What exaclty is Bun Cha Hanoi?

GM Tran

February 2, 2024

My favorite Vietnamese dish of all time is Hanoi rice vermicelli with grilled pork patties/meatballs, also known as Bún Chả. Bún Chả is a Northern Vietnamese specialty originating from Hanoi, known for its unique combination of flavors and textures.

1. What is Bun Cha Hanoi?

My favorite Vietnamese dish of all time is Hanoi rice vermicelli with grilled pork patties/meatballs, also known as Bún Chả. Bún Chả is a Northern Vietnamese specialty originating from Hanoi, known for its unique combination of flavors and textures.

It is a refreshing and light dish, consisting of grilled pork patties (chả), and sometimes thinly sliced pork belly and shrimp, served with round rice vermicelli noodles (bún), pickled and fresh herbs, and a fish sauce-based sweet dipping broth to bring all the flavors and textures together.

This a popular dish that you can find in many Vietnamese restaurants that perfectly and wonderfully balances the five S’s: sweet, sour, salty, spicy and smoky.

The Authentic Bun Cha Hanoi Style
The Authentic Bun Cha Hanoi Style (Source: Collected)

1.1 Origins and History

Bún Chả originated in Hanoi, the capital city of Northern Vietnam. It has been around for a very long time, probably since the French colonial period when vermicelli was introduced to Vietnam in the 19th century.

The dish was traditionally sold by street vendors carrying portable stoves and charcoal grills, selling freshly grilled patties and noodle bowls to locals and visitors alike.

Over time, Bún Chả became one of the most iconic and beloved dishes to represent Hanoi and northern Vietnamese cuisine. President Obama famously ate Bún Chả with Anthony Bourdain on his visit to Vietnam in 2016.

Bun Cha Hanoi
The history of Bun Cha (Source: Collected)

1.2 Regional Variations

There are some regional variations of Bun Cha that have developed over time:

  • Hanoi style - The original and most authentic version. Uses thin rice vermicelli noodles, boneless pork patties, and a vinegar/fish sauce based dipping broth. Herbs include mint, cilantro, green onion.
Hanoi Style Bun Cha
Hanoi Style Bun Cha (Source: Collected)
  • Bun Cha Hai Phong style - Uses thicker rice noodles, pork ribs, and a more savory dipping broth. Popular herbs include basil, mint, perilla.
Hai Phong Style Bun Cha
Hai Phong Style Bun Cha (Source: Collected)
  • Hue style - Uses pork and shrimp patties and round rice noodles. The dipping broth has adistinct sourness from pineapples. Common herbs are mint, fish mint, perilla.
Hue Style Bun Cha
Hue Style Bun Cha (Source: Collected)
  • Saigon style - Uses egg noodles or thick rice noodles, sliced pork belly and pork patties. Dipping broth is sweeter. Herbs include basil, bean sprouts, mint.
Saigon Style Bun Cha
Saigon Style Bun Cha (Source: Collected)

While the ingredients may vary slightly between regions, the core elements of bun cha remain the same - grilled pork, noodles, herbs, vegetables, and dipping broth.

1.3 Typical Eating Experience

Bún Chả is typically served deconstructively, with the rice noodles and herbs placed on a plate, and the grilled pork patties and broth served in a small bowl on the side.

The dish comes with an assortment of fresh herbs such as mint, cilantro, basil, lettuce, and peppers. Pickled vegetables like daikon radish and carrots also accompany the dish, either served in the dipping broth or on the side.

To eat, place some noodles and herbs into your bowl. Add a few slices of grilled pork. Dip the noodles and pork into the broth. The broth is light yet bursting with sweet, sour, salty and savory flavors that perfectly balance the smoky pork, starchy noodles and fresh herbs.

Sip the remaining broth once you’ve finished the noodles and pork for a refreshing drink. Enjoy the complex symphony of textures and flavors in every bite!

2.0 How to Serve Bun Cha

Bún Chả is typically served deconstructively, with the rice noodles and herbs placed on a plate, and the grilled pork patties served in a small bowl with the dipping sauce.

Here is how it is traditionally served:

  • Noodles - The round rice vermicelli noodles are served on a plate. They are soft and tender, yet still have a nice chewy bite.
  • Pork - The caramelized, smoky grilled pork patties are served in a small bowl with the nuoc cham dipping sauce. The pork soaks up the savory flavors of the sauce.
  • Herbs & Veggies - An assortment of fresh herbs like cilantro, mint, lettuce, basil are served alongside the noodles. Pickled carrots and daikon radish are served in the dipping sauce or on the side.
  • Dipping Sauce - The brothy dipping sauce is the tie that binds everything together. It brings sweet, sour, salty and savory flavors to balance the dish. The sauce is meant to be sipped like a broth.
  • Extras - Some restaurants may include extras like peanuts, chili sauce, or lime wedges for added flavor and texture.
Best way to eat bun cha
How to eat Bun Cha (Source: Collected)

The deconstructed serving style allows you to customize each bite and experience the dish exactly how you like it!

2.1 Why Serve Deconstructed?

There are a few reasons why Bun Cha is served deconstructed:

  • It allows all components to be highlighted individually so you can taste each element.
  • The noodles don’t get soggy or overcooked soaking in the broth. They retain their perfect texture.
  • You control how much broth coats the noodles and pork in each bite.
  • The vegetables and herbs stay crispy and vibrant instead of wilting in the broth.
  • It makes for a fun interactive eating experience as you customize each bite.

The deconstructed serving style provides the optimal enjoyment of textures and flavors that make Bun Cha so craveable!

3. How to Eat Bún Chả

The traditional way to eat Bún Chả Hà Nội is to use the meat and broth bowl as your main bowl. Here is how to eat it like a local:

3.1 Add Noodles

Place a portion of room temperature rice noodles into the bowl with the pork and broth. This will allow the noodles to soak up that savory umami flavor.

3.2 Add Herbs & Veggies

Tear or cut some of your favorite fresh herbs like mint, cilantro, basil into bite-sized pieces. Add them into the bowl. You can also add some pickled vegetables like daikon radish or papaya.

3.3 Toss & Swish

Use your chopsticks or a fork to swish everything around so the noodles and herbs are coated in the broth.

3.4 Enjoy with Pork

Enjoy the dressed noodles with a slice of caramelized, charred pork patty. The smoky pork paired with the sweet and sour broth is divine.

Bun Cha Hanoi
Eat the pork after deeped in the fish sauce (Source: Collected)

3.5 Repeat

Repeat the process for each bite - swish some noodles and herbs in the broth, enjoy with the pork. Be sure to get some broth in each bite!

3.6 Drink the Broth

Once you’ve finished the noodles and pork, drink up the remaining broth for a refreshing and tasty finish.

Enjoying Bun Cha in the traditional communal style with personalized bites allows for the perfect harmony of flavors and textures in each mouthful.

3.7 Tips

  • Add chili sauce or sliced chilies to your broth for extra heat.
  • Squeeze some lime into the broth if you want extra zing.
  • Mix up the herb and vegetable additions to try new flavor and texture combos.
  • Customize the broth with extras like hoisin or soy sauce.
  • Drink the broth between bites to cleanse your palate.

4. Northern Vietnam Vs Southern Vietnam Styles

Bún Chả is considered a Northern Vietnamese dish whereas Bún Thịt Nướng is its southern equivalent. They are both Vietnamese noodle dishes featuring grilled pork, fresh herbs, and a sweet chili dipping sauce. However, there are some key differences between the two regional dishes:

Bun Cha Hanoi vs Bun Thit Nuong Saigon
Bun Cha Hanoi vs Bun Thit Nuong Saigon (Source: Collected)

4.1 Serving Style

  • Bún Chả is typically served deconstructively, with the rice noodles and grilled pork patties served separately. You construct each bite with noodles, herbs then dip into the sauce/broth with pork.
  • Bún Thịt Nướng is served more traditionally, with everything together in a bowl except for the dipping sauce on the side. Drizzle sauce over noodles and toss to coat before eating.

4.2 Dipping Sauce

  • The Bún Chả dipping sauce is typically sweeter and lighter. It is referred to as a broth due to the lightness.
  • The Bún Thịt Nướng dipping sauce is thicker, richer, and more savory. It is strictly a sauce, not a broth.

4.3 Pickled Vegetables

  • Bún Chả typically uses pickled papaya or carrots.
  • Bún Thịt Nướng uses pickled daikon and carrot.

4.4 Pork

  • Bún Chả uses ground pork made into patties.
  • Bún Thịt Nướng uses thinly sliced pork shoulder/butt.

While both dishes feature grilled pork, noodles and herbs, the northern and southern styles differ in serving method, flavor profiles, textures and ingredients. Yet they both represent the amazing culinary diversity across Vietnam!

5. What You Will Need

To make authentic Bún Chả at home, you will need the following ingredients:

5.1 Pork

  • Ground Pork - Use fatty ground pork with at least 20% fat content. The fat keeps the patties moist.
  • Pork Belly (optional) - Thinly sliced pork belly can be added for extra flavor and texture.
Grilled Pork
The best ingredient of Bun Cha: Grilled Pork (Source: Collected)

5.2 Aromatics

  • Onions - Sliced onions are cooked with the ground pork for flavor. Caramelized charred onion also tops bowls.
  • Garlic - Minced garlic is cooked with the patties for aromatic flavor.
Onion, Garlic, Fish sauce mixed all together (Source: Collected)

5.3 Seasonings

  • Fish Sauce - Provides salty, umami depth and is used in patties and dipping broth.
  • Oyster Sauce - Adds savory flavor to the patties and dipping broth.
  • Brown Sugar - Caramelizes the patties and gives the dipping broth balanced sweetness.
  • Black Pepper - Provides subtle heat and peppery accent.

5.4 Noodles & Garnishes

  • Rice Vermicelli - The classic noodle for Bun Cha is thin rice vermicelli. Soak in warm water before using.
  • Herbs - Fresh mint, cilantro, basil. Lettuce leaves can also be used as wraps.
  • Vegetables - Bean sprouts, cucumbers, green onions. Pickled carrots and daikon radish.
  • Peanuts (optional) - Roasted peanuts can be crushed and sprinkled on top to add crunch.

These core ingredients come together to create the perfect balance of flavors and textures in an authentic bowl of Bun Cha!

6. FAQs

6.1 What kind of noodles are used in Bun Cha?

Thin rice vermicelli noodles are the classic noodle used in Bun Cha. Their tender yet chewy texture pairs perfectly with the dish. Round rice noodles can also be used.

6.2 How do you cook the pork for Bun Cha?

The pork can either be grilled over charcoal for full authentic flavor, or pan-fried until caramelized and charred on the outside. Cooking over high heat helps render fat and develop that delicious charred flavor.

6.3 What cut of pork is best?

Choose fatty ground pork with around 20% fat content. Chuck or shoulder also work well thinly sliced. The fat keeps the pork moist and flavorful. Avoid lean cuts which can dry out.

6.4 What herbs go with Bun Cha?

Common fresh herbs are mint, cilantro, basil, lettuce, perilla. Herbs add freshness and balance the rich pork. Pickled papaya or carrots add texture and tang.

6.5 How do you serve Bun Cha?

Traditionally, the noodles and fresh herbs are served separately on a plate. The broth and pork come in a bowl. This allows you to customize each bite and control broth to noodle ratio.

6.6 What is Nuoc Cham dipping sauce?

Nuoc Cham is a traditional Vietnamese dipping sauce made with fish sauce, lime juice, sugar, garlic, and chili peppers. It balances the sweet, sour, salty and spicy flavors.

The broth for Bun Cha is a lighter version, often referred to as Nuoc Cham Chien (fried Nuoc Cham).

7. Nutrition Facts

Serving Size: 404 g  
Calories: 624g
Carbohydrates: 67g
Protein: 30g
Fat: 23g
Sodium: 2798mg

8. Similar Hanoi Local Dishes

  • Bún Thịt Nướng - Southern Vietnamese grilled pork and noodle bowl
  • Bún Bò Huế - Spicy beef noodle soup from Hue
  • Bún Cá - Hanoi-style turmeric fish noodle bowl
  • Phở - Famous Vietnamese noodle soup
Hanoi Tranditional Cuisine (Source: Collected)

Bún Chả Hà Nội is the quintessential Vietnamese noodle dish, bursting with sweet, sour, salty, smoky and savory flavors in perfect harmony. The tender rice noodles, charred pork patties, fresh herbs, crunchy vegetables, and umami-packed dipping broth make for an irresistible symphony of textures and flavors.

Part of what makes this dish so special is the customized eating experience - you control the broth to noodle ratio and choose your own herb and vegetable accompaniments in each bite.

Selecting the appropriate lodging is essential for a pleasant and revitalizing holiday in these locations. The VIET Restaurant Hanoi is a popular choice among tourists due to its true vietnamese cuisine. We create menus that highlight traditional Vietnamese dishes and showcase traditional dining styles that appeal to the senses of Vietnamese food enthusiasts. We offer our fresh food daily from a farm to the table deliveries to ensure that only the finest ingredients are used to create quality dishes.

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