meat in Vietnamese to marinate or season as needed, suiting whichever dish or meal it’s inputted in. The tofu is also highly absorbent, which means it takes on all sorts of flavors. Depending on how you want to prepare it, tofu can be the perfect meat substitute and is healthy.

Tofu has been used in Vietnamese cuisine or some variant of thereof for literal centuries. Tofu is low-calorie, contains a large amount of proteins, is high in iron, and also has a high calcium or magnesium content.

Read more: Using Tofu as Imitation Meat in Vietnamese Cooking – What’s It Made From and How It’s Used

Bubble tea’s one of Toronto’s trendiest drinks this year and that’s with good reason. Rich in polyphenols, a natural plant chemical, bubble tea reduces inflammation, has antioxidants, and most importantly, tastes delicious. Half drink and half dessert, the best bubble tea in Toronto courtesy of TorontoPHO comes in the following varieties. Here’s why these are our favourites!

Strawberry

Who doesn’t love a nice, classic strawberry drink? Strawberry’s packed with vitamin C, manganese, folate, and potassium. They’re also very rich in antioxidants and plant compounds, providing benefits for the health, blood sugar control, and other internal systems.

Pineapple

Pineapple is a great bubble tea selection, with a delicious taste in addition to numerous health benefits. Pineapple is believed to reduce the risk of some cancers, suppress inflammation, and contains disease-fighting antioxidants.

Passion fruit

Passion fruit has key nutrients that make it an ideal bubble tea choice. Passion fruit is rich in antioxidants, is a good source of fiber, improves insulin sensitivity, supports heart health, and reduces anxiety. Passion fruit is one heck of a food!

Read more: Where to Find The Best Bubble Tea in Toronto – See All the Varieties!

Home-Style Cooking is a Thread through Vietnamese Cuisine, with Inspired and Tantalizing Dinners

If there was one thing linking north Vietnam to south Vietnam, it’s a love of home-style family cooking. Vietnamese dinners mean a lot. No matter where you’re from, what age or gender, or what your background is, dinners in this culture is a gathering not to be missed. Tantalizing Vietnamese dinners provided in restaurants from Vietnam to Canada still prominently emphasize this home cooking culture. In one of Toronto’s top Vietnam restaurants, TorontoPHO, we offer home-style cooking from all regions pulling from different dishes, differences, and cultures in celebration.

For those who haven’t eaten Vietnamese food before or who don’t regularly enjoy Vietnamese, they’re probably unfamiliar with how we divide our national cuisine. Although there are many philosophies that go into Vietnamese cooking, regionally speaking, there are 3 categories of eating. There’s rice-eating home-style cooking with pulls a lot from Chinese influenced meals. There’s what’s called ‘fun eating’ which involves eating outside the home and usually from French-influenced street vendors. Dishes like banh mi and pho fall into this category. Lastly, festive eating is what’s pulled out on celebrations such as weddings and New Year’s Day.

The heart and soul of all this is a fixation on family cooking. To eat with the family and converse, this is where and how we build connection generation to generation. Vietnamese pho is a great example of family cooking done right. For many makers of pho, especially those working from oral recipes passed down from generation to generation, it can take a full day to get the broth just right. After the pho is made, there’s then so much of it that it’s the sort of thing which is meant to be shared. No one makes pho just for themselves. It’s something every member of the family’s invited and expected to participate in and have.

Read more: Home-Style Cooking is a Thread through Vietnamese Cuisine, with Inspired and Tantalizing Dinners