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You are here: Home : Community : Travel Writers : Vietnamese Pancake

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Travel Writers: In Search of the Vietnamese Pancake by Jordan Watson

     
   

Location: Hanoi, Vietnam, Southeast Asia

I walked with intent, scanning each of the sidewalk vendors for the characteristic yellow of the Vietnamese pancakes (Banh Xeo) of whose taste I had recently grown so fond in Southeast Asia. My brisk pace carried me beyond the labyrinth of guesthouses and internet cafes and into the local markets of Hanoi.

The streets narrowed and swelled, the traffic pulsed into chaotic intersections, and I deftly paused and shuffled across the road in a living version of Frogger. My appetite told me that I was close to finding the famed pancake as I rounded a corner and the traffic disappeared. I was suddenly immersed in a sea of headless bodies, topped only with the unmistakably Vietnamese, conical hats. I had somehow avoided the capillaries of the local market and was transported directly to the artery, teeming with life…and death. The background noise had shifted from squealing moto horns to shouts of spoken Vietnamese amidst a metronomic cacophony of cleavers, pounding the cartilage and bone of any animal that had once experienced a heartbeat - a table of pig snouts on the left, a haphazardly discarded rib cage on the right, bowls of chicken feet.

A vendor looked up from beneath her hat to see a lanky white foreigner obviously lost on a street unaccustomed to foreign tourists. She flashed a toothless smile, extended a handful of carnage in my direction and returned to the operating table. Beneath her feet a black, viscous liquid pulsed through the gutters like the cup of Vietnamese ca phé pulsing through my own veins.

As I circulated deeper into the heart of the maze, a light rain began to fall and the distant cries of a soccer game could be heard between the thwacks of meat cleavers. The distinct odor singed my nose hairs as I maneuvered among baskets of goods balanced precariously from the ends of wooden struts. The struts bowed as they cut across the shoulders of women who seemed not to notice - bananas, mangoes, noodles, ducks, eels -"Hello sir, you buy! Special price! Sir! You buy for girlfriend [giggle giggle]." I couldn't help but think how a Western girl would respond to the gesture of a half-dried eel or a bound duck.

Another corner and I stumbled over a mesh bag full of toads, seemingly aware of their fates as the emanated heat from a nearby cauldron convinced them to struggle at all costs. They croaked negotiations to the escaped crabs scurrying sideways down the pavement but the crabs seemed indifferent to such efforts, knowing that they themselves were not yet out of hot water. They had been liberated from aluminum tubs containing thousands of their cousins but would still have to chance survival in the bile-filled gutter. Reminding them of their fate, a tray of fish heads stared disconnectedly into space while buckets of prawns twitched with finality amidst bales of dried noodles.

One more corner and these deathly images were erased by an explosion of colorful fruits and vegetables - the aroma of herbs uncurled the remains of putrid essence from my nose and the rain ceased as though uninvited to this block.

My stomach reminded me once again that coffee drank with a fork and the sight of a lifetime of protein did not in fact fill the void exacerbated by my "take with food" malaria medicine. I rounded a final corner and the market disappeared as quickly as it had come to life. I abandoned my search for the elusive pancake and settled for fried noodles and beef, which were most certainly fresh!

 

Text © Jordan Watson 2005, All Rights Reserved.

     
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