With an abundance of seafood, Southerners have created a wide variety of dishes featuring fish in various modes - stewed fish, grilled fish, fermented fish, fish vermicelli and, of course, the ubiquitous fish sauce.
Keo fish hotpot impresses diners with its delicate broth, aromatic fish meat and characteristic vegetables of the rural South. (Photo: VNA)
The
aromatic, juicy Ca keo (pseudapocryptes elongatus), one of the Southerners’
favourite fish, is used for grilling and hotpot. “Keo fish hotpot originates in
the South of Vietnam and has been one of the highlights of the Southern rural
kitchen,” said culinary expert Le Kim Chi from the Quan An Ngon restaurants
chain.
Keo
fish is a type of catfish the size of about two fingers and about 15 cm long
when it is mature. This fish is found mostly in Soc Trang, Bac Lieu and Ca Mau
provinces.
Writer
and journalist Phan Trung Nghia from Bac Lieu province once wrote: “In the
early 19th century, Bac Lieu was a characteristic province of the Mekong River
Delta with scores of rivers, streams and canals. Many rivers stemmed from the
sea, therefore there was an abundance of seafood there.
“In
the lead-up to the Tet (Lunar New Year) holiday, when slightly cold weather
comes, keo fish season begins. In local canals and rivers, keo fish is so
abundant that the fish heads emerging from the water look like dense black spots
on the surface of water.
“Keo
fish grow very quickly. It is as thin as a toothpick at the beginning of the
rainy season and becomes as big as a thumb at the end of the season. At that
time, a day’s catch could reach 500 to 700 kilogrammes of keo fish, so much
that no boat was big enough to store them,” wrote Nghia.
The
fish has since become a favourite of not only people in the South but also food
connoisseurs in Hanoi, said Chi.
Chi
has brought many Southern dishes, including keo fish hotpot, to her Quan An
Ngon restaurants in Hanoi. “Hanoians fall for this dish very quickly,” she
said.
To
make authentic keo fish hotpot, Chi, like other cooks, has to import keo from
the South and keep them alive until they are cooked. “The prerequisite
requirement for this dish is for the fish to be fresh and live,” said Chi.
“Fish
is to be eaten a few minutes after being put in the broth because this type of
fish is small and long and therefore it is cooked very quickly,” said chef
Nguyen Xuan Luyen from Quan An Ngon.
As
keo fish do not have anterior dorsal fins, they don’t have little bones.
Despite its unattractive look, the fish meat is delicious — being soft in
texture and having a unique aroma of a fish living in nature, an aroma that is
rarely present in frozen fish.
Normally,
when cooking fish, Vietnamese people add seasonings or specific types of
vegetables to reduce the fishy smell, for example pepper, rau ram (Vietnamese
coriander) or pineapple or dam bong (rice wine residue). “In keo fish hotpot,
locals use their la giang (river-leaf creeper) and tamarind, which help to add
sourness. Some replace tamarind with either lemon or vinegar, yet these two are
not a good choice as lemon may cause a bit of sourness when it is added to hot
water while vinegar is not as delicate as tamarind,” said Luyen.
Therefore,
there is no fishy smell in the broth. Instead, the first whirl of steam from
the boiling broth will make diners’ mouth water. Taking a first sip of broth is
never enough, arousing curiosity and a desire for more of the slightly sour,
salted, sweet and a bit garlicky meaty fish.
The
ingredients and preparation of Vietnamese hotpots are simple: broth made by
simmering pork bone, (different types of) meat, various kinds of vegetable and
vermicelli noodles with broth at the end of the meal. While lau bap bo (beef
thigh hotpot) features the tenderness of beef, the seafood hotpot indulges
diners with the sweet meaty broth, lau mam (salted fermented fish hotpot)
features the pleasantly pungent and characteristic aroma of salted fermented
fish, keo fish hotpot impresses diners by its delicate broth, aromatic fish
meat and characteristic vegetables of the rural South.
The
keo fish hotpot broth is made by simmering pork bone with la giang (river-leaf
creeper) which tastes sour and has a good aroma. Other vegetables served in
this hotpot include rau dang (bitter vegetable), banana flower, keo neo (yellow
burrhead), water lily and water spinach. Locals also cook keo fish with pepper
or rau ram (Vietnamese coriander), or grill the fish with chilli and salt.
By VNA/VNS