PressReports about Highway4
Transcription
PressReports about Highway4
TimeOut, 4-10 November 2002 FIRE OF THE SPIRITS Following his Traditional Culture of Liquor on Poonah Paper exhibition, artist Nguyen Anh Tuan returns with his new curvaceous, nom script-inflected collection Awakenings. It is a search for the roots of Vietnamese culture in all respects, both material and spiritual. My aim is to make Eastern philosophy accessible by converting its concepts such as Buddhism, Taoism and Confucianism into pictures and drawings." So says artist Nguyen Anh Tuan of his latest exhibition to go up in Hanoi's Highway 4. Regulars at the popular ruou bar and restaurant may be familiar with Tuan's previous aptlythemed exhibition entitled 'The Traditional Culture of Liquor on Poonah Paper'. Drawing on an age-old reverence for rice wine, the show featured images of bearded sages and tigers supping from gourd-shaped receptacles in a style reminiscent of ancient Chinese ink scrolls. While dispensing with the liquor. Awakenings is no less inebriating for the senses. While many of the pieces feature bold, curvaceous brush strokes and Tuan's trademark use of Chinese Han and Sino-Vietnamese Norn script, others employ more subtle textures and images of horses (mascots of the current lunar year) and the female form. Tuan seems to relish a variety of materials and forms. Poonah paper, oil paintings, block printing, water-colour and calligraphy are each key to his artistic vision. "They are an expansion of my enthusiasm and inspiration," he says. "[They form] a combination and collection of traditions through painting and drawing symbols of culture, an exploration of the synergy between traditional and contemporary materials, symbols and ways of expression." Late starter Born in Hanoi in 1956, Tuan began exhibiting his work relatively late. Following a 15-year stint in the army, he graduated from the College of Industrial Fine Arts in 1995. During the '90s, his work found its way into private collections both in Vietnam and abroad, but it was not until 2001 that Tuan gained more widespread recognition, winning a Ford Foundation award as part of its Conservation and Environment Programme. Nom script, which Tuan learnt through courses before studying himself, is central to his work. "I perceive it as an interesting expression of Vietnamese culture; also as a challenge to use a complex, traditional writing system to create art that is still attractive to modern viewers," he says. And why Highway 4 for his latest exhibition? "Highway 4 also explores traditional Vietnamese culture through its liquor and food - liquor is the fire of the spirits." "Awakenings" by Nguyen Anh Tuan Venue: Highway 4, 5 Hang Tre, Hanoi Duration: November 7 to December 18 Opening reception: Thursday 7 November 18.30 - 20.30 (ALL WELCOME) The Guide, December 2002 Scripted awakening Hanoi Nguyen Anh Tuan, whose study on ancient altars and incense, writing and prayer tablets won a recent Ford Foundation Award, is exhibiting 52 paintings - 11 in oil, the remainder graphic works and calligraphic painting in Chinese characters and Sino-Vietnamese (Nom) script. The artist has been learning Sino-Vietnamese for only a short time, but says this language interests him the most. "I perceive it as an interesting expression of Vietnamese culture, and I see it as a challenge to use a complex traditional writing system to create art that is still attractive to a modern audience," says Tuan. Most of the works are created on do paper, representing the search for the root of Vietnamese culture in both material and spiritual aspects of life. With the aim of making Eastern philosophy accessible by converting its concepts into pictures and drawings, the exhibition is entitled "Awakening", and is open until December 18th at the Highway 4 restaurant and bar, 5 Hang Tre, tel: 926-0639. Vietnam Discovery, May 2002 Tried and tested by our staff Take the Highway 4, gateway to the north, winds along the Chinese-Vietnamese border. It's also a unique bar/ restaurant, specializing in this northern region. Home to discerning ex-pats, it's also the hangout of the Minsk and motorbiking clubs. Even the decor reflects the cuisine's origins: exquisite rice-paper wall hangings, silk floor cushions and split-bamboo low tables: check out the exotic roof terrace. Traditional northern medicinal liquors are brewed on site and flagons of snake, gecko and black forest bee wines line the walls. Experienced staff (plus selfexplicatory menus) will talk you through the range of herbal potions (including sample shots, like fruit liquors). The food too is traditional north Vietnamese; no greater compliment than mostly Vietnamese enjoying the delicacies on a Friday night. Specialties include 20 kinds of rice porridge, 6 types of spring rolls, tortoise, clay-pot and steamboat dishes. Be adventurous and try fried silkworms with lemon leaves, roasted sparrow, bull testicles with Chinese herbs, or Cha Ran, snake nuggets. • Highway4 5 Hang Tre, Hanoi, tel: (04) 926 3639 Cam Nang Mua Sam (Handbook of Shopping), No. 1, 2002 Cam Nang Mua Sam (Handbook of Shopping), No. 2, 2002 Heritage In-Flight Magazine, March/April 2002 Road Trip Used to be, if you wanted to sample exotic Vietnamese moonshine, you had to take a road trip to the northern mountains. That changed when Highway 4, a bar that takes its name from the road that runs near the Chinese border, opened its doors at 5 Hang Tre Street in Hanoi's Old Quarter. Here, you'll find a rare stock of traditional Vietnamese rice wines infused with fruits, medicinal herbs, flowers, and animals. Served by the bottle or by the shot, the liquor comes in such exotic flavors as rambutan, wild honey, and gecko. Different blends are reputed to aid various ailments, and, if nothing else, provide an undeniable buzz. Highway 4 also offers tasty Vietnamese food, including both traditional dishes and some interesting East-West fusions. Set in an old French villa, Highway 4 offers plenty of room for lounging. The second floor has low tables and mats where patrons can stretch out, while the third floor terrace features an open-sided traditional wooden house. Vietnam Discovery, December 2002 Making his mark There's still time to catch Nguyeh Anh Tuan's" Awakening" exhibition at Highway 4 Restaurant and Bar. A native of Hanoi, Tuan specialises in Chinese Han calligraphy and ancient Vietnamese Norn script, The 36 exquisite works displayed feature both oil paintings and poonah (rice) paper. Why "Awakening?" Tuan explains, "it's a search for the roots of Vietnamese culture in all respects, both material and spiritual, My aim is to make Eastern philosophy accessible by converting its concepts into drawings and pictures." The artist chose Highway 4 for his exhibition, as it too explores (north) Vietnamese culture through traditional liquor and food. He perceives Norn script as an expression of Vietnamese culture; by using this traditional writing system today, it still creates an attractive art. See for yourself: the exhibition runs until December 18 at Highway 4, 5 Hang Tre, Hanoi; tel: (04) 926-0639. Time, 23 December 2002 STRANGE BREW "Young sister, you drink ruou— you must have some more," the flush-faced butcher insisted, waving the bottle in my direction. With the glowing benevolence of a newfound friend, he poured the berry red medicinal rice wine into tiny teacups. Someone shouted the ubiquitous toast "Mot tram phan tram" (which means 100%) as we downed the liquor with one gulp and, in my case, with a grimace. Binh and his fellow butchers had been sitting around the tea stall in Cao Bang market for an hour, and we were on our third round of ruou and feeling little pain. Normally, this wouldn't be a problem, except that it was only 6:35 in the morning. Anyone who has traveled Vietnam's back roads knows that villagers love to welcome visitors with a cup or more of ruou, no matter what time of day. Locally brewed by the ethnic minorities in the highlands, there are almost as many kinds of ruou (pronounced zyoo)—as there are hill tribes. Notorious for packing a punch, plain ruou is made from rice and is either clear or red, depending on the brew. More exotic, though, are the ones containing some notso-secret ingredients: whole pickled cobras, monkey parts or any other animal that will fit in a jar. Each variety is said to have specific medicinal powers. Gecko is purported to be a natural antibiotic. Black crow supposedly cures backaches. Aphrodisiac versions come with goat testicles, starfish and sea horse. Then there's the secret herbal recipe with a name that conveys a sense of its rare erotic promise: Nhat Da Ngu Giao, or One Night, Five Times. In the past, travelers had to hit the highlands to procure ruou, but it's now sold in some Hanoi bars, which are thronged with trendy Vietnamese and Westerners alike. One of the first, and still most popular, is Highway Four at 5 Hang Tre Street. Named after the famous scenic highway from Lang Son to Cao Bang in the north, the bar offers nearly every kind of ruou. Unlike the tea stall in Cao Bang market, however. Highway Four doesn't open until midday. Asiaweek, 4 May 2001 The Economist, 21 December - 3 January 2003-07-02 Eating out in Vietnam As communism crumbles, a great cuisine revives IN VIETNAMESE, simple tasks are not as "easy as pie"—they're "like eating dog's brain". But until recently, eating dog's brain was not easy at all. Vietnam's old communist regime frowned on bourgeois excesses, such as eating out. The few restaurants that survived were drab, soulless spots reserved for party grandees and visiting dignitaries. Anyway, there was not much food on offer. Thanks to a disastrous attempt to force all the country's small family farms to merge into giant collectives, Vietnam flirted with famine in the 1980s. A decent portion of rice, let alone a dog's brain, constituted a feast. Faced with desperate food shortages and a growing exodus of "boat people", the government undertook tentative market reforms. Its first step was to give peasants secure tenure over the land they farmed, and freedom to sell their crops at a profit. Gradually, other forms of private enterprise won freer rein. The ensuing revolution was not just agricultural, economic and social, but also gastronomic. Ten years ago, there were only three restaurants serving dog along the dyke that protects Hanoi from the Red river; now there are 25. Hungry Hanoians can feast not only on dog's brain, but also sausages of dog-meat with beans and bitter herbs, grilled dog with ginger and shrimp sauce, boiled dog with lemongrass and steamed dog's liver with chilli and lime. Geography determined the basics of Vietnamese food. The vast deltas of the Red river and the Mekong provide the staple, rice, while the strip of coast that connects them supplies abundant fish. Every other aspect of Vietnamese cuisine, however, has changed along with the country's tumultuous history. Chinese invaders introduced chopsticks and soy sauce. French colonists brought coffee, now the country's biggest cash crop. Pressed rice cakes became popular during the war with America, as a durable and lightweight ration. American ice-cream, which had been sidelined by Russian slush, has made a comeback since America and Vietnam reestablished diplomatic ties in 1995. Nowadays, free-market reforms are having a profound effect on Vietnamese food, most obviously in terms of quantity available. In 2000, Vietnam produced some 32m tonnes of rice: more than twice the output of 1987. That huge increase has transformed the country from a net importer of rice to the world's second-largest exporter (after Thailand). Over the same period, production of chicken and pork-and much else—more than doubled. But this plenty is unevenly distributed. A third of Vietnamese children are underweight, and even more are stunted. Ethnic minorities living along Vietnam's mountainous borders with Laos and China an the hungriest, and the north is hungrier than the south. The weather in the Mekong delta (in the south) is warm and wet all the time, allowing farmers to churn out three rice crops a year. The chilly northern winters, by contrast, limit their counterparts in the Red river valley to two. The war's legacy plays a role, too. The south was only subjected to collectivisation for about a decade after reunification, compared with some 40 years in the north, so agriculture suffered less disruption. Many Vietnamese still have to eat whatever they can lay their hands on. Pet birds and dogs are kept indoors to save them from the cooking pot. In 1998, the government tried to reduce the consumption of snakes and cats by banning their sale, since the exploding rat population was damaging crops. Instead, peasants simply took to eating rats as well. The dwindling number of rats, in turn, has caused an explosion in the numbers of another tasty treat: snails. Meanwhile, in nearby Ho Chi Minh city, the country's commercial capital, a recent survey found that 12.5% of children were obese—and the figure is rising. Local restaurants vie with one another in expense and luxury. Hoang Khai, a local businessman, recalls how his family always celebrated at home when he was young, because there was nowhere to go out. He decided to change all that, by ploughing the returns from his textile business into a restaurant lavish enough to suit the city's business elite. The result is Au Manoir de Khai, a colonial villa smothered in gilt and silk where a meal with imported wine can set you back more than most Vietnamese earn in a year. Mr Khai's humbler compatriots are also learning to enjoy their food again. Take Lan, who has been cooking Hanoi's famous beef-noodle soup, pho bo, for over 20 years at a hole-in-the-wall stand in the city's old quarter. She learned the trade from her parents, she says, but never bothered to put any effort into it since the shop belonged to the state. In the 1990S, however, it was sold to an entrepreneur as part of the government's economic reforms. Now she uses only the softest noodles, and stews her beef broth for eight hours before serving-twice as long as before. People are fussier now, she explains, and won't tolerate slapdash service. Of silkworms and goats' testicles Indeed, Vietnam's culinary renaissance is helping to revive traditions lost during the years of war, famine and repression. Didier Corlou, a French chef who has married into a Vietnamese family, explains how his in-laws eagerly contributed old recipes for his recent book on Hanoian cuisine. Several new restaurants in Hanoi have helped to popularise old-fashioned medicinal wine. Diners at the inexpensive Highway 4, for example, merrily knock back shots flavoured with silkworm, snake, crow or goat's testicles. The food, too, is a souped-up version of traditional mountain cuisine, complete with rural treats such as eel or frog. Even street food is being gentrified: at Quan An Ngon in Ho Chi Minh city, bejewelled ladies wash down their stuffed pancakes and hot-and-sour soup with sips of chardonnay. There are innovations as well as resus-citations. Highway 4 serves spring rolls containing foreign ingredients such as wa-sabi paste and mayonnaise. These are so popular that several other local restaurants have copied the recipe. Mooncakes, a delicacy sold in the autumn, now come stuffed with chocolate as well as the standard beans and egg. Bars - a foreign concept in Vietnam, where food always accompanies drink—are beginning to spread. Unlike the cheap pubs that draw only men, the comedy acts, raffles and bands at the new nightspots attract both men and women. But the biggest new craze of all is the ubiquitous corn, a sort of Vietnamese fast-food joint. Whereas traditional street stalls serve only one dish, corn stands offer a wide choice of ready-made toppings to accompany a bowl of rice. Poor Vietnamese, delighted by the variety and convenience, are flocking to them. Not everyone is happy about these changes. Cha Ka Le Vong, a Hanoi restaurant which only serves a thick stew of fish and herbs, has survived three wars, two famines, several attempts at nationalisation, hyperinflation, and the dramatic boom and bust of the 1990s. But the old lady who runs it considers current culinary trends a tougher challenge than any of that. Corns, newfangled foreign ingredients, and even well-entrenched French imports, such as bread or French fries, are "a threat to our tradition", she rails. To this day, Vietnam has no McDonald's. But most Vietnamese are adapting to commercial pressures all too readily. Farmers, suddenly paid according to what they produce, are slathering their crops in pesticides to increase their yields. Many Hanoians fear that this may damage their health; the market stalls that advertise "clean vegetables" are doing a roaring trade, even though their wares cost as much as 25% more. Eating pho probably poses a more serious threat, since some unscrupulous merchants try to preserve perishable noodles with formaldehyde or boric acid. Indeed, food scares have become common enough that the World Health Organisation is helping Vietnam to set up a food-safety agency. Other dodgy tradesmen make a fortune serving endangered species to superstitious diners. The menu of the Lamrice restaurant in Hanoi offers a whole roast civet cat for 120,000 dong ($8) or porcupine steamed with ginger for 50,000 dong. Liquor bottles filled with bear paws and tiger penises decorate the walls. In Ho Chi Minh city, sea-turtle meat goes for 300,000 dong a kilo, while one enterprising salesman offers to produce a bear and draw its bile on the spot for $400. He also sells tiger meat, he says, to "men whose flags are drooping". All these animals are protected by law, but as Pac Bo, the owner of Lamrice, puts it, he has "good relations" with the authorities, so no one bothers him. The unabated trade in wildlife is all the more alarming since half of the big new mammals discovered worldwide in the past century were found in Vietnam. Piracy, too, goes entirely unchecked. La Vie, the country's most popular mineral water, contends with a host of blatant knock-offs with names like La Vi, La Ve and La Viei. Vietnam's best fish sauce comes from the island of Phu Quoc, off the southern coast-so every fish-sauce producer with initiative slaps a "Phu Quoc" label on his inferior swill. Despairing of official help, the islanders have entered a joint venture with Unilever, an international consumer-goods firm, which may have enough cash and clout to pressure the authorities to curb the counterfeiters. There could be no better sign of the free-market turmoil to which Vietnamese food is suddenly being exposed. Fish sauce is the basic condiment for all Vietnamese food, and Phu Quoc its finest incarnation. Imagine French vintners granting Coca-Cola distribution rights over their grands crus. In fact, one impassioned Vietnamese argues, the comparison is inadequate, since fish sauce is a more sophisticated product than wine: only a tiny number of wines survive longer than 50 years, whereas fish sauce continues to grow in flavour and complexity indefinitely. The wood of the barrels in which it ferments, the quality of the anchovies and salt from which it is made, the weather and temperature during the fermentation process-all these factors, he explains with a faraway look in his eyes, affect the flavour of the finished product. The producer, he continues, knows that the sauce is ready for bottling when the flies have stopped swarming over the rotting brew. Unilever has promised not to alter this challenging flavour for foreign palates. Nor will it need to. Given Vietnam's new wealth and interest in its culinary heritage, making money out of Phu Quoc fish sauce should be like eating dog's brain. Far Eastern Economic Review, 26 December 2002 - 2 January 2003 CURRENTS FIREWATER Highway to Intoxication Rice liquor lubricates life in Vietnam, providing one of Asia's cheapest routes to pleasure, inspiration or oblivion By Margot Cohen/HANOI WHEN THIRSTY, approach an apparently pregnant woman. That was how Vietnamese in 1930$ Hanoi flouted the French colonial ban on home-brewed rice liquor. Typically, a woman vendor would take a buffalo bladder fitted with two spouts, fill it with liquor, tie it around her stomach, then cover the bulge with a loose brown vest. In the market, male customers would squat under her belly for a few surreptitious gulps. It's easier to get a drink in Hanoi these days. While the communist leadership formally brands drunkenness a "social evil," officials recognize the futility of clamping down on ruou, a distilled rice liquor steeped in tradition. Beyond toasts at weddings and funerals, the firewater permeates daily life, whether served in tiny ceramic cups at street stalls, shot glasses in bars or bowls in more rustic villages. In winter, the warming spirits are especially popular. Cyclo drivers and other common folk often have a few shots with their breakfast of pho (chicken noodle soup). Afternoon tippling is also widespread, particularly among Vietnam's underemployed and the artistic crowd. At a street stall, a standard shot costs as little as 500 dong (30 cents). At night comes another round or two, as some potent varieties are thought to enhance sexual prowess. Hence the Vietnamese proverb: "A man without ruou is like a flag without wind." To test that proverb, or simply to enjoy some brew in particularly stylish surroundings, head to Highway 4, a Hanoi drinking (and eating) establishment named after a road that winds through four northern mountainous provinces, where many villages have refined their own ruou recipes over centuries of backyard experimentation. Since opening its doors two years ago, the narrow three-storey hang-out has drawn a remarkably mixed crowd, and helped ruou transcend its image as rough, cheap firewater. A busy night packs in about 160 patrons—roughly 70% Vietnamese—as young professionals, self-styled bohemians, petty gangsters, tourists and resident expatriates sit on floor mats, lean against ethnic embroidered cushions, and clink glasses over low rattan tables. The 34-year-old owner, Vu Thi Thoa, happens to be pregnant at the moment, but don't expect any buffalo bladders. On the downstairs bar are displayed jars of the more exotic varieties of liquor—an eerie floating world of flattened geckos, bloated starfish, tiny sea horses and a king cobra. On Highway 4's educational menu, some monikers are left to the imagination. such as "One night five times” while others are more fully described, such as "Minh Mang," a brew of 27 herbal ingredients named after a 19th-century emperor "notorious for uncountable concubines and over 100 children." First-timers may wish to opt for a tray of four sample shots. Samplers are grouped around fruit concoctions, herbs, animals and insects. The common base is rice, though tills too includes several varieties, such as unhusked rice and glutinous red rice. Most of the liquors are made in the village of Phu Loc in Hai Duong province not far from Hanoi, where Thoa's mother and extended family monitor quality. But the recipes are strictly vetted by Thoa's 77-year old uncle, a member of the traditional medicine association in the northern town of Sapa. The menu claims ruou can turn grey hair black, cure backache and strengthen bodily functions. It urges: "Drink our potions at ease without fear of headache." But while most Vietnamese imbibe gradually while eating, foreigners show a disturbing tendency to gulp with haste. That can make Highway 4 a road to a shocking hangover. South China Morning Post, 17 June 2003 Perfect 10 The low-down on the best places to visit in Hanoi, by Graham Holliday 1 Highway 4 The Vietnamese take on alcohol embodies the age-old belief that' consuming something living, disgusting, decaying or harmful turns even the biggest loser into a sexual behemoth for the night. Hanoi's Highway 4 Bar in the Old Quarter takes the Vietnamese alcoholic experience away from its grubby back-alley haunts and gives it new dignity. The bar's no-nonsense menu virtually screams "Sexual satisfaction guaranteed or your money back", as the name of one concoction, "One night, five times", suggests. Cobra whisky, bee spirit and herbal brews are served in shots on low wooden tables, tatami mats and cushions. It seems like a 1970s bohemian beat boozer, but it works (5 Hang Tre. Tel: [84 4] 926 0639). 2 Ethnology Museum This vast French-funded institution celebrates the diversity of Vietnam's 54 ethnic groups, from Sapa in the north to the Central Highlands. Interactive exhibitions, live displays, and aural and video units shower visitors with a wealth of living and ancient history. There are also recreations of authentic Yao and Tay stilt houses and an Ede longhouse among other buildings in the museum's grounds. Entrance fee HK$8 (Nguyen Van Huyen Street, Cau Giay District. Tel: 756 2193). 3 Bun Cha You'll find bun cha, northern Vietnam's finest street lunch, served all over Hanoi between 11 am and 2pm. Bun cha is a barbecue-grilled pork-ball affair doused in a spicy fish sauce with sliced carrot, -accompanied by a mountain of seasonal greens and herbs and a plate of cold rice noodles. It is a hearty meal for less than $3. Nem, crabmeat spring rolls, can be ordered as extras and dipped into the bun cha sauce. With more than 100 bun cha stalls and restaurants scattered throughout the city you might try a few before you find a favourite. Each has its own closely guarded recipe and the secret is all in the sauce. Try 61 Ly Thai Tho Street or a tiny front-room affair at 20 Ta Hien Street. 4 Snake Village Le Mat Village, or Snake Village, in Gia Lam district is on the opposite bank of the Red River from central Hanoi. There are 15 or so restaurants in this serpentine maze, all selling much the same farmed snakes and some more exotic creatures. Nguyen Van Duc's " special snake and forest beast meat" restaurant is as good a place as any to take the plunge into the area's reptilian pleasures. Snake meat is served in 12 courses - you name it and the chefs have done it to the snakes. Many older Vietnamese swear by a therapeutic snake whisky nightcap. Bien, the cook and wife of the restaurant owner, says: "It's no myth, my husband is very strong." With drinks included, dinner costs just under $50 (Le Mat, Viet Hung, Gia Lam. Tel: 827 2891). 5 Hang Bong Street This prime stretch of real estate is Hanoi's Pedder Street. Clambering around parked motorbikes, over uneven pavements and past street sellers can test your patience in the capital's humidity, but the vast array of air-conditioned shops are a relief. Big hits on the street are silk and paintings, and Duc Loi Silk has a selection of off-the-peg designs and can rustle up made-to-measure numbers in no time (76 & 93 Hang Gai. Tel: 826 8758). The two-storey Apricot Gallery sells paintings from some of Vietnam's most famous artists such as Le Quang Ha and its prices can reach $400,000 (40B Hang Bong. Tel: [84 4] 828 8965; www.apricotart vietnam.com. The Co Do Gallery next door has regular exhibitions by the likes of Le Thiet Cuong (46 Hang Bong. Tel: 825 8573; www.codogallery.com). 6 Temple Of Literature Otherwise known as Van Mieu, this temple was founded in 1070 by Emperor Ly Thanh Tong and was supposedly modelled on a structure in Shandong, the birthplace of Confucius. The temple went on to become the first university in Vietnam, originally only for the sons of Mandarins. Now it is open to everybody and alongside the Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum is one of the most visited sites in the capital. The recently restored temple and gardens offer a surprisingly tranquil setting in the middle of a very noisy city on Van Mieu Street. 2km west of Hoan Kiem Lake. Opening times are 8am to 11.30am and 1.30pm to 5pm, Tuesday to Sunday. 7 Pho Bo Do you like Saigon pho or Hanoi pho? Wherever your loyalties lie, Hanoi pho bo (beef noodles in soup) is purportedly the original. Even if it seems to lack the sophistication and flavour of its southern alternative, Hanoians prefer this beefy broth. The genuine northern article is rare in the tourist traps, so head to 13 Lo Due Street. This unassuming joint boils cauldrons of bones 24 hours a day for one of the meatiest soups you'll find. Add a raw egg for depth and a dollop of chilli sauce for bite. 8 Cue Phuong Forest Cue Phuong, Vietnam's oldest national park, was officially opened in 1962. Made up of 220 square km of rainforest on limestone mountains, 120km south of Hanoi, the park makes for a fascinating overnight trip from the capital. The Endangered Primate Rescue Centre (EPRC, www.primatecenter.org) is worth a visit as it is the only rescue and breeding centre for primates in Indochina. In the Van Long protected area, you have a good chance of seeing the endangered Delacour's langur, of which there are thought to be only 250 left. The centre cares for even rarer species such as the golden-headed langur, a species from Cat Ba, an island off the country's northern coast. The best time to visit is between April and June during the butterfly season. Guests can stay in small, basic bungalows and there are a variety of walks, including an overnight trek to a Muong village. Sinh Cafe runs inexpensive tours to Cuc Phuong (Tel: 934 4103; www.sinhcafe.com). 9 Metropole Hotel The Hotel Sofitel Metropole Hanoi was the first accredited five-star hotel in Vietnam. And although other arguably more upmarket places such as the Hilton Hanoi Opera, Nikko Hotel and the Daewoo Hotel have since opened, "The Met" retains the romance of a bygone era. Located on a leafy boulevard just south of the Opera House and Hoan Kiem Lake, this imposing 232-room, white French colonial building was built at the turn of the century and has since catered to the rich and famous, from princes to presidents, Charlie Chaplin and Stephen Hawking. Rooms from $970 (15 Ngo Quyen Street. Tel: 826 6919; www.sofitel-hanoi-vietnam.com/metropole/). 10 Bia Hoi It is hard to understand why Hanoi's bia hoi phenomenon has not caught on overseas. The concept is simple: fresh beer is delivered in barrels to various street corners and dens throughout the city in the morning, and served ice-cooled, cheap and direct from a hosepipe. When the beer's finished, usually by 3pm or 4pm, the street stalls wind up for the day, though the larger beer halls might not run dry until 8pm or 9pm. There are bia hoi stalls on just about every street corner and larger drinking halls such as the one at 89 Pho Hue (tel: 943 2452) and the gargantuan Ho Chi Minh Bia Hoi, behind the deceased leader's mausoleum. The Bia Hanoi and Viet Ha brands are often recommended and sell for $2 a pint. New Sunday Times: Nuance Magazine, 5 January 2003 Enthralling Hanoi Seems like every other Caucasian we meet in Kuala Lumpur of late is a documentary film maker, and an American one at that. What with all the developments in the past months on the security front everywhere, we couldn't resist asking CHRIS CALLAHAN if he had any links with the CIA. He is the producer of the Noodle Box series — a new offbeat TV travelogue that focuses on South-East Asia and is currently airing on Discovery Travel and Adventure in the UK and around Europe. The team had also gone up north to Shanghai and other places. Chris assured us that he is not an agent, despite `my uncanny resemblance to Gill Bellows (star of the TV series 'The Agency' now running over Astro's AXN channel). Some people say I look like a young Tom Hanks too." Though the jury is still out on both counts, we allowed Chris to regale INTAN MAIZURA with tales of his travails and travels in the region, the accounts of which - starting with Hanoi will be featured over the next six weeks. Hanoi was one destination where everything simply fell into place for us. I arrived there two days ahead of my crew, didn't know anyone and wasn't at all sure what I'd find. There were four of us in all: myself, Keith Chong (the director), a soundman and a cameraman. We flew there from KL, courtesy of Malaysia Airlines, and we had a van to get round in. We brought basic camera, sound and lighting equipment and filmed on DVcam until it exploded and I quickly found a replacement mini-DV. From what I knew. Ho Chi Minh City was the more vibrant of the two, culturally and economically,so I wasn't overly optimistic. As it turned out, my apprehensions were totally unfounded. CULINARY DISCOVERY First things first. Food. I have to say I simply love Vietnamese food. Hanoi is a small and really laidback city It doesn't have very many big restaurants. But what it does have in abundance are stalls (on the sidewalks as well as those of a slightly more permanent structure) that specialise in single dishes. People go eat at the place that serves the specific dish they want, and usually out in the open. For example, there is this "special fish" prepared in a hot pot. Somebody's great grandmother came up with the recipe and the restaurant has been serving the dish, and nothing else, ever since. That stretch of road where the restaurant is located has even come to be named after the fish — Cha Ca fish on Cha Ca Road. It was summer when we were in the city, the weather was pretty hot, but the atmosphere was simply great. One thing I appreciated about the food in Hanoi was the freshness of everything that goes into the pots and pans. You don't get that very much anymore in major Asian cities. And eating out is amazingly cheap. You should check out Restaurant Bobby Chinn, which is one of the more "expensive" restaurants in Hanoi, and yet the most you'd be paying for a main dish is about US$7. Other dishes cost about US$3 or US$4 and they're all really good, easily match the stuff you get in five-star hotels. For the more adventurous, there is a village a few kilometres outside Hanoi whose entire economy seems to be based on serving up snake meat (and parts thereof) dishes. You have a choice of 30 restaurants there, and you choose the snake you want to eat. The conservationists would be very upset, but we chose a king cobra. They cut it open while it's still alive, and removed the heart and gall bladder — which traditionally go to the oldest man at the table. The still beating heart was served in a glass with a little vodka, supposedly a very potent aphrodisiac. Snake meat is surprisingly tasty, and like everything else in the country, nothing is wasted too. The meat is stir-fried with vegetables, the skin is battered and deep fried, and the bones go into the soup. There is also a wide selection of traditional snake liquor — displayed in jars — to go with your meal, or take away. It's wild. BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE Vietnam has a very young population. People, even the poor, seem to spend a lot of time and money on looking good. Vietnamese women are in any case among the most beautiful in the world. They're naturally extremely good-looking and they make an effort to dress nicely, put themselves together properly. We came across a peasant woman, and a woman who was selling fish in the market, who looked to be manicured and pedicured... and the vegetable seller, by the way, was a stunner. All women have manicures and pedicures pretty much. In fact, they have corners in the market where women go to have their nails done... not the career women, mind you. They sell shrimps or something. As for fashion, there is this amazing woman, Christina Yu, who has built a brand of her own called "Ipa Nima". If you are a woman and find yourself in Hanoi, her shop downtown (59G Hai Ba Trung Street, Hoan Kiem iStistek*) is a must-visit. It's located in a great big yellow building, and the first things you should pick up is one of her very nice handbags... they go for about US$35 each. The very same items are sold for 300 each at Liberty's in London. All her handbags and other fashion items are handmade and use local materials. She's succeeding in proving that a developing country can come up with high quality, high-end fashion products... this lady's products are way cool and apart from Liberty's they are also sold at Saks Fifth Avenue in New York as well as top department stores in Tokyo. WATER PUPPETS and RUSSIAN BIKES You've got to check out the water puppet shows. They are a blast. Ask your hotel concierge where there will be one. It's a traditional Vietnamese thing, done on a lake with puppets dancing on the water. Somebody sits behind a curtain and works the puppets, made of paper, to re-enact old fables and tales. It's absolutely fascinating. There's always a good turnout for the shows... and an air of festivity. And if you are into architecture, prepare for a feast — go on a private tour of all the old buildings, very French. People sell baguettes outside them as well. The buildings stand out majestically against the dour government blocks. But for something different, try the Minsk Motorcycle Club based at Highway 4,which is a bar. It rents out ancient Russian motorcycles which the Government imported way back in the 1950s. They may not be attractive, but what character. Very sturdy. The guys organise motorcycle tours of the surrounding areas... the hills, nearby villages and mountain tracks that are completely inaccessible by any other mode of transport. Here is a chance to see Vietnam and village life as it has existed for hundreds of years. You can go to the snake village on a bike. Elsewhere, you'll meet people who have never seen foreigners before, up close anyway. Daredevils and Apocalypse Now One of the most dangerous things you'll ever get to see is the motorcycle spectacle at the Hoan Kiem lake. Held in the evening, a bunch of guys gather to race along the narrow roads around the lake at more than 100 km an hour. It's illegal of course, but I was told that as long as you steer clear of politics, pretty much anything goes. For starters, you have sharp curves, and the pedestrians and cars to avoid. And then, some of them actually disable the brakes on their bikes just so that it's impossible to slow down. For good measure, the riders are sometimes blindfolded as well. Imagine tearing around the "course" guided only by a pillion rider, with no brakes. It seems the race only ends when somebody gets hurt. The authorities are trying to clamp down on the activity because of the many casualties, but apparently it is something even grandmothers would bring chairs and sit out to watch. Most things shut down at midnight. It's government regulation. But there are still plenty of places to go at any time of the night... discos everywhere, although some tend to be a bit seedy. Ho Chi Minh City definitely has a better "nightlife", more clubs and bars though. The most famous bar in Hanoi is Apocalypse Now (there is one in Saigon too) but you have a lot of Western guys and young Vietnamese girls getting very drunk. To me, Highway 4 is more fascinating. It serves traditional Vietnamese liquor, basically grain alcohol with different things added... snakes, lizards, goat testicles, crows and other stuff. The taste is not that great, but interesting... you've got all these jars with the different things that are supposed to have different effects. Boost your libido with this, avoid the cold with that, but all I got was seriously drunk. Actually the last one did wake us up, so who knows.