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The apricot and peach trees in early bloom signal
the advent of Vietnam’s biggest holiday of the year, or Tet. Around the
country, families are preparing glutinous rice and other ingredients
to make banh chung and banh tet for this Lunar New Year.
Staff of the
HCMC-headquartered travel firm Vietmark are also rolling up their
sleeves to arrange a tour that will take participants to the good old
days of banh chung, a square glutinous rice cake filled with
green bean paste, pork fat and onion slices, and banh tet,
which is akin to banh chung except it is cylindrical in shape.
Truong Hoang Phuong of
Vietmark says the two-day banh chung tour will begin in the
quiet ecotourism area of Cao Minh in Dong Nai Province on February 6,
or the 23rd day of the twelfth lunar month when Vietnamese place
offerings to see off the Kitchen God.
Also regarded as the soul of
the kitchen in many households, the Kitchen God is believed to return
to Heaven seven days ahead of the Lunar New Year to report the
activities of every household over the past year to the Jade Emperor.
Then, this emperor of the heavens rewards or punishes a family based on
his yearly report.
The tale of the Kitchen Gold
still remains vividly in the belief of many families to this day, but
the tradition of cooking banh chungbanh tet just
before Tet is fading away as it takes more time and effort to
make these cakes than it does to buy them in the market at anytime of
the year. and
Fortunately, many families,
especially those in the countryside, still keep the long-lasting
tradition through which youngsters can learn much about the past and
the indispensable rituals for Tet.
As usual, grandparents and
parents tell their nephews and nieces and children about their life
chores in the past and compare past and present traditions of Tet. Such
stories told by a fire used to cook banh chung and banh
tet provide young generations with an insight into the change in
traditions and values as time goes by.
Vietmark wants to help revive the good ambience of
cooking banh chung and banh tet on a fire by
organizing this tour. Phuong says the primary objective is to create an
opportunity for family members to surround a brazier of red-hot
charcoal used to cook the cakes and exchange their sad and happy
memories of the year.
Participants will be taught
to make banh chung and banh tet from ingredients
provided by the tour organizers and then cook these cakes properly so
they will be most enjoyable on the threshold of the Year of the Tiger
at the ecotourism area.
Phuong said Cao Minh was a
quiet tourist site nearly 50 kilometers from HCMC and near the dam of
Tri An Hydropower Plant in Dong Nai. There, participants will stay by
the fire to talk about Tet in addition to topics of interest,
or sleep in a tent provided by the organizers.
The next morning, the
organizers will award prizes to the best banh chung and banh
tet.
The banh chung tour
is VND870,000 per person and includes round trip car fare, two person
tents, food, drinks and insurance.
vietnamnet |