Tet food reflects different lifestyles
Taking as example the banh chung and banh tet, which are the most important Tet dishes. While people in the north prefer banh chung – square cake, residents in the former royal capital city of Hue in the central region prefer banh tet – the cylinder sticky rice cake that is said to symbolise a shoulder pole (the Centre) carrying two baskets (the North and the South) at either ends.
Another difference that can be seen is that the sizes of the cakes are smaller in the central region. Hue residents like to claim that this denotes an emphasis for sophistication rather than volume, as also greater skills required to shape and wrap the smaller cakes.
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While banh chung and banh tet are the items that Hue inherited from ancestors who came in from the North, dua mon, which is sliced papaya, kohlrabi, carrot and onion preserved in salt, sugar and vinegar, is a ‘endemic’ Tet dish of locals. It is as an accompaniment to banh chung and banh tet in order to enjoy a combination of different tastes - sweet, salty, fatty and spicy.
Predicting the Tet weather in Hue is a difficult task. It might be hot at above 30 Celsius degrees or be cold under 15 Celsius degrees with continuous rains for a week. With such unpredictable weather conditions, banh tet and dua mon are the best choices for Tet food, since they can be preserved for up to 15 days, and people do not have to spend too much time in the kitchen.