Grilled banana wrapped in sticky rice (grilled sticky rice banana) is a type of cake originating from the Mekong Delta, where there are many bananas and coconuts. The cake was made by the people here from simple and easy-to-find ingredients. Traveling to Can Tho, visitors will enjoy the sweet taste of this rustic dish.
By Thomas Vietnam at vemekong.com | All Best Foods & Restaurants in Can Tho
1. Better to Know as a Food Lover
Find them: Ninh Kieu District, Can Tho city.
Best time: Dusk-Dawn
Don’t miss: Coconut milk handmade
Local’s pick: Folk Cake Festival
Tourist’s pick:
– Next to the southern bookstore (right at the red light of Ngo Quyen Street), Peace Avenue, Ninh Kieu District.
– Banana Sticky Rice at the intersection of Xo Viet Nghe Tinh with Truong Dinh at the corner of Can Tho Tourism Intermediate School.
– Banana Sticky Rice at the end of Deer Street, opposite EMI Cafe, bordering the round lake on Huynh Cuong Street
– Banana Sticky Rice at Mau Than Street next to Tham Tuong canal embankment, Ninh Kieu District.
– Banana Sticky Rice Pham Ngu Lao at 35/78 Pham Ngu Lao, Ninh Kieu District.
– De Tham street food area, Ninh Kieu District.
– Baked Potatoes & Grilled Sticky Bananas on Ngo Quyen Street, Ninh Kieu District.
Blog: https://vemekong.com/grilled-sticky-rice-banana-can-tho-food/
Facts: It is called grilled sticky rice banana because the main ingredient is banana and sticky rice mixed together
2. Better to Know Grilled banana wrapped in sticky rice
The popularity of grilled sticky rice banana
This Vietnamese dish was voted the most popular street food at the world street food festival in Singapore last year.
World Street Food Congress (WSFC), takes place for 10 days in Singapore, ending on June 9. Representatives of 10 countries brought their national dishes to the festival, including Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore, Mexico, the US, Indonesia, China, India, Denmark, and Malaysia.
Representative of Vietnam, chef Vo Quoc presented 4 dishes of shrimp rice paper, sunbathing shrimp, grilled banana cake with coconut milk, and Banh Can Phan Rang, introduced to the world.
Grilled sticky rice banana – a rustic gift on the streets of Saigon became the most popular dish at the 2013 World Street Food Festival.
Of the 4 dishes of Vietnam, few people expect that the grilled sticky rice dish served with coconut milk will be highly appreciated by diners and become the most popular dish at the street food festival. During the 10 days of the festival, there are always long lines of customers waiting in line at this stall selling grilled glutinous bananas originating from the South.
3. Grilled banana wrapped in sticky rice in Can Tho
This simple dish in Can Tho is popular with foreign diners, first of all thanks to its attractive taste. Each banana is wrapped in glutinous rice, wrapped in banana leaves, then grilled and cooked over charcoal until it is ripe and crispy. To create a thin, crispy and fragrant coat, sticky rice is soaked and cooked with coconut water instead of regular water.
Baked yellow bananas can be left whole or cut into slices, sprinkled with coconut milk, a little onion fat, and roasted sesame seeds on top and enjoy. The combination of the soft sweetness of bananas, the fleshy but not greasy taste of coconut water, and the highlights from roasted sesame, onion fat… create a special appeal for the dish.
4. How to Make Grilled banana wrapped in sticky rice
Ingredients for grilled sticky rice banana
5 Western bananas
200ml coconut milk
200g glutinous rice
100g peanuts
50g tapioca flour (also known as small pearls)
100g banana leaves for wrapping
Tapioca starch, salt, sugar
How to make grilled sticky rice
Step 1. Cook sticky rice with coconut milk
First, you wash the glutinous rice and then add a small amount of water with a little salt and then put it in the rice cooker to cook. As soon as you see the sticky rice has just cooked, you continue to add about 50ml of coconut milk and 2 tablespoons of sugar and stir until smooth. Cook until the rice is soft, then let it cool and set aside.
The remaining 150ml of coconut milk is brought to a boil with the tapioca starch, you add a little salt, 4 tablespoons of sugar and a little tapioca. While boiling the pot of coconut milk, remember to stir well. Stir until the milk mixture thickens and blends, when the seeds float on the surface of the water, the pot of coconut milk is cooked.
Step 2. Prepare ingredients
Roast the peanuts until fragrant, then pound them until smooth.
Peel the bananas and remove the tendons.
Take the boiled starchy part and let it soak for about 15 minutes in a bowl of water, after 15 minutes are up, take it out, drain the water, then put it in the pot to boil.
Step 3. Baked Banana Pack
After preparing the ingredients, we continue to the step of wrapping bananas for baking.
First, take some sticky rice and spread it on a clean and dry nylon layer. Continue to put a banana on the center position of the surface of the sticky rice.
Roll the sticky rice wrapped with bananas by hand. When you see that the sticky rice and bananas have been firmly wrapped together, you remove the plastic layer and then leave.
Banana leaves after being washed and dried, you spread each piece of banana leaf on a cutting board, then put each banana wrapped in sticky rice on top, then wrap it securely.
Step 4. Bake the Sticky Rice Banana
Put all the bananas that have been wrapped in sticky rice and wrapped firmly in the oven for 30-40 minutes at 180 degrees Celsius.
Hot tip: You can also make this dish without an oven, just follow the same steps as above, at the stage of baking bananas, put them on the charcoal stove and bake until the outer layer of sticky rice is cooked, golden, Crispy, while bananas are soft.
Step 5. Finished Product
With only 4 very simple steps, an extremely delicious and attractive grilled banana dish has been completed. Sticky rice wrapped bananas have a sweet aroma, you cut the sticky bananas into small pieces and then put them on a plate, eat with freshly cooked hot coconut milk and a little soft, chewy tapioca, sprinkle a little peanut crush. It’s really awesome, isn’t it?
5. Pro tips:
Here are our tips for easing your mind (and stomach) around food-handling environments that you may not be used to.
Make sure the food is freshly cooked. If you’re eating hot street food, it’s always safest (not to mention more delicious) to eat food you can see being cooked to order.
Look for lines and busy stalls. Busy street food stalls are an indicator of popularity, and their high turnover rate means the food is never sitting out for hours and developing dreaded bacteria. Yes, long lines can be discouraging when you’re hungry after a full day of exploring, but it’s not worth the risk of grabbing precooked food from the empty spot next door.
Eat when the locals are eating. The last and most important element here is when to eat. You’re likely already on a weird eating schedule while you’re traveling, but it’s important to try and adjust to the eating times of where you are. A bowl of pho might be lunch for Americans, but it’s breakfast for the Vietnamese. This ensures that you’re eating freshly cooked food and that you can find the best and most popular places to eat.
If you can’t drink the water, then you can’t eat the salad. Most people get so hung up on not drinking the water or skipping ice in drinks that they don’t think about all of the other ways in which water is used in food service. Fruits and vegetables tend to be washed with tap water in most places, rather than the filtered water that locals drink—or sometimes it’s not washed at all. If you’re really craving some produce, try fruits you can peel or cooked veggies.
Trust your gut. If you’re unsure about the food or the way that it’s being prepared, then keep moving. Eating street food all over the world doesn’t make you an expert. Every stall and every country are different, and sometimes the rules can be harder to follow. When something doesn’t look, smell, or feel right, don’t eat it! Trust your judgment. Chances are that there’s another spot close by that’s making something more delicious.
Must-Eat Foods & Restaurants in Can Tho: Co Ut’s Cong cake, Ut Dzach Fine Rice Vermicelli, Thanh Van Grilled Pork Sausage, Crab Noodle Soup At Floating Market, Scorched Rice with Caramelized Fish Sauce, 7-Toi’s Duck Meat Pancake, Banh Mi Thuy, Banana Blossom Salad, Fried Spring Rolls, Fresh Spring Rolls, Fetal duck egg (balut), Honeycomb Cake, Mini Sticky Rice Cake, Cassava Silkworm Cake, Grilled Banana Wrapped in Sticky Rice, Khmer-style Bun Goi Da Soup, Egg Coffee, Con Son Grilled Snakehead Fish, Bun Mam – Fermented Fish Noodle Soup, Lau Mam – Fermented Fish Hotpot, Grilled Snails with Pepper, Magenta Sticky Rice Cake, Duck cooked with Fermented Tofu, Rice Noodle Pizza, Vegetarian Noodle Soup, Snails Stuffed With Pork…
Must-Eat Foods & Restaurants in Chau Doc: Chau Doc Fish Noodle Soup, Sugar Palm Fruit, Basa Fish Hot Pot, Mam (Fermented fish), Phu Huong Beef Noodle Soup, Broken Rice with Pork Chop, Long Xuyen Broken Rice, Nui Cam Pancake, O Thum’s Chicken Grilled with Lime Leaves, Stir-fried Shrimp with Sesbania Flower, Sweet & Sour Soup with Siamese Mud Carp Soup & Sesbania Flower, Caramelized & Braised Catfish, Grilled Rice-field Rat with Salt and Chili…
Must-Eat Foods & Restaurants in Soc Trang: Pia Cake, Cong Cake (Banh Cong), Bun Nuoc Leo Soc Trang’s Noodle Soup, Soc Trang’s Bun Goi Da Soup, Duck Noodle Soup with black Pepper, Curry Noodle Soup, Grilled Beef on Tile, Khmer-style Tube Cake, Khmer-style Mung Bean Cake (Banh In), Dried Radish (Xa Bau), Stir-Fried Noodles with Seafood (Mi Sua), Soc Trang’s Green Rice Flakes…
Must-Eat Foods & Restaurants in Ben Tre: Phu Le Rice Wine, Ben Tre’s Coconut Candy, Flat Banana, Coconut Rice, Snail Pancake, Sea Snail with Coconut Milk, Coconut Worm, Young Coconut Salad with Shrimp & Pork, Son Doc Puff Rice Paper…
Must-Eat Foods & Restaurants in Cai Be: Puffed Rice Cake…
Must-Eat Foods & Restaurants in Vinh Long: Elephant Ear Fish (fried giant gourami)…
Must-Eat Foods & Restaurants in My Tho: Fried Sticky Rice, Snakehead Fish Rice Porridge, Hu Tieu My Tho (Noodle Soup), Coconut Banana Cake…
Must-Eat Foods & Restaurants in Tra Vinh: Macapuno Coconut, Bun Nuoc Leo Tra Vinh’s Noodle Soup, Tra Cuon’s Sticky Rice Cake…
Must-Eat Foods & Restaurants in Sadec: Sa Dec Noodle Soup, Sadec Crab Hotpot, Lai Vung Spring Rolls, Sa Giang Shrimp Puff Pastry, Lai Vung Tangerine…
Must-Eat Foods & Restaurants in Bac Lieu: Spicy Beef Noodle Soup, Bac Lieu’s Three-striped Crab, White Radish Pies, Bac Lieu Thick Noodles & Creamy Coconut Milk, Bon Bon Pickles…
Must-Eat Foods & Restaurants in Ca Mau: Banh tam ga cay (Silkworm rice cake with curried chicken), Grilled Vop clams with salt and pepper, Grilled Mudskipper Fish, Stone Crab Roast With Salt, Young Bee Salad, Nam Can’s Crab, U Minh Forest’s Honey, U Minh’s Fermented Fish Hotpot…
Must-Eat Foods & Restaurants in Hau Giang: Cau Duc Pineapple, Cai Tac’s Pork Organs Porridge, Hau Giang’s Bronze Featherback Fish Cake…
Must-Eat Foods & Restaurants in Ha Tien: Herring Fish Salad, Spider crab cake soup, Ken Noodle soup, Xoi Xiem (Siamese sticky rice), Steamed Noodle soup, Ha Tien Oyster porridge…
Must-Eat Foods & Restaurants in Rach Gia: Stir Noodle Soup, Kien Giang Fish Noodle Soup…
Must-Eat Foods & Restaurants in Con Dao: Bang nut jam, Vu Nang Snail, Roasted Pork Bread (Banh Mi), Coconut Ice Cream…
Must-Eat Foods & Restaurants in Phu Quoc: Phu Quoc Sim Wine, Phu Quoc Pepper, Phu Quoc fish sauce…
Hopefully, the above tips will help you to come up with a great plan for your adventure in Mekong River Delta, Vietnam. Have a safe trip!
“Sleep less, travel more, respect more” – Thomas Vietnam – Local travel expert.
Thank you