Although he lives in Japan, Nguyen Minh Tung is still in the habit of eating mỳ Chũ (Chu noodles) for breakfast every day with his family.
The noodles, a speciality of Bac Giang Province, have been well known far and wide for nearly a century.
“Compared with other noodles available in the market, we like this kind of noodles most for their nutrition and health benefits. They are cooked with beef, chicken, eggs or minced pork as a quick breakfast for my family members,” Tung said.
Tung, who has been living and working in Japan for almost 15 years, said his wife asks her relatives in Bac Giang to send the family these noodles to eat all year round.
“My two daughters particularly liked these noodles fried with shrimps and sea crab meat,” he said.
Local elderly Pham Van Mach, 90, said the dish originated in China. Long ago, a Chinese man introduced these noodles to Bac Giang’s Nam Duong Commune.
Every day, the Chinese man would set up a stall at the Chu Market, giving the dish its name. His noodles were so tasty that they often sold out, Mach recalled.
He added that my Chu has a higher quality because it is made of a special kind of rice, which is grown on hilly lands that are famous for providing a unique aroma, texture and stickiness compared with other types of rice that grow in lower lands.
The most important thing is that the noodles are handmade. Producers soak the rice in water for eight hours before grinding it down to a wet dough, which is stored overnight before being cooked.
My Chu needs three people to make it: the first person cooks the wet dough on a frame over medium fire to make a thin crepe; the second brings the cakes to dry in the sun; the third person cuts it into threads and continues to dry it before it is packed, said Mach, though he acknowledged that these days machines are often employed too.
“Without using preservatives, the Chu noodle is still soft but tasty compared with others.”
A young woman named Nguyen Thi Kieu Anh, from Luc Ngan’s Nam Duong Commune, was one of the first to make colourful noodles, which have proven a hit in the local market.
“In 2019, I decided to give up my job at the district post office to continue my traditional family job of making noodles. I use several types of fruit and vegetables mixed in with the rice to make the colourful noodles,” Anh said.
She has chosen turmeric, gac fruit (Momordica cochinchinensis), black sesame, beetroot, moringa, butterfly pea, rice with bran, and cashews to mix with rice to create more eye-catching colours, as well as improving the nutritional value of the noodles.
“I ground each fruit or vegetable down and mix the juice with the wet rice dough to make the noodles,” Anh said, noting that after several failures, caused by climate changes or using an incorrect recipe, she finally had success.
She has made yellow, orange, pink, green, blue, black and light brown coloured noodles, which have sold well in the markets of Hanoi, Hai Phong, Da Nang, HCM City and others via direct contracts or online.
“We produce between 7-10 tones of these noodles per month, at about VND60,000 per kilogram,” Anh said.
The noodles are loved for their organic quality and speed at which they can be cooked. They only need a little minced pork, 100gr broccoli, 200ml of water and a little spice to make your own, colourful bowl of noodles.
In addition to private sales, some shops and restaurants have also started serving these noodles. Ngon Garden Restaurant in Hanoi, which is famous for providing hundreds of delicious dishes, say most customers prefer Chu noodles for their hotpots.
Chu noodles have been granted a safe food certification by the Bac Giang’s Department of Industry and Trade. They were chosen as one of the top 100 specialities of Vietnam by Vietkings last year and have been recognised as a ‘symbolic industrial item’ of the northern region in 2014, and as one of the most trusted products nationwide in 2013.
The noodle is not only popular for domestic usage but also exported abroad to China, Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, South Korea, Japan and others.
Source: Vietnam News
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