I have many relatives living abroad, in countries like the US, Denmark, Norway and so on.
Bánh gai Ninh Giang.
It
is safe to say that all of them, without exception, miss the food they used to
have at home, and are prone to request some to be sent from here, once in every
while.
From
what I can see, among the items most in demand among the Vietnamese diaspora in
all corners of the world are specialties from Hải Dương Province: the bánh đậu xanh (green bean cake) Rồng
Vàng Bảo Hiên and the bánh gai
(glutinous rice cake dyed black with a concoction of pinnate leaves) Ninh
Giang.
These
snacks are made elsewhere, too, but people generally swear by the ones that are
made in Hải Dương.
Bánh đậu xanh
Trần
Lệ Mẫn, a relative living in Denmark, enjoys having the bánh đậu xanh with (green) tea, a popular combination. He thinks
the fatty sweetness of the cake goes along well with the acrid, bitter flavor
of the tea.
“I like the cake a
lot because it is not so sweet and melts easily in my mouth. When I have it,
its flavour and fragrance takes me to Việt Nam, my homeland,” Mẫn said.
Nguyễn
Thị Mơ, 92, a Hải Dương resident, has the story about the cakes’ origins. She
says the cake was first made by Bảo Hiên, a native of Kiến An Village in the
port city of Hải Phòng. Kiến An was home to vast fields that yielded delicious
green beans.
Brand value: Bảo Hiên Rồng Vang is the most popular green bean cake maker in Hải Dương Province.
Hiên
took his green beans recipe to Hải Dương in 1922, and opened the first shop in
the province. After he died, his daughter Nguyễn Thị Nhung took over the
establishment, and it flourishes to this day.
Nhung
employs 30 workers to produce 300 - 400 kg of cake daily. Early in the morning,
many wholesale traders arrive to pick up the cakes, note down how many they
take in a book and return in the evening to pay for them.
In
a competitive market, Nhung takes particular care to retain her customers’ trust
by being ready to destroy any cake or batch of cakes that do not meet quality
standards.
Nhung’s
daughter Phùng Thanh Nhã said her mother imports quality sugar from Tuy Hòa in
the south by train, green beans from Kiến An by boat and pork fat from Lục Nam.
The
green beans are cooked with several ingredients including a vanilla essence to
make the cake, Nhã said, adding that their shop was busy and crowded from early
morning until late in the night.
In
1932, the Bảo Hiên cake joined the Sài Gòn Food Fest. The cake was highly
appreciated by King Bảo Đại, who granted it a certificate with a dragon image
on it. The dragon has been a Bảo Hiên trademark since then.
Bảo
Hiên cake was also considered bánh tiến
(cake to offer the King) and became famous nation-wide. In the 1990s the cake won the first national
gold medal at the Giảng Võ Exhibition Fair in Hà Nội, for its aroma and
excellent quality.
Herbalist
Đặng Văn Tuất of the Hải Dương Centre of Traditional Medicine says the cake is
very good for children and the elderly. “It
helps reduce weight gain, cholesterol and triglycerides as well as prevent
arteritis among the elderly. It cools body heat and reduces toxins for children
during the summer.”
In
the old days, only the really well off people could enjoy the cake, but that
has changed since.
Collective effort: A group of people make the Ninh Giang bánh gai.
Bánh gai Ninh Giang
A
very different kind of green bean cake from the one discussed above, the making
of bánh gai (glutinous rice cake) is
a bit complicated, but for Mơ, every effort is worth it because it has a taste
“no words can express”.
The
legend associated with this snack is that a poor couple, hungry because the
harvest was bad that year, went looking for wild leaves they could eat. They
found one plant and brought it home, and decided to cook its leaves with rice.
They had made a good choice! An appetizing aroma came from the rice pot, and
the rice itself was very soft and tasty.
So
the couple picked more leaves, dried and saved them to cook with rice. Then
they started mixing the leaves with glutinous rice to make cakes that could be
eaten for a longer time. Later on, their descendants began making the cake by
wrapping it with dried banana leaves and using other ingredients like green
beans as a stuffing.
Ninh
Giang people call this cake bánh lá gai.
Mơ
says her mother was the original bánh gai
maker in Ninh Giang some 50 years ago. To make a quality cake, her mother had
to order nếp cái hoa vàng (glutinous rice) from Kinh Môn District, well known
nationwide for the quality and taste of its rice. The molasses used for the
cake had to be very sweet and the pinnate leaves should also be sticky to be
soft and delicious.
“She asked me to
clean the leaves before cooking them till they were well stewed. Then they were
washed again and mixed with molasses for 2-3 days before being ground very
carefully,” said
Mơ.
Leafy flavour: Bánh gai wrapped up in dried banana leaves carry a different taste.
Mơ
said her mother had to make the cake’s stuffing very carefully, too. She used
meat from the neck of pigs and cut them into pieces and mixed it with molasses
to reduce its greasiness, while retaining its crispiness. Lotus seeds had to be
cooked until they were soft, but not broken, and retained their natural
flavour.
The
outer layer of the cake was made with glutinous rice powder that was mixed with
the stewed pinnate leaves, whereupon it turned black. After this layer was
stuffed, the whole cake was wrapped in dry banana leaves and steamed.
Medicinal: Pinnate leaves are not only used to make bánh gai but also to treat several ailments. — Photos dulichhaiduong.com
Bánh gai makers in Ninh Giang steamed the
cake for two hours.
Many
customers have remarked that they enjoy Mơ’s cake the most because of its
lightness. It is not too sweet or greasy or fatty.
In
the past, the cake was only made for special occasions, like Tết or death
anniversaries. “And for such such occasions, people had to place an order
several months earlier. Very few ordinary people could enjoy the cake,” Mơ
recalled.
Bánh gai is very popular now, and many
farming households know how to make it. The cake is not just available in Ninh
Giang now. It follows students going abroad, as they take gifts for their
friends.
Despite
her age, Mơ tries to push descendants who make bánh gai to keep its traditional flavor and taste.
By Thanh Ha/VNS