“Bac” Cake – A Tribute to the King
Wednesday, 05/17/2017 08:51
It isn’t clear who first made the “Bac” cake but it’s believed that the cake first appeared in the 6th century under the reign of King Ly Nam De, and it used to be presented to the Kings and Court.
“Bac”
is the local term for “fry”, but the frying method of people in Giang Xa
Village (Tram Troi Town, Hoai Duc District, Hanoi) is far different from the
normal way that we know.
Necessary
ingredients for “Bac” cake include glutinous rice flour, cochinchin gourd or
Gac fruit, mung bean, lard, sugar and sesame seeds. The most difficult stage is
to make the cake’s outer skin with glutinous rice flour. Half of the flour must
be mixed with Gac flesh to create the red colour for the cake’s crust which
then should be fried in lard. “In order to make a delicious outer skin, one has
to touch it by his fingers to know its thickness and see if it is well done.
Spoons cannot deliver the exact feel,” said baker Do Phu Thu (74 year olds),
one of the most famous bakers in Giang Xa Village.
“Bac” cake is a famous specialty of old Hanoians which was used as a tribute to kings. Photo: Nguyen Quyen/VNP
Completed cakes will be rolled into plantain leaves for about 2 hours before being cut into pieces. Photo: Nguyen Quyen/VNP
The cake has the red colour of Gac fruit, yellow from green beans and white from sesame seeds. Photo: Nguyen Quyen/VNP
The cake is free from preservatives. Photo: Nguyen Quyen/VNP
The
old man shared his own experience while busily spreading flour over the boiling
hot pan. He acknowledged that frying over a wood fire can create a unique smell
which other methods of cooking cannot. It takes years of practice to get
acquainted with the intense heat of the pan, not to mention injuries like burns
or blisters. The frying method is so hard to achieve that not everyone can
imitate it and there are about 15 households in Giang Xa Village that maintain
the ancient technique.
After
the inner filling of mung bean is cooked, it is folded into sticks of 30cm to
be rolled up with 2 pieces of red and white skin. Sesame seeds are spread
outside lastly. A completed “Bac” cake will then be covered with plantain
leaves. After 2 hours, when the cake is firm and has cooled down, it will be
uncovered and cut into small pieces.
“Bac”
cake possesses both a beautiful appearance and a pleasant aroma of Gac fruit
that cannot be mistaken for any other type. The most demanding taster will
surely be lured by the delicious taste formed by the sweet inner mung bean
paste mixed with the sticky, crunchy outer skin. Bac” cake is free from
additives or preservatives while all the stages are carried out by hands./.
By Nguyen Quyen/
VNP