Stay in the old quarter in Hanoi. Learn to love the congestion, the buzz and honking of motor scooters. Ah, and the smells. Two stroke, food and incense.
This is the place where the action is. Life is lived and transacted on the street or at least without leaving the motorcycle saddle.
It is a place where street names have a meaning. Hang Gad is chicken, Hang Hahn is onion. Hang Ruoi is clam worms. And the stretch between Hang Luoc (combs) and P Hang Can (scales) is Cha Ca or roasted fish.
One roasted fish restaurant Cha Ca La Vong (14 Pho Cha ca, Hanoi 825 3929) has remained there for, well nobody’s sure but at least 135 years. It’s a single fronted place with one small room downstairs and two rooms upstairs. We are led up a steep narrow staircase – think ladder – to the first floor painted in a shade of eau de nil that would make interior designer Tricia Guild weep.
Locals and tourists mix eating the one dish this joint.
An old lady stacking greens into a large plastic draining baskets comes over and places an ageing menu on the table. There is one dish on the menu and it costs 70,000– about US$4.50, which is expensive for Vietnam.
Soon our tabletop barbeque arrives together with a large plate of greens plus noodles, peanuts, local herbs and a dipping sauce.
The waitress dumps some of the greens in the pan and we tuck in dumping noodles into our bowls followed by fish and greens, herbs and nuts.
The flavours are amazing although by the end of the exercise the fish is a bit overcooked. J likes it so much that she wants to return the next day but I have other plans…
Eating on fried fish street
by Ed on May 3, 2006
Additional comments powered by BackType
Previous post: Final call for entries
Next post: Home and blogging again





{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }
Welcome home – what a coincidence! I was just reading about this very place in Stephen Downes ‘To Die For’. It gets a mention in the eating out section. But your pix make it much more alive!
I read about it first in Stephen’s book too and it seems to be in all the guides. Also got some good pics of the Hotel Saigon Morin, which he also writes about today in The Oz.
Hey, I’m reading this book at the moment too! I’ve been waiting to hear all about your food adventures, Ed! Welcome home.
Cool Cindy. It’s a great read but watch out for the bit about the mango pip. More food adventures soon. bad news for cats and dogs too, sadly.