Dining and Entertainment
Restaurant
Fourchette can be found 9 Ngo Duc Ke, right in
the heart of the city. It is a small French restaurant, with a very
French feel to it. The lunch time is extremely busy so it is best
to arrive there early especially as they only have about 10 tables.
Their food is typically French with specials of the day also on
offer. Being so small it can be rather intimate but if you need
to feel as if you are almost in a French Bistrot somewhere then
this is the place.
Madame Tinh - recommended by H.L., Madame Tinh
is a superb Vietnamese chef. She ran the Vietnamese restaurant at
the New World until it closed. She now runs a small little restaurant
in the backpacker area with her sisters which has great food. It
is simple, but clean and cheap. Her mother was also a chef from
the Hue area. You will love it. It is always full of travellers
and so quite fun. It is actually in one of those funny little lanes
that runs off Pham Ngu Lau Street. As you enter Pham Ngu Lau Street
it is the second little left lane about 20 metres down on your right
side.
The following reviews and recommendations were very kindly given
to us by a dear friend HL who is Australian and lived for a long
time in Vietnam - Our sincere thanks go out to you HL.
Vasco's under Camargue Restaurant: 16 Cao Ba Quat
St, D1, HCMC - Hosts Alexander and Thy. Groovy bar with cool music,
board games, pool tables, garden area and live music on selected
nights from about 11pm until late. Good light meals menu too. Complimentary
BBQ in the garden on nights that the band plays.
Camargue - Still a good spot for tourists as the
French colonial style open air villa is such a lovely spot in the
heart of the city. International menu with French feel, reasonable
wine list.
La Bocca - Newish small restaurant in Nguyen Thiep
St, D1 which runs between Nguyen Hue & Dong Khoi Streets. Modern
interior, soft lighting. Supposedly Italian cuisine but the chef
is French so it is a bit of a mix.
Globo - also in Nguyen Thiep across the road from
La Bocca. Used to be a funky French wine bar, but has been taken
over by new management and changed into a restaurant. Their big
plus is a great pizza oven. The chef is Italian (used to work for
the well known Italian restaurant called Sandro's which is now called
Pendalasco's).
Sheridan's - corner of Le Thanh Ton St & Thi
Sach St, D1. Great little Irish pub run by Michael Forsyth, the
GM of Riverside Apartments. Great Irish food, home baked breads,
home made sausages, etc - good hearty feel good food.
Sakura Japanese Restaurant - Mac Thi Bui St, D1
- Pricey by Vietnam standards but good food. Upstairs has private
tatami rooms.
Akatombo - Hai Ba Trung St, D1 near corner of
Le Loi St. Japanese tavern style restaurant. A good little spot
for inexpensive Japanese meals served at a little bar counter.
Le
Bordeaux - Fabulous upmarket French restaurant near the
big round about (circle of death !) as you head out of the city
towards An Phu District. Cannot remember the address and in any
case it is hidden away so someone would need to explain to a cab
driver the directions. Hotel staff could do this. It is usually
listed in the weekly Time Out magazine restaurant guide. Hosts Bruno
and Jean Yves are great. They have fresh foi gras flown in from
Paris, superb wines, bucket loads of fresh roses and a very romantic
atmosphere. Very few tourists would know about this place. Bookings
recommended.
Bi Bi's - Thi Sach St, D1 - run by the flamboyant
Bi Bi who is known for his wonderful assortment of colourful espadrilles.
Serves great French Mediterranean Cuisine. Complimentary couscous
salad is served when you arrive with crusty bread. he also has mussels
and oysters flown in from France occasionally, makes great fillet
for a group of people.
Sama - Dong Du St, D1 - fabulous French deli that
sells cheese and cold cuts with a small restaurant attached. Open
for lunch and dinner. Great baguettes for take out or eat in if
you can find a seat amongst the French expat lunchtime crowd. Great
creme caramel.
Restaurant 13 - 13 Ngo Duc Ke St, D1 - a bit touristy
but one of my favourites. Serves classic Vietnamese food that is
a step up from street food, but still cheap and tasty. They cater
to foreigners by serving chicken with no skin, no bones, etc. Extensive
menu with some strange translations like Fried Fallopian tubes.
Head waiter is a charming older man who speaks French to all foreigners.
Even serve house Bordeaux by the glass! Best dishes are Lemongrass
Chicken, Deep Fried Squid with Plum Sauce (read Crusty Squid), Caramel
Claypot Pork, Thai Style Soup and Water Spinach with Garlic.
Coffee Shop at Caravelle Hotel - great buffet especially the Sunday
Brunch and Friday Seafood Lunch.
Asian Reflections, 3rd Floor, Caravelle Hotel
- fab restaurant where Exec Chef from Australia, ex-Macau Bella
Vista (which was one of the leading boutique hotels in Asia famous
for its food until it turned itself into the Portuguese Ambassadors
home-previously Mandarin Hotel Group) shows his flair with East
meets West cuisine. Menu features exciting dishes from all over
Asia served with flair and style. Expect unusual platters and artistic
presentation, plus yummy tastes.
Dynasty Restaurant, New World Hotel Saigon - Le
Lai St, D1 - still one of the best Chinese restaurants in town.
Serves great dim sum for lunch and Sunday brunch.
Sapa Restaurant - Thai Van Lung St, D1 - unsophisticated
cafe style place which is great for Sunday cooked breakfast - cheap
and cheerful - try for the table on the upstairs balcony.
Chao Thai - Thai Van Lung St, D1- beautiful decor
and fabulous food from your hosts Simon and Cherry Millard. Cherry
is Thai and personally supervises the cooking. Nice little pre-dinner
drinks bar at entrance.
Why Not? - Thai Van Lung St, D1 - lovely small
French restaurant upstairs. Pleasant decor and good priced set menus.
Yummy desserts - try the sinful chocolate terrine. Your host Ms
Thu Anh is delightful.
Indian Heritage - Corner of Le Thanh Ton &
Thai Van Lung St, D1 - Yummy Indian food. Also serve a lunch buffet
which is good value.
O'Brien's Bar - Hai Ba Trung St, D1 - a pub style
spot with courtyard at the rear run by a Frenchman. TV's for sports
and great pizza from the oven in the coutryard. Also serve up yummy
filled jacket potatoes and hot dogs in baguettes.
Bars
When it comes to having a drink around Pham Ngu Lao, there's no
shortage of spots. Allez Boo -- the bamboo rimmed place on the corner
of De Tham and Pham Ngu Lao -- is both very popular and wickedly
overpriced. Cyclo Bar remains popular as does the Guns and Roses
Bar -- both on Pham Ngu Lao, though we skipped on the latter as
we didn't have a groovy enough baseball cap to fit in with the crowd.
Heading down De Tham, Eden Bar isn't a bad hole-in the wall, while
Go2 on the corner of Bui Vien and De Tham is the largest and noisest
spot in the immediate area. All these places will stay open as late
as they can get away with. For something a little more hidden away,
K Cafe on Do Quang Dau is more of an expat hang-out than another
slice of backpackerdom. Also at the head of Do Quang Dau and Bui
Vien and along Bui Vien back towards De Tham are a host of Bia Hoi
joints -- though watch your drinks as we picked up a severe case
of poisoning along here that left us delirious for four days.
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