Chè
Chè is any traditional Vietnamese sweet beverage, dessert soup or pudding. Varieties of Chè are made with mung beans, black-eyed peas, kidney beans, tapioca, jelly, fruit, and coconut cream. Other types are made with ingredients such as salt, aloe vera, seaweed, lotus seed, sesame seed, sugar palm seeds, taro, cassava and pandan leaf extract. Some varieties, such as chè trôi nước, may also include dumplings. Chè are often prepared with one of a number of varieties of beans, tubers, and/or glutinous rice, cooked in water and sweetened with sugar. In southern Vietnam, chè are often garnished with coconut creme.
The preparations are named with the addition of qualifying adjectives referring to a wide variety of distinct soups or puddings which may be served either hot or cold. Each variety of chè is designated by a descriptive word or phrase that follows the word chè, such as chè đậu đỏ.
Chè may be made at home, but are also commonly sold in plastic cups at Vietnamese grocery stores.
In northern Vietnam, chè is also the word for the tea plant. Tea is also known as nước chè in the North or more commonly trà in both regions.
The Chinese category of sweet soups called tong sui are very similar to chè.
Varieties
There is a nearly endless variety of named dishes with the prefix chè, and thus it is impossible to produce a complete list. What follows is a list of the most typical traditional varieties of chè.Beans and pulses
- Chè ba màu - usually including green mung beans, white black-eyed peas, and red azuki beans, although people can cook with any ingredients making any three colours they like.
- Chè đậu đen - made from black beans; one of the most popular varieties of chè, particularly for northern Vietnamese
- Chè đậu đỏ - made from azuki beans, usually using whole beans, rarely using ground beans.
- Chè đậu huyết - made from red beans.
- Chè đậu ngự - made from Phaseolus lunatus - specialty in Huế, an imperial dish
- Chè đậu phụng - made from peanuts
- Chè đậu trắng - made from black-eyed peas. Oftentimes, this dessert is just referred to as chè đậu as it is one of the most common bean dessert for southern Vietnamese.
- Chè đậu ván Huế - made from Dolichos lablab ; a specialty in Huế
- Chè đậu xanh - made from whole mung beans
- *Chè đậu xanh phổ tai - made from mung beans and phổ tai
- *Chè đậu xanh đánh - made from ground mung beans
- *Chè đậu đãi - made from ground skinless mung beans
- *Chè đậu xanh nha đam - mung beans and pieces of fresh aloe vera
- *Chè hoa cau - a northern dish made from ground skinless mung beans with betel nut flower-shape
Rice, grains, tubers and cereals
- Chè bánh lọt - made from bánh lọt - a cake from Huế.
- Chè bắp or chè ngô - made from corn and tapioca rice pudding
- Chè bột sắn - made from cassava flour
- Chè sắn lắt - made from sliced cassava
- Chè cốm - made from young rice.
- Chè lam - made from ground glutinous rice
- Chè củ mài - made from Dioscorea persimilis
- Chè củ súng - made from water lily bulbs
- Chè củ từ - made from Dioscorea esculenta
- Chè hột lựu - in this dish, rice paste are cut into pomegranate seed-shaped pieces.
- Chè hột éo - basil seed drink
- Chè khoai lang - made from sweet potato
- Chè khoai môn - made from taro
- Chè môn sáp vàng - made from a variety of taro grown in Huế
- Chè kê - made from millet
- Chè khoai tây - made from potato
- Chè mè đen - made from black sesame seeds
- Chè sen - made from thin vermicelli and jasmine flavoured syrup
- Chè hạt sen - made from lotus seeds
- *Chè sen trần
- *Chè sen dừa - made from lotus seeds and coconut water
- *Chè củ sen - made from lotus tubers
- Chè mã thầy - made from water chestnuts
- Cơm rượu - mildly alcoholic chè.
Jellies
- Chè thạch or chè rau câu - made from agar agar
- *Chè thạch lựu - made from seaweed and other pomegranate seed-shaped tapioca pearls.
- *Chè thạch sen - made from seaweed and lotus seeds
- Sương sâm - jelly with Tiliacora triandra extract
- Sương sáo - Grass jelly
- Chè thạch sen - thin, vermicelli-like jellies.
Dumplings
- Chè bột lọc from small cassava and rice flour dumplings
- Chè con ong - made from glutinous rice, ginger root, honey, and molasses– this is a northern dish, usually cooked to offer to the ancestors at Tết.
- Chè bánh xếp - green bean wrapped in a tapioca skin dumpling eaten in a coconut milk base with smaller pieces of tapioca. Translated to English, the dish is "folded cake dessert".
- Chè trôi nước - balls made from mung bean paste in a shell made of glutinous rice flour; served in a thick clear or brown liquid made of water, sugar, and grated ginger root.
Fruits and plants
- Chè hoa quả or chè trái cây - mixture of different fruits including pineapple, watermelon, apple, pear, mango, lychee, dried banana, cherry, and dried coconut with milk, yogurt, and syrup
- Chè nhãn - made from longan
- Chè xoài - made from mango
- Chè trái vải - lychee and jelly
- Chè bưởi - made from pomelo oil and slivered rind
- Chè chuối - made from bananas and tapioca
- Chè sầu riêng - made from durian
- Chè thốt nốt - made from sugar palm seeds
- Chè mít - made from jackfruit
- Chè lô hội - made from Aloe vera
- Hột é - made from Sterculia lychnophora extract and basil seeds
Mixed
- Chè đậu đỏ bánh lọt - red beans and bánh lọt.
- Chè thập cẩm meaning ten-ingredient sweet soup or mixed sweet soup is a mixture of various kinds of ingredients such as black-eyed peas, azuki beans, lotus seeds, mung beans, coconut, syrup, ice cream, milk and trân châu. This is one of the most popular forms of chè served in Vietnam.
- Chè bà ba - made from taro, cassava and khoai lang bí, a kind of sweet potato that is long, with red skin and yellow flesh.
- Chè bà cốt - made from expanded glutinous rice
- Chè bách niên hảo hợp – made from red beans, lotus seed, water lily bulb, and others
- Sâm bổ lượng - cold, sweet soup containing Coix lacryma-jobi var. ma-yuen, dried longans, red jujubes, lotus seeds, thinly sliced seaweed, and sometimes other ingredients, with water, sugar, and crushed ice
- Chè thưng - name translates to combo dessert in Vietnamese. One version is made from dried red jujube, peanut, and dried Auricularia auricula-judae fungus, while another is made from taro, cassava, green bean, sea weed, and water chestnuts
Savory chè (chè mặn)
- Chè lạp xường or chè lạp xưởng - made from Chinese sausage
- Chè thịt quay - made from roast pork
- Chè trứng đỏ - made from eggs and other ingredients
- Chè trứng - served with boiled eggs, either hot or cold, in a sweet soup base or sweet tea
Foreign chè
- Bubur Cha cha or Bocha - a Vietnamese interpretation of a popular sweet soup originating from Malaysia and Singapore, found in Hanoi.
- Chè Thái - a sweet fruit soup, which is believed to be a version of Thailand's tub tim krob, but the Vietnamese version uses a variety of tropical fruits, while the Thai version uses strictly chestnuts.
- Tàu hũ or Tào phớ - Douhua chè.