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42 Worst Rated Vietnamese Foods

Last update: Sun Feb 16 2025
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01
Tiết canh
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This vibrant red Vietnamese dish is prepared with fresh animal blood that is mixed with fish sauce. The base is then seasoned and incorporated with fried or roasted meat before it is left to coagulate. When set, the base transforms into a thick, gelatinous pudding that's usually garnished with chopped peanuts, Vietnamese coriander, and mint.


The dish is traditionally prepared on special occasions, and though it has caused much controversy due to the danger of ingesting meat bacteria, it has not been officially banned.

VARIATIONS OF Tiết canh
02
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Chè đậu xanh is a traditional dessert soup. It's prepared with mung beans as the main ingredient. Apart from the mung beans, the soup also contains water, sugar, and coconut milk. The beans are soaked, drained, rinsed, then slowly simmered with sugar until tender.


Coconut milk is added near the end of cooking, and the soup is then left to cool down or chilled in the refrigerator. Due to the fact that mung beans have cooling properties, chè đậu xanh is especially popular in the summer.

03
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Bánh ít is a traditional dish of steamed sticky rice cakes. The cakes are usually made from glutinous rice flour, while the fillings vary depending on the recipe, but pork, steamed mung beans, and shrimps are some of the most common ingredients for the filling.


Once prepared, the rice cakes are wrapped in banana leaves, then steamed until tender. Bánh ít is often served as a snack or appetizer with a dipping sauce on the side that's usually based on vinegar or pineapple.

VARIATIONS OF Bánh ít
04

Dessert

RED RIVER DELTA, Vietnam
3.1
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Bánh gai is a Vietnamese cake consisting of dark-colored dough that is stuffed with a sweet filling. The dough combines rice flour and a paste or a powder that is made from thorn leaf (gai or ramie)—a plant belonging to the nettle family.


The filling is typically made with mung beans, shredded coconut, sesame and lotus seeds, sugar, pork fat, and flavorings, while some optional additions may also include ginger, pumpkin jam, or roasted peanuts. Before they are steamed, the cakes are wrapped in dry banana leaves. 
05
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Thịt đông is a Vietnamese take on aspic. The dish is prepared by slowly boiling pork meat and various pork cuts such as trotters and hocks, as well as pork skin, carrots, mushrooms, and different spices. When cooked, the combination is left to set until it achieves its typical jellied texture.


The dish is usually associated with northern Vietnam, and it is often enjoyed on Vietnamese New Year. It is best served with pickled onions and a bowl of rice on the side.

06

Sweet Pastry

VIETNAM and  7 more regions
3.4
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An ancient Chinese delicacy eaten during the Mid-Autumn Festival or Moon Festival, known as mooncake, is a pie-like pastry made with a shortcrust base called yueh ping that is traditionally filled with black sesame seed or lotus seed paste, along with red beans, roasted pork, mung beans, dates, and salted duck egg yolks.


Nowadays, mooncakes are available in a variety of different sweet and savory fillings, some of which are fruits like honeydew, litchi or pineapple; chocolate or mixed nuts; abalone and seaweed; green tea, and even cream cheese or ice cream. Their round shape is not only reminiscent of the moon, but also a symbol of return or a full circle, which in Chinese philosophy stands for fulfillment, oneness, perfection, and unity. 
VARIATIONS OF Bánh trung thu
07
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Nem chua is a traditional dish of cured and fermented meat. Although the dish is traditionally made from pork, it can also be made with other types of meat such as beef. In order to prepare it, lean pork is minced, then combined with sliced pork skin, spices, chili peppers, and garlic.


The combination is wrapped into banana leaves, then stored for the fermentation process from 3 to 5 days in a cold place. These rolls have a sweet, salty, spicy, and sour flavor, and they're usually served as a snack or an appetizer with raw garlic on top, and fish sauce or chili sauce on the side. 
08
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Phở cuốn is a Vietnamese dish that translates to rolled pho. In order to prepare it, sheets of uncut pho noodles are used as a type of wrapping paper that's filled with stir-fried beef, garlic, ginger, pepper, onions, lettuce, and herbs such as mint, perilla, and cilantro.


Once assembled, these rolls are served with a dip on the side, usually a combination of fish sauce, sugar, garlic, chili, and vinegar. Phở cuốn can be served as a snack or an appetizer, and it's especially popular in the summer. It is believed that the dish was invented when a street vendor from Hanoi ran out of broth for his pho, but there were still some uncut noodles left in his kitchen, and phở cuốnn was born.

09

Pancake

NINH THUẬN PROVINCE, Vietnam
3.4
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These savory Vietnamese pancakes are made with a thin rice flour batter. They are cooked on outdoor grills which are equipped with a specialized terracotta bánh căn mold. The mixture is poured into the mold, and the pancake is then topped with a whole shrimp and scallions, or optionally pork or quail eggs.


The pancakes are usually served with a fish sauce on the side and various fresh herbs and leafy vegetables which are meant to be used as wrappers. It is not clear when these pancakes first appeared, but their origin is often attributed to Ninh Thuận province, although they are enjoyed throughout South Central region. 
10
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Bánh trôi is the name of a traditional Vietnamese dessert which consists of delicious tiny balls of glutinous rice wrapped around a sweet filling. The sticky and elastic dough for bánh trôi is made with a mixture of plain and glutinous rice flour that's merely bound with water.


The dough is wrapped around a piece of dark palm sugar, rolled into a ball, and cooked until the balls float up to the surface. This authentic Vietnamese dessert is usually associated with northern Vietnam, especially the region of Hanoi. It is served freshly prepared, and roasted sesame seeds or grated coconut are sprinkled on top of each piece. 

MOST ICONIC Bánh trôi

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1
2
4
5
11
12
Rice Dish
RED RIVER DELTA, Vietnam
3.6
13
14
Street Food Sweets
SOUTHERN VIETNAM, Vietnam
3.7
15
16
Pancake
NHA TRANG, Vietnam
3.7
17
Sandwich
SOUTHERN VIETNAM, Vietnam
3.7
18
19
Soup
HANOI, Vietnam
3.7
20
21
Dessert
HẢI DƯƠNG, Vietnam
3.8
22
Noodle Dish
SÓC TRĂNG PROVINCE, Vietnam
3.8
23
24
Noodle Dish
ĐÀ NẴNG, Vietnam
3.8
25
26
27
Chicken Dish
NORTHERN VIETNAM, Vietnam
3.8
28
29
30
Noodle Soup
THANH XUÂN DISTRICT, Vietnam
3.8
31
Snail Dish
HO CHI MINH CITY, Vietnam
3.8
32
33
34
Noodle Dish
HỘI AN, Vietnam
3.9
35
36
37
Fish Soup
MEKONG DELTA, Vietnam
3.9
38
Rice Dish
NINH BÌNH PROVINCE, Vietnam
3.9
39
Rice Dish
SA PA, Vietnam
3.9
40
Dessert
MEKONG DELTA, Vietnam
3.9
41
42

TasteAtlas food rankings are based on the ratings of the TasteAtlas audience, with a series of mechanisms that recognize real users and that ignore bot, nationalist or local patriotic ratings, and give additional value to the ratings of users that the system recognizes as knowledgeable. For the “42 Worst Rated Vietnamese Foods” list until February 16, 2025, 7,309 ratings were recorded, of which 4,665 were recognized by the system as legitimate. TasteAtlas Rankings should not be seen as the final global conclusion about food. Their purpose is to promote excellent local foods, instill pride in traditional dishes, and arouse curiosity about dishes you haven’t tried.

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