HUE, Vietnam (March 9, 2015) — Vietnamese chefs and management at La Residence Hotel and Spa have connected the dots on a new food trail through the city’s finest noodle shops, nhà hàng and quán as an entrée to an authentic appreciation of Vietnamese cuisine in the one-time imperial capital of Vietnam.
The Hue Food Trail is the first systematic effort to formally usher guests into little-known but highly regarded kitchens across Hue, if not anywhere in Vietnam.
The hotel is introducing the gastronomic adventure as part of its Hue Food Trail package, including a three-night stay at the hotel and stops at carefully selected food stalls and noodle shops around the city where local chefs prepare:
- bún bò Huế (Hue style noodle soup)
- bánh cuốn thịt nướng (fresh spring rolls)
- bánh bèo (steamed rice cake)
- cá kho tộ (stewed fish)
- bún hến (clam noodles)
“The foods we survey on this tour are as essential as the daily fare eaten by cyclo drivers and farmers and as extravagant as the multi-course feasts prepared for the emperors of imperial Vietnam,” said Phan Trong Minh, general manager of La Residence. “Indeed, it was the demand by the emperors for dishes of great imagination and stunning presentation that inspired generations of creative, culinary industry in Hue. Vietnamese cuisine wouldn’t be what it is today if not for the Nguyens.”
The hotel’s food package also includes a cyclo excursion to the city’s famous Dong Ba market, and visits to a traditional Hue garden house, the city’s illustrious Thien Mu pagoda, the mausoleum of Emperor Tu Duc and traditional Vietnamese spa at Le Spa.
The package is priced at US $499 per person based on double occupancy. The Hue Food Trail package is available from March 20 to Dec. 20. For reservation and information, please contact the reservations department at resa@la-residence-hue.com
ABOUT LA RESIDENCE
Set on a two-hectare site with 200 meters of frontage on the fabled Perfume River, La Residence celebrated its grand opening in December 2005 after a painstaking restoration of the former colonial governor’s residence. The hotel’s distinctive bowed façade, its long horizontal lines and nautical flourishes are hallmarks of the streamline moderne school of art deco architecture.
The hotel’s 122 rooms and suites, restaurants, lounges, bars and conference room are tricked out in complementary art-deco furnishings and décor that evoke both the 1920s and 1950s. The hotel’s fine-dining venue, Le Parfum, serves Mediterranean and French cuisine, as well as dishes from an expansive Vietnamese menu.
The conference facilities, including board rooms, can accommodate 140 guests. WiFi Internet access at the hotel is complimentary.