Vietnamese Pizza

Have you heard of Vietnamese pizza aka bánh tráng nướng?

I love watching those Youtube channels where they visit street food places and night markets. I miss travel in a big way and watching vlogs of people in other countries visiting cafes and street food stalls sort of scratches the itch. It’s not quite the same but I’ll take what I can get! Recently, I saw a video of someone in Vietnam having Vietnamese pizza. I asked Mike about it and he said it wasn’t a traditional dish - it’s one of those inventive street foods that makes use of rice paper.

I LOVE rice paper. Give me something wrapped in rice paper and I’m there. So when I saw that the “pizza” was rice paper that was grilled up to a crisp, I was all in.

Vietnamese pizza | www.iamafoodblog.com

What is Vietnamese pizza?

Bánh tráng nướng, or Vietnamese pizza, is a popular Vietnamese street food made with rice paper, egg, sauces, and toppings. It originated in Da Lat, in Northern Vietnam. A sheet of rice paper toasts over coals until crisp, then is topped with egg, green onions, pork floss, dried shrimp, mayo, and sweet chili sauce or sriracha. The rice paper gets super crisp and everything comes together in a salty, sweet, savory delicious bite.

Much like regular pizza, there are loads of variations, each street food vendor has a plethora of toppings to satisfy different tastes. In Vietnam, they fold over the rice paper OR serve it flat. On the internet I’ve seen people serve it up like a pizza, cut into wedges, but I think it tastes better when you fold it up so you have the crunchy crispy bits on both sides.

Vietnamese pizza | www.iamafoodblog.com

Ingredients

Rice Paper | www.iamafoodblog.com

How to make Vietnamese pizza

  1. Toast. Add a sheet of rice paper to a dry pan and toast over very low heat.
  2. Egg. Add an egg on top and scramble it, spreading it evenly over the rice paper.
  3. Top. Sprinkle on green onions and any other toppings you desire.
  4. Crisp. Let the egg cook and the rice paper crisp up.
  5. Sauce. Drizzle on a bit of mayo and sweet chili sauce or sriracha.
  6. Eat. Enjoy hot, open face, or folded over like they do in Vietnam.

making Vietnamese pizza | www.iamafoodblog.com

Vietnamese pizza toppings

Vietnamese pizza | www.iamafoodblog.com

Substitutions

Vietnamese pizza is infinitely customizable so if you don’t have pork floss or dried shrimp, no worries at all. You can try tiny bits of ham, bacon, tuna, tofu, or even skip the protein all together. Personally, I like sautéing up a bit of ground pork best of all.

I hope you give this Vietnamese pizza a try. I’m thinking of opening a Vietnamese pizza stand on my street corner I can live out my dreams of being a pro bánh tráng nướng maker LOL.

Vietnamese pizza | www.iamafoodblog.com

xoxo steph

Link nội dung: https://appstore.edu.vn/banhpizza-a55550.html