Vietnamese food my mom feeds me in a day

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  • Опубліковано 1 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,2 тис.

  • @laurah2831
    @laurah2831 10 місяців тому +1781

    I love that you are always in PJs, sometimes with cardigan, just glasses, no make up. You are so relaxing for women around the world

    • @ChimChimChums
      @ChimChimChums 9 місяців тому +52

      That's the best lounge attire in the world.

    • @slaybutton1692
      @slaybutton1692 7 місяців тому +30

      Ikr? She always looks so comfy!

    • @akina3673
      @akina3673 6 місяців тому +28

      You should come visit Southeast Asia sometimes. Make up isn't as common here as compared to other countries. (Mostly due to the hot weather)

    • @101life9
      @101life9 4 місяці тому +2

      I used to be in phs 24/7 when I was so sick to the point of death.😢
      She is kinda neglecting herself.....

    • @soulsecrets12789
      @soulsecrets12789 3 місяці тому +23

      @@101life9I disagree. Takes confidence to do what she’s doing.

  • @nastyatrofi
    @nastyatrofi 10 місяців тому +718

    I love how one moment you're a grown up woman, but the next second you can ask your mom 'please clean the cabbage for me' Moms are always moms 🌼

  • @cherylindiana
    @cherylindiana 10 місяців тому +771

    Your mom is so knowledgeable. Respect to her.

  • @teachandplant
    @teachandplant 10 місяців тому +1176

    Uyen eating yummy worms but being scared of worms on the cabbage was so cute 😂 So fun to see you and your mom cook together ❤

    • @monicaglenn7878
      @monicaglenn7878 10 місяців тому +6

      Yes, I giggled at that too!!

    • @user-le7oy2rp1y
      @user-le7oy2rp1y 10 місяців тому +13

      Yeah one worm is ok but not the other?😅

    • @danthanh98
      @danthanh98 10 місяців тому +34

      eating them cooked is different than touching them alive isnt it 😂

  • @wormwoodwine6997
    @wormwoodwine6997 10 місяців тому +1427

    Cơm mẻ is a form of lactic fermented yeast rice which can contain microworm or Panagrellus redivivus (sour paste nematode, or beer mat nematode from its occurrence in constantly moist felt beer mats). It adds a unique sourness to the dish.

    • @uyenninh
      @uyenninh  10 місяців тому +326

      Thanks for the explanation! 🥰

    • @wormwoodwine6997
      @wormwoodwine6997 10 місяців тому +69

      @@uyenninh Hello from HCM. Love your videos. My mom has a vegetable garden as well. She said the same thing. I feel it in my soul.

    • @PixieYelsraek
      @PixieYelsraek 10 місяців тому +52

      @@uyenninh I can't imagine the tofu version is "vegan" with the nematodes in the rice?

    • @artistuk9590
      @artistuk9590 10 місяців тому +66

      @@PixieYelsraek Yes you can make it vegan by substituting a plant based fermeted substance (like plant based ferment of something in the same style....like sour rice). Sure, it won't be the same, but at least it'll have the same feel to it. And it's veganised to everyone's satisfaction.

    • @hollywebster6844
      @hollywebster6844 10 місяців тому +23

      ​@@PixieYelsraekMaybe vegan variations spoon out all the nematodes that can be seen? Some vegans are ok with honey and maybe spooning out the nematodes makes this like honey - made by animals but no animals were killed. Or maybe there is a vegan way they ferment the rice.

  • @natashadrummond5334
    @natashadrummond5334 10 місяців тому +14

    My husband's stepmother is Vietnamese and you've just opened up a whole topic of things for me when I see her next. She's such a good cook!

  • @peabubble368
    @peabubble368 10 місяців тому +591

    The “Hi” of the worm killed me 😂 I love this video so much, as a Vietnamese born in Germany it’s so fascinating to see so many amazing dishes that my mother never could introduce me to 🥺❤️ some resources are just not available here 😭

    • @kigeliakitten
      @kigeliakitten 9 місяців тому +4

      I saw how useful chop sticks are in the kitchen; I use them a lot now.
      Love your videos!

    • @xuxuxhisalvatore2499
      @xuxuxhisalvatore2499 9 місяців тому +1

      Fr 😂😂😂

  • @loafbreed7246
    @loafbreed7246 10 місяців тому +29

    ahahah "peel it for me mom it's disgusting" I chuckled heartily. there is something pure about this.

  • @hollywebster6844
    @hollywebster6844 10 місяців тому +199

    I love to see everyday home food from different countries. The only type of "Vietnamese" food I have had are a couple of different types of pho from US restaurants. I'm continually amazed by how resourceful and creative humans are around the world. I like to imagine the first people who looked at green bananas and thought up that delicious dish. Thanks for sharing, especially for sharing vegan variations.

  • @Health_care_906
    @Health_care_906 9 місяців тому +53

    Everything is so natural ☺️
    I miss my country Pakistan 🇵🇰 by seeing your video. The food is different but how you sitting and cutt the meat, washing dishes, work with parents and culture everything reminds me of me my country 😢😢 and my family 😢

    • @LeisaLeisa-v6s
      @LeisaLeisa-v6s Місяць тому +1

      Our similarities are greater in number than our differences all over the world.

  • @plutoniumlollie9574
    @plutoniumlollie9574 10 місяців тому +314

    I love the insight of her parent's home and how things are done. Also the kind of food they eat. I love how accepting people are towards it. Over twenty years ago, I couldn't tell my friends about the village life of my grandmother. It was frowned upon to enjoy such a 'babaric' and 'uncivilised' lifestyle during the holidays.

    • @lijohnyoutube101
      @lijohnyoutube101 10 місяців тому +23

      Sounds like you needed different friends..yikes!

    • @plutoniumlollie9574
      @plutoniumlollie9574 10 місяців тому +18

      @@lijohnyoutube101 Believe or not, it were different times. There was no UA-cam. The internet just started to be a thing. No one heard of being woke. Most not well traveled Westerners weren't ready for a hole in the floor kind of toilet, having dices of blood in the soup of a chicken you played with just an hour ago or the 'shower', which was a pot you use to pour water on yourself. Some of the stuff my grandmother did was even by her village's standard old fashioned

    • @lijohnyoutube101
      @lijohnyoutube101 10 місяців тому +11

      @@plutoniumlollie9574 I was a grown adult with kids before cell phones were ubiquitous. I still think it was your friend group.

    • @maryandchild
      @maryandchild 6 місяців тому +1

      @@lijohnyoutube101 yeah it was definitely the friend group... 20 years ago was like, 2004. I was a teenager in the 90s and knew poor people and immigrants and also had immigrant grandparents lol

    • @NitroDS
      @NitroDS 6 місяців тому

      20 years ago? that makes no sense, tons of immigrant families living in the west do travel to the country their parents come from and share their experiences from their mothers and grannies home villages. its def your friends being weird.
      i live in germany and tons of germans did travel places like turkey and the near east sharing their experiences from 30 years ago.
      i would believe you if you said north americans. i had wacky online experiences some 10 years ago.

  • @Wvr_
    @Wvr_ 10 місяців тому +316

    Uyen this might sound weird but, your moms hands look exactly like my moms hands. We are Mexican and similar to Asian cultures, there’s a lot of colorism. She hates how she has sunspots on her hands. But I think it’s so beautiful and you can see she’s worked a lot. Made me feel warm inside 🥰 I thought about how she makes my favorite foods with love too.

    • @annehersey9895
      @annehersey9895 10 місяців тому +18

      My best friend is Mexican and I used to always make sure that I 'happened' to be at their house a lot of days, just when it was dinner time. If not, after school was the best. We'd get to her house just as they were finishing up the fresh tortillas! Right of the comal we got them with butter (a treat for me because my family used margarine). If we were lucky, Mom and Abuela would slice some avocado onto our tortillas! Pure heaven. Mexican food is my favorite coming from California and I could eat it every day. Most of my vacations are to Mexico too and it's nice trying dishes from the different States there.

    • @sandrahayes108
      @sandrahayes108 10 місяців тому +2

      So you could be hand twins? 😅

    • @LeBensWerkbn
      @LeBensWerkbn 9 місяців тому +2

      For real my grand Mother has also These hands 😊

    • @asiya-y4b
      @asiya-y4b 7 місяців тому

      my circassian grandma also have it :)

    • @dana102083
      @dana102083 5 місяців тому +3

      My mom too..ethnically white but she could get away with another race until her facial bones lol she worked on the farm and loves gardening so sees a lot of aun..then my dad and i have vampire pale skin which makes me laugh😊

  • @Mugsy19_6.8
    @Mugsy19_6.8 10 місяців тому +52

    Your Mom’s garden is impressive! She clearly works hard to have such a good garden

  • @TuNguyen-kx9jd
    @TuNguyen-kx9jd 10 місяців тому +95

    Thật hài hước và thú vị khi nghe Uyên Ninh nói cả tiếng Anh và tiếng Việt! Mình rất thích các videos chân thật , phong phú của em!

  • @Rachel-vx8se
    @Rachel-vx8se 4 місяці тому +9

    Uyen you instantly brighten up peoples day! You have an amazing Mom who raised a smart, funny and beautiful daughter! I pray that You and German boyfriend are blessed always ❤

  • @rhenceocampo3253
    @rhenceocampo3253 9 місяців тому +22

    Can I just say… Uyen, you have the most authentic host personality.

  • @yshart
    @yshart 10 місяців тому +38

    my parents are from vietnam (hue) and i was born and raised in america, and some of the vietnamese dishes you have on your channel when i show my parents they’ve never even heard of it. i think it’s very cool. thanks chi for sharing your content with us!

  • @quantaca5773
    @quantaca5773 10 місяців тому +398

    uyen, to counter cabbage worms, your mom can (companion)plant celery or aliums (onion, garlic, shallot). herbs like cilantro/coriander, thyme, sage, rosemary, oregano and pepper/spearmint. or flowers like chamomile and marigold. as they all repel cabage worm butterfly, there are also plants that attract cabage worm predators like yarrow, white clover and buckwheat but that may be alot less practical.

    • @susanbryant6516
      @susanbryant6516 10 місяців тому +21

      ..a lot of those plants won’t grow in Vietnamese climate.

    • @quantaca5773
      @quantaca5773 10 місяців тому +46

      @@susanbryant6516 yes, and thats why i gave a lot of options... Even though im pretty sure aliums grow there and i could have just mentioned them, its better to grow something that you need/use

    • @FollowmedowntheNumberWhole
      @FollowmedowntheNumberWhole 10 місяців тому +26

      What interesting, useful and fascinating knowledge! Where can I learn more about what things to plant together in such ways? Thank you so much!

    • @PerpetualJoy
      @PerpetualJoy 10 місяців тому +40

      ​@@FollowmedowntheNumberWhole This strategy is called "companion planting." You can look up which plants go together in this way. Aside from which plants might help repel bugs, some companion plants are good pairs because they use different nutrients in the soil or things like that

    • @fanisanidiot
      @fanisanidiot 10 місяців тому +33

      @@quantaca5773you’re right, aliums do grow here. Cilantro also grows here, and my mom uses them as herbs and to keep cabbage worms out!!!!!

  • @Foreverforests
    @Foreverforests 10 місяців тому +189

    Thank you for sharing your culture with us!!! Also your parents can use neem oil in their garden to repel pests its a natural pesticide made from the neem tree.

  • @Myrtle2911
    @Myrtle2911 10 місяців тому +79

    I love this video!
    I am a Home Care nurse who takes care of special needs kids in their homes. (I should add that I'm in the USA and white.)
    One of my little kiddos was Vietnamese. One day, as I was halfway out the door after my night shift, kiddo's Grandma asked me if I wanted breakfast. I know well enough not to say no. She handed me chopsticks, a spoon, and a big bowl of chicken soup. 😊 From that day on, she fed me breakfast right along with the rest of the family. Usually it was some kind of soup, and it was delicious. Her chicken pho was really good, but my favorite was her congee (I don't know the Vietnamese name). It was thick and warm and peppery and had century egg and some kind of meat in it. I haven't had it in years, I don't know where to find it or how to make it, and I *miss* it!

    • @hangeroo2439
      @hangeroo2439 10 місяців тому +25

      It's called chao (pronounced sort of like ciao but with more of j sound). You should be able to find lots of recipes out there for chao/congee. There are many versions of it like chicken, pork, blood sausage (really delicious and the only blood product I'd eat...but it also oft times comes with organ meat, which I'm meh about), fish, etc. You can make it easily yourself. Do about 1 part rice to 10 parts water if you want it a bit loose (I start with 1 part rice to 8 parts water and just add more water if it's too thick). So cook a whole chicken or chicken parts to make a broth. Remove the chicken after 1-1 1/2 hours. If you want to use bone broth, then maybe add the bones and skin back in and cook in crockpot overnight. You can shred your chicken to add back into the chao or add it atop it when serving. The broth can be flavored with garlic, ginger, onion. Add your rice and just let it cook until the consistency you like (about an hour, longer if want the rice to disintegrate more). Don't forget to add salt. When done, top with whatever you want. My favorite toppings are sliced green onions, cilantro, crumbled hard boil egg (you can do the 6 minute egg or like you said the century egg), fried shallots, homemade chili oil, black pepper, etc. An easier version would be to use ground pork and cook it in a pot with garlic and ginger. Then add the rice and water to the ratio you want. You can add salt (or chicken bouillon) and a bit of fish sauce to flavor it more.

    • @HH-kg4fq
      @HH-kg4fq 10 місяців тому +2

      Wowwww....lucky😊

    • @Kira-kun_89
      @Kira-kun_89 8 місяців тому +1

      Please do not use the words “special needs”, it is very offensive to disabled people
      Please just say disabled, it is not a bad word and it is rude to treat it as such

    • @maryandchild
      @maryandchild 6 місяців тому +5

      @@Kira-kun_89 just to be clear, 'special needs' has only fallen out of favor in the last 3-4 years, so it's possible that when OP learned, 'special needs' was what was being pushed as the 'correct' term.. these things ebb and flow.

    • @socalbarbie1040
      @socalbarbie1040 6 місяців тому +1

      @@Kira-kun_89Says who? You? They’re plenty of people who still use that word.

  • @huiwentan5357
    @huiwentan5357 10 місяців тому +130

    Thanks for showing us homecooked Vietnamese dish!🥰

  • @mrmistyeyes4338
    @mrmistyeyes4338 24 дні тому +7

    6:25 I understand that ‘wow you’re strong’ feeling! My own grandmother could knead bread as if it’s nothing, and then I tire out after two minutes 😭😭

  • @yian7384
    @yian7384 10 місяців тому +104

    For those making 'mẻ' and storing it at home, if you plan to make more of them, make sure that 1: there's still some amount of 'mẻ' left in the container, 2: when you open the container that you put it in, the bacteria inside have already transformed the amount of rice you added last time. It's best to feed it with leftover rice after finishing your meal as too hot rice can kill the bacteria instead.

    • @zagrych
      @zagrych 10 місяців тому +17

      this is interesting and makes sense. growing up we make our own yeast to make bread and its the same idea. You are really raising them like "livestock" to eat, just tiny tiny ones haha. If you don't care for them properly and fatten them up, they will die off and you have to start over😅

  • @honglien123
    @honglien123 10 місяців тому +11

    I'm originally from Danang but grew up in the US within a large Vietnamese community. The Vietnamese food in the US is dominated by dishes from south and central Vietnam. I thought I knew Vietnamese food but some of the dishes you show are so new to me. Thank you for sharing and opening my mind!

  • @Android25K
    @Android25K 10 місяців тому +196

    I am not going to lie, my western mind is telling me that looks strange, but seeing you so happy eating it makes me want to give it a try

  • @First._.Last.
    @First._.Last. 10 місяців тому +49

    I always feel a flash of contentment when I find a new upload from you. I'm not sure if you *really* get how much we appreciate you and German Fiance. _(EtA: And your family as well! They've been such good sports!)_

  • @krislove1167
    @krislove1167 10 місяців тому +120

    Looks absolutely scrumptious, Uyen. Mom's cooking is the best!

  • @mags143
    @mags143 9 місяців тому +34

    I'm an adoptee from north vietnam and I love learning about my culture through you! Thank you

  • @jandynmarkham317
    @jandynmarkham317 10 місяців тому +12

    I really love this video and your great edits to respect your family's privacy. This whole series has been a great look into your culture and how you can include loved ones without sticking them right in front of the camera. Very much appreciated!

  • @TheRadu21
    @TheRadu21 10 місяців тому +34

    the third dish... we make something very similar in Romania... we call it 'toba' ... same filling but we use the pig stomac instead of banana leaf and maybe a bit different condiments... it looks almost the same... and probably taste similar... we also do that once a year, right before Christmas... Watching your videos, it is surprising to me how many things I find somewhat similar between vietnamese culture and traditional romaian culture ...

    • @riverAmazonNZ
      @riverAmazonNZ 10 місяців тому +1

      In english it’s called Brawn

    • @elisa821
      @elisa821 9 місяців тому +1

      La tobă m-am gândit si eu😂

  • @LythaWausW
    @LythaWausW 10 місяців тому +55

    Living in Germany, the food I miss most is the fresh seafood from the Pacific coast. The fresh oysters, really good local wild salmon, lobster, and especially the crab. I was pretty jealous when you ate crab!

  • @Jazzy.girl.Sarah2023
    @Jazzy.girl.Sarah2023 10 місяців тому +20

    It is really wonderful to watch you cooking and preparing meals with your mother. Thank you so much for this peek into your family's life.

  • @altoclef6688
    @altoclef6688 10 місяців тому +36

    For the cabbage, in Europe you can reduce the pests by mixing cabbage plants with tomatoes. The smell of the tomatoes hides the smell of cabbage. A biology teacher, dad to my first gf in the 1980s taught me this! I guess you can use the same principle with some other vegetable between the cabbages in Vietnam.

  • @lizzzy6905
    @lizzzy6905 10 місяців тому +17

    Mums are amazing really. The knowledge your mum has when ik comes to recepes, methods and food/cooking is amazing. 😊

  • @nysunra
    @nysunra 10 місяців тому +5

    Love seeing the Vietnamese food and traditions as well hear you speak your native language 😊

  • @energyvive731
    @energyvive731 10 місяців тому +5

    You're such a wholesome human thanks for sharing your experiences with us! When I lose all hope, my soul is happy to watch your videos. Thank you for always being your authentic self!

  • @jennahmcewan1467
    @jennahmcewan1467 10 місяців тому +12

    Watching these videos makes me miss my momma , she passed away , please give your mom an extra hug for me !

  • @alfredbackhus6110
    @alfredbackhus6110 6 місяців тому +9

    I love how there seems to be a lot of green leaves in so many vietnamese dishes, makes it look very fresh.

    • @generalcodsworth4417
      @generalcodsworth4417 3 місяці тому

      Much of it seems super fresh, they're harvesting the plants the same day as cooking it! I can only do that with the few herbs I can fit on my apartment balcony 😅
      It's nice to have fresh herbs, but I would love to have such fresh main ingredients

  • @lindalately
    @lindalately 10 місяців тому +6

    such personable video, thanks a bunch for showing us how your family makes meals back at home! everything looks simple but comforting and yummy especially with all of the vegetables.

  • @bobbilynnsmith5146
    @bobbilynnsmith5146 10 місяців тому +14

    Uyen, thank you for this video - my favorite one so far! I can feel the sigh of delicious satisfaction you got from all the dishes. XO to your Mom and Dad, BF and you from SW Colorado

  • @zanchan
    @zanchan 10 місяців тому +3

    Your wholesome videos are just what I need in my life! Thanks to you and your mom for showing us some interesting new recipes! Much love

  • @alphonsathomas2138
    @alphonsathomas2138 10 місяців тому +12

    Its my first time watching homecooked vietnamese food.. Really enjoyed watching your mother's cooking..

  • @leileleileleile
    @leileleileleile 10 місяців тому +6

    I love this format of video! So cool to get a peek inside your life in Vietnam. I feel very lucky that you’re able to share it and I’m able to watch!

  • @white_clover767
    @white_clover767 10 місяців тому +15

    Super interesting, please make more of these. Love from the Nordic Faroe Islands.

  • @Adoozyofaday
    @Adoozyofaday 9 місяців тому +2

    Head cheese was also a common dish in the Appalachian region. Not made the same way with banana leaves, but still called head cheese. They used every part of the pig head but the eyes. No waste!

  • @saraanderson2784
    @saraanderson2784 10 місяців тому +10

    I used to have vegan green banana and tofu dish a lot when I lived Hanoj as well as vegan sausage. They were so delicious. I miss Vietnamese food a lot. I think my favourite food which I ate almost every day and still make myself is tomato tofu. So simple and yummy 🤤

  • @ShinyBr3nda
    @ShinyBr3nda 10 місяців тому +3

    i love all the spaces around your home for preparing things. My own home has been through decades of people cooking less and less, so now the spaces like the kitchen are delicate and high maintenance unlike the tiles and easy clean spaces in your family home.

  • @iloverabbits5924
    @iloverabbits5924 10 місяців тому +10

    The third dish is almost
    exactly like a romanian appetizer called toba (literally means drum), and the process of making it is almost the same. We use bits of meat alongside the ears and other fatty and gelatinous parts. We also put the gelatine and meat in the stomach and then sew it. After some time, it is good to eat, and we slice it and eat the inside part, not the stomach layer. It's very delicious. I loved this video ❤️❤️

    • @riverAmazonNZ
      @riverAmazonNZ 10 місяців тому

      There is a similar English dish called Brawn

  • @meredithmcintyre9228
    @meredithmcintyre9228 9 місяців тому +1

    Thank you for sharing your culture with us! The video is fascinating and your pride in your family is beautiful.

  • @sarvagyavishwakarma3772
    @sarvagyavishwakarma3772 10 місяців тому +30

    Being a vegetarian but still enjoying your video you eating your favorite food cooked by your mom because when I also do the same thing when I go back to my home

    • @aznmochibunny
      @aznmochibunny 10 місяців тому +5

      What a lot of people don't know is that a ton of Vietnamese food can be made vegetarian.

  • @Natashaz48
    @Natashaz48 10 місяців тому +5

    Wow! You Mama is an incredible chef! How lovely to be able to have all these recipes and celebrate your culture! Everything looks delicious!

  • @Mishin108
    @Mishin108 10 місяців тому +5

    Such an excellent video, Uyen, to see you cooking with your Mom, picking vegetables in her garden, and seeing how to make so many different dishes. And you were so happy eating them!

  • @dianajones4639
    @dianajones4639 8 місяців тому +1

    For me, some of the most inteeesting part of this is what seeing like the village/ outdoors/ house/ kitchen in Vietnam looks like! It’s very different from America, especially the house/kitchen, and I feel like it actually gives me a sense of what the place looks like to picture in my head!

  • @tu_tia_violeta
    @tu_tia_violeta 10 місяців тому +12

    So many of these things I have never heard of, because the Vietnamese restaurants in my town have to cater more to western pallets, but all of these look so good! I love all of the greens used in every dish. Makes everything look so fresh and bright.

    • @doodahgurlie
      @doodahgurlie 10 місяців тому +10

      It's not something you'd find in restaurants even in Vietnam. These are home-style meals that you'd eat daily (she's from the north, so that's why she likes boiled and steamed stuff).

    • @tu_tia_violeta
      @tu_tia_violeta 10 місяців тому +1

      @@doodahgurlie oh that's good to know!! And honestly: The boiled cabbage looks so good, and I never thought I'd say that about boiled cabbage. Just gotta do it right I guess!

    • @doodahgurlie
      @doodahgurlie 10 місяців тому

      @@tu_tia_violeta Boiled cabbage and green beans are often eaten in a fish sauce that has boiled eggs mashed into it (I always thought my mom used soy sauce growing up, but my SIL who is from Hai Phong said it's fish sauce). Where Uyen is from, they just eat it with pure fish sauce, I guess.

    • @tu_tia_violeta
      @tu_tia_violeta 10 місяців тому

      @@doodahgurlie Oh interesting!! Do you think it's better with the egg?

    • @doodahgurlie
      @doodahgurlie 10 місяців тому +2

      @@tu_tia_violeta Definitely. I'd never dip anything in pure undiluted fish sauce like that. When you mash the boiled egg and mix it with fish sauce or soy sauce, it gives it more depth of flavor and a creaminess that enhances plain boiled veggies. But it's a comfort food Viets grew up eating. Not sure if someone who's never tried it will like it. Try it with soy sauce and a mashed egg and see what you think. Eat it with steamed rice, though.

  • @vogelchenzwitschert8754
    @vogelchenzwitschert8754 10 місяців тому +7

    Vietnamese ist so eine cool klingende Sprache! Lovely video, greetings to your mom and thank you for sharing more about your Cuisine and culture 🥰

  • @suzaynnschick158
    @suzaynnschick158 10 місяців тому +7

    Fascinating! My family makes American headcheese. We boill it until the meat is softer, and we add vinegar and American pickling spicem (coriander seed, black pepper, allspice, cinnamon, and bay leaf). I think I'd like the Vietnamese headcheese too.

  • @s.c.2424
    @s.c.2424 9 місяців тому +2

    Everything looked so good. Germany definitely doesn't have this. I loved seeing you with your mother it honestly felt like one my favorite videos.

  • @viviancandelario4766
    @viviancandelario4766 10 місяців тому +3

    I thoroughly enjoyed your Vietnam visit vlogs U! My favorite is the one with you and your sister in Hanoi and this one, bonding with your Mom. It shows how much family means to you. These memories will sustain you when you return to Germany. Thanks for sharing this with us ❤

  • @katerina1179
    @katerina1179 10 місяців тому +4

    Your mom is such a hard working woman ❤

  • @TeeBoyd88
    @TeeBoyd88 10 місяців тому +2

    I'm Samoan, we've never eaten the skin of the green banana. We use it in our compost on our fields. I am so interested in trying this! Your mother is so kind to share her time & knowledge. Thank you for sharing Uyen.

  • @lik3th3hamm3r
    @lik3th3hamm3r 10 місяців тому +1

    it's so cute to see your face every time you ate something! It is so clear how much you enjoy this food and have missed your mom's cooking!!

  • @karlylo
    @karlylo 10 місяців тому +103

    The lifestyle you had in Vietnam is GOALS. Family centered, surrounded by nature, living off your own hard work and just knowing natural life skills. It makes me wonder if the "conveniences" of modern life in first world countries are better 🤔 I know Vietnam is still recovering from the past wars, hopefully with newer opportunities, they don't forget this simple and magnificent lifestyle 🥰

    • @ttrinhity
      @ttrinhity 10 місяців тому +3

      I totally agree with this!

    • @KrisJustus
      @KrisJustus 10 місяців тому +22

      Gently and respectfully, we shouldn't use language like "first world" and "third world" anymore. But all love to Uyen, I know that's what you meant!

    • @Aelffwynn
      @Aelffwynn 10 місяців тому +32

      There are pros and cons to both. People romanticize it, and it is beautiful, but it's also a lot of hard work and not very relaxing most of the time. I appreciate that Uyen discusses the good sides of her life in Vietnam and her life in Germany. If only we could all have the best of both worlds.

    • @nanniecath528
      @nanniecath528 9 місяців тому

      ​@@KrisJustusit's fact though 😊

  • @tatertot1946
    @tatertot1946 10 місяців тому +1

    Your mom is an amazing lady! What a treasure trove of traditional cooking! Write it down and preserve! Make a small book of her knowledge! ❤

  • @tildessmoo
    @tildessmoo 10 місяців тому +16

    "One is enough, it's too spicy!" 😂 Been in Germany too long!

  • @virginiakepler5007
    @virginiakepler5007 9 місяців тому +1

    Thank you for thoughtful and heartwarming video. Such good food and recipes as well as family being a part of the process. Will definitely have to try some of these out! Thank you again and take care. ❤

  • @lgran79
    @lgran79 10 місяців тому +6

    Thank you for sharing! Theres nothing like a mom's homemade cooking❤

  • @nelnel007
    @nelnel007 3 місяці тому

    Everything about this vide, the vibe, the food, the family dinners reminds me so much of my family especially my late dad. Thanks.

  • @MissTirsty
    @MissTirsty 10 місяців тому +4

    So cool seeing you at home with your family

  • @sarahsilvasy4599
    @sarahsilvasy4599 Місяць тому

    I cry every time I go home and eat with my mom..the food is great.mbut being around your mom and the food..perfect ❤😊

  • @BriannaLKay
    @BriannaLKay 9 місяців тому +5

    Wow finally someone who appreciates their viewers and translates their language for us🎉

  • @nokomarie1963
    @nokomarie1963 10 місяців тому +1

    Thank you to you and your generous mom for letting us in to watch in her kitchen!

  • @Jazzy.girl.Sarah2023
    @Jazzy.girl.Sarah2023 10 місяців тому +7

    The first dish looks so yummy!! It is so cool to watch your mom cooking!
    I never knew you could eat banana peel when it was green.

  • @VertifiedEv
    @VertifiedEv 9 місяців тому

    She’s such a lovely person, so enjoyable to listen to ❤

  • @abbykurosawa7997
    @abbykurosawa7997 10 місяців тому +3

    when i visited vietnam in january, i only managed to eat the popular dishes so i never really got to explore enough but watching your food related videos always confirms that vietnamese food caters so much to what i like, even the everyday meals 🥰 (vegetables and seafood)

    • @doodahgurlie
      @doodahgurlie 10 місяців тому +3

      The stuff she's eating are home cooked meals, which are way different than the stuff you'd see in restaurants and street food. Some of it it seems regional to where she lives, too.

    • @abbykurosawa7997
      @abbykurosawa7997 10 місяців тому +2

      @@doodahgurlie yeah i figured they had to be regional in some way too if theyre not popular dishes they serve at restaurants. i do love seeing the consistency though in the cuisine that it seems like they'd cater to me haha

    • @doodahgurlie
      @doodahgurlie 10 місяців тому +6

      @@abbykurosawa7997 There are AMAZING home cooked dishes that I would have featured over what Uyen did. But she's also from a remote village so the food preferences there would be different than bigger cities with more resources and such. Notice she mentioned how she loves boiled/steamed veggies. Those are typically considered the blandest ways to eat veggies. And she dips it in pure fish sauce. Most Viets I know would dip boiled cabbage or green beans in a mix of fish sauce with mashed boiled eggs (I use soy sauce and eggs in mine)

  • @58borges1
    @58borges1 10 місяців тому +1

    Other foods can never beat Moms cooking. Glad you got to spend the Luna New Year with your family, and enjoyed all that delicious food. Say, ‘Hi’ to German boyfriend. Blessings

  • @raysacastro8942
    @raysacastro8942 10 місяців тому +7

    This reminds me of when I used to visit my mom. She would cook all my favorites. Enjoy, there's nothing better in the world than moms cooking. 😋

  • @saphiagegamyang1172
    @saphiagegamyang1172 9 місяців тому +1

    Love the family dynamic and bravo to mom for taking such good care of everyone! Big time respect for that generation.
    🤍

  • @eattherude7450
    @eattherude7450 4 місяці тому

    This was so cool, i loved seeing the diversity of vietnamese cuisine :)) the dishes looked like real comfort food

  • @jenniferdoyleart
    @jenniferdoyleart 10 місяців тому +30

    So I’m the odd ball from the states. The worm saying hello was so funny. You have such a great mom. I don’t know if I could eat the worm but the ribs looks so good. You are truly blessed. Have an amazing day I love learning about your culture 🤗💕❤️

  • @orynadvortsova2030
    @orynadvortsova2030 10 місяців тому +7

    I am not from Vietnam, but I am also an expat living in another country. Although I cannot relate to the food you cooked as home food for myself, I can relate so much to your desire to catch up on homey things. It makes me also wanting to go home and ask my mom to cook for me :)

  • @Elizabeth-n3v2u
    @Elizabeth-n3v2u 10 місяців тому +21

    Omg viet home cooking looks SO GOOD im jealous. Im from the southern US but have always loved southeast asian food. Id even try the worm rice stuff.

  • @aldelandpomeranze9249
    @aldelandpomeranze9249 10 місяців тому +3

    This video was really beautyful and authentic, thank you so much

  • @monmon3681k
    @monmon3681k 10 місяців тому +33

    I'm born and raised in France but i'm cambodian and I never had food like that 😯 Even if my mom cooks similar dishes from Cambodia and Vietnamese dishes. Fish stew with green banana with fermented rice. Mind blowing

  • @Saavik256
    @Saavik256 10 місяців тому +3

    I adore your videos, you are so wholesome, your partner is a very lucky guy :) Please continue being wholesome and much love from my tiny corner of the world (Slovenia) :)

  • @epiclexi1234
    @epiclexi1234 10 місяців тому +5

    steaming vegetables is the best way to cook them to keep the nutrients! when you steam vegetables it keeps the most nutrients, compared to all other ways to cook them! :)

  • @DomesticAlmonds
    @DomesticAlmonds 9 місяців тому

    Aw! Seeing your face after you took that first bite of green banana at 3 minutes in made my eyes water a little bit. You look so happy!! This whole video is super heartwarming, but that part really takes the cake.

  • @Tasi-or-An
    @Tasi-or-An 10 місяців тому +65

    As a Vietnamese, I can confirm the moms are amazing cooks.

    • @Melinabellisima
      @Melinabellisima 10 місяців тому

      Because they do it with love for the family

  • @abitnajs9479
    @abitnajs9479 10 місяців тому +2

    What a great video to see. Thank you! there are tons of videos with vietnamese restaurant style food, but i prefered this one because it actually shows how you cook at home. Thank you!

  • @woceht
    @woceht 10 місяців тому +5

    Wow thanks for these. I love Vietnamese food but it's been difficult finding English explanations. Please do more Vietnamese cooking videos.
    I've been enjoying your content for awhile but finally motivated to comment because I love learning about South East Asian cooking techniques.
    I will give com me a try. It looks like lactic acid fermentation. I imagine the taste would be a bit like how northern Thai fermented sausages taste as they add sticky rice to the fermentation. We have a lot of interesting Thai food here in Singapore but the Vietnamese options are a bit more limited. Or maybe it just seems so because I don't speak Vietnamese yet (on the bucket list).

  • @AntoineChan
    @AntoineChan 8 місяців тому +1

    Hello! I am from Hong Kong. My mum from Vietnam. I love Vietnamese Cuisine very much.When I was young, my mum can make some Vietnam cuisine, and we can order the Vietnamese sausage by phone and they will delivery to you, because there was a lot of Vietnamese lived in Hong Kong, but not now, and it is difficult to have really Vietnamese cuisine. Because of the cost they changed a lot and simplify it. No real taste! Now we still can find the Chả Lụa, Chả Chiên, but no more Giò Thủ. When I shaw your mum making Giò Thủ in the video, I miss it very much. Mu mum is old now and she can't cook any more. I try to learn how to cook Vietnamese cuisine on UA-cam, but very complicated, like Phở Bò, you have to prepare a lot of things and gather a lot of different herbs, a big work! You are so lucky! 😁

  • @spencer4142
    @spencer4142 10 місяців тому +15

    I absolutely love your videos uyen!! ❤❤❤

  • @3mmaloops
    @3mmaloops 10 місяців тому

    I (and from what I read in the comments, many others also) love how natural and casual you are on camera. I know there's a lot of invisible mental load that comes with content creating, but you carry it well and your content is always so inviting and friendly 🥰

  • @oonyooa
    @oonyooa 10 місяців тому +2

    really enjoying these vlogs from your recent trip home to vietnam! really appreciate getting to know more about you and your culture! ❤

  • @ryasnipes6068
    @ryasnipes6068 10 місяців тому

    You are so blessed! Wonderful video showing all that you cooked with your mom.

  • @beIIabeIIa
    @beIIabeIIa 10 місяців тому +8

    1:30 the worm saying "hi" is too cute 😭

  • @Aiden-V2.0
    @Aiden-V2.0 10 місяців тому +3

    thank you for sharing your culture with us😊

  • @jewel65
    @jewel65 10 місяців тому +16

    My mom sucked at cooking. She cooked everything on high, so it was always dry & burnt. God bless her.

    • @georgiafrye2815
      @georgiafrye2815 10 місяців тому +2

      One of my Grandmother cooked like that. I think she was always in a hurry?

  • @naminea2480
    @naminea2480 10 місяців тому +1

    I love the way the family sticks together and I love that you eat fresh veggies and fruits from your own garden. I am just not thrilled by some dishes 😬 Sometimes it’s better to taste it without knowing what’s in it 😂

  • @AKMackle
    @AKMackle 10 місяців тому +5

    You should do a video on the village/garden! That is such a different concept vs getting food from the market. Like is it free? Or is there a monthly contribution? Is that just your moms personal garden or it is a shared garden? If it is shared, how do you keep it from running out?

  • @Readersgoingtoread
    @Readersgoingtoread 9 місяців тому +1

    I adored this video! Thank you for sharing with us!