Bánh gối | |
Alternate Name: | Bánh quai vạc |
Type: | dumpling |
Creators: | --> |
No Recipes: | false |
(Vietnamese for 'pillow '), also known as and , is a Vietnamese regional dumpling. The dish is a common street food in Vietnam.[1] [2]
The main ingredients of are commonly seasoned ground meat, mushrooms, vermicelli, and diced vegetables such as carrots, kohlrabi and jicama (like the ingredients of chả giò); sometimes boiled egg and sliced Vietnamese sausage are used. It wrapped into a thinly rolled piece of dough and deep-fried. is also made in pastry form with mung bean, sugar and shredded coconut as filling.
Bánh gối appeared for the first time in Haiphong, Vietnam. Believed to be inspired by typical cuisine of Haiphong, the British Cornish pasty or Spanish empanadas and pastel. Portuguese traders and explorers were the first Europeans to enter Asia in the 1500s, building settlements to test the lucrative spice trade in Goa, India, Malacca and Macau. This process has indirectly influenced the cuisine of Asian countries. Similar dishes have been eaten as snacks throughout Asia for a long time. originally from Guangdong yau gok; deep-fried jiaozi was introduced to Vietnam before 1954.