The ultimate guide to Vietnamese supermarkets
VloĆŸit
- Äas pĆidĂĄn 19. 06. 2024
- Vietnamese supermarkets are just built different. So let me show you my favorite products. Also, don't forget to always smack the rice! đ
00:00 - Intro
00:41 - Locking away your bag
01:36 - Coffee
01:55 - iced tea
02:15 - Milk
04:13 - Instant noodles
05:26 - Rice
06:15 - Vegetables
07:49 - Pickled stuff
10:11 - Chili sauces
11:25 - Fish sauce
13:25 - Rice paper
14:08 - MSG
15:37 - Salts
16:07 - Cooking sauce
17:38 - Food court
18:08 - Outro
---
Hi, I'm Uyen Ninh but please just call me Uyen!
Originally from Vietnam, I now explore life in Germany, sharing my unique perspective through my videos on my way to be your favorite AuslĂ€nder! đ
Subscribe to my CZcams Channel for Videos and Shorts: @uyenninh
Instagram: uyenninh
TikTok: tiktok.com/@uyenthininh
uyen@yilmazhummel.com - Komedie
I enjoy the humor and creativity of your youtube shorts, Uyen, but there's something extra special about your longer videos. Just seeing you earnestly share your life and culture with us is so educational and fun. I really love how you never try to be anyone else in your videos and how real you are. I've been on youtube for almost 15 years now, and out of all the channels I've ever come across, you might just be my favorite youtuber ever. :)
Grocery shopping is honestly my favourite part of travelling. It gives insights into what the locals eat, and it's always super fun to try out new snacks đ
For me here in 2024 UK, it's interesting to see how fully stocked all the shelves are; ours haven't been like that since covid. I don't even really notice it anymore, until I see something like this where there aren't gaps all over the shelves! đ€Łđ€Ł
Yes, I ALWAYS visit supermarkets and markets and home decor stores too, actually, when I'm abroad.
You are very confident in filming in public. Respect! If I had to do it, I would try to hide and my cheeks would be red like tomatoes. đ
I had the same exact thoughts while watching this video đ
Uyen, those shrimp paste and fish paste are not pickled but fermented. So it is a totally different process to make them, and since the salt content is too high, it is very unlikely that any bacteria can survive in that environment and therefore, very safe to consume. Any risk of food poisoning that might come from eating bun dau mam tom (fried tofu with shrimp paste) is usually from the fresh herbs that is contaminated and not cleaned properly. Just want to clarify. đ
Thanks for the info âș
When people are talking about this ("can this product spoil") I like to say "It's spoiled when you get it! It's gone as far as it can go!".
5:54 "That was disrespectful" - clip was spot on đ
I actually laughed out loud đ
But it is so true. Even the most expensive brand of rice you can find in an ordinary danish grocery store taste like trash compared to any rice from an asian grocery store đ
ââ@@isabellagrnneskov3537 same thing for getting a decent early grey (or any) black tea in Germany. They all taste like cardboard đ (although truth be told it has gotten a lot better over the years when u know where to look)
She just speaks out loud the truth :v
I don't know as a American we are very spoiled in this country so at our local grocery stores they have three main brands a couplemof them come dro, Thailand and I forgot the other country and the hige bag of ricemcost $25-$35 depending on the brand and type of rice meaningnifmits jasmine or basmatti rice and if you want to really go truly authentic just hit up your local asian mart where they sell everything.
I am assuming outside of U.S.A and even Canada this isn't the case meaning with your European countrys it's not very spoiledmlike that..â@@thanhphi8658
I can't stress enough how much Vietnamese love fish sauce. Everyone has their favorite brands. And people can tell the difference from brand to brand. I would legit quit a meal because of "bad" fish sauce. In quote, because the taste varies so much between types and brands. Think of it as the Vietnamese version of wine. Smelly wine which we don't drink. Hope this helps.
Edit: Viva shrimp salts! (So glad you didn't forget about them)
As an American from the US south, my family is like this with hot sauce! A lot of us carry our favorite in our purses and cars lol
It's a pretty common rule across big Supermarket in developing asian countries.
@@sumit6190p Are you talking about locking bags? I think you're replying to the wrong person.
but that makes SO MUCH sense, thats like saying every hot sauce is the same, each ah their own taste for it. so of course fish sauce will have variety.
@@Just_Flipy Exactly, I find soy sauce and ketchup vary a lot as well.
The variety of fish sauces in Vietnamese supermarket is equivalent to the baking aisle in German supermarket đâ€
or the pickles aisle ;D
So many fish sauces! New ones come out constantly. Someone needs to do a review, maybe the top twenty or thirty? One Crab, Two Crabs, Three Crabs, maybe six crabs! What the right number of crabs? Some people just use the same one their whole life, if you ask them. Squid brand around here. Who is buying Two Crabs and why? When I first saw this kind of store it was small and obscure, there might have been one kind of fish sauce, from the Philippines in a plastic bottle, they still have it. I think an individual person cooking at home could not figure this out in a lifetime, we need some help.
or the cereal isle in the US
Don't worry Uyen, we smack the rice in America.
Awh, I love how enthusiastic Uyen is about her culture! As she should be. â„My fiancĂ© is Vietnamese and very disconnected from his culture/language (Americanized) but I try to help him embrace it and encourage him to learn more about it.
We both bond over our culture's foods and Uyen has been a big help in familiarizing him with what certain foods are in his culture (he's eaten them but doesn't remember or know the name of certain dishes) as well as sharing her experience with Vietnamese culture. We both hope to visit Vietnam some day! Thank you, Uyen!
Even we indians love pickles,
We too make from lemon, raw mango, garlic, chilli, mixed veg pickle, n many more
Picled stuff is big in the Balkans too, we pickle the small cucumbers, green tomatoes, chillies, tiny watermelons, you name it, we pickle itđ
â @@minime7375what do you do with tiny watermelon
@@hhheidi1121 we pickle them just like you do with cornichon cucumbers, green tomatoes and the rest. I personally donât like that the inside is too mushy but the exterior is crunchy so it makes up for it. Tbh I never did it myself, just helped my aunty with pickling, I think itâs just hot water, salt and a touch of vinegar poured in the jars then the jars get closed, boiled and thatâs about it. The jars for tomatoes and watermelon pickling are those big ones or people even use large plastic containers. Our traditional cuisine is pork, pork and porkâŠso pickles are very popular cause they cut the fat.
As for what we do with them, we eat them of courseâșïž
@@minime7375 gherkin, the small cucumbers are called gherkins
@@ert8968 oki, we use the French name of tha5 variety of cucumber âcornichonâ, at least I think itâs French
Aloe Vera juice, my great grandmother would make it. Peel, cut cubes from the jelly, boil, add sugar, she would add some gelatin but she was using it as a health drink.
We put it in smoothies.
You have to be really careful though, because Aloe Vera has a poisonous layer. That's why it's actually recommended not to make Aloe Vera juice at home. You can buy it ready-made everywhere (even in Germany, like at drugstores (dm, Rossmann, MĂŒller etc.)). I personally buy Aloe Vera leaves (which are available in Germany in organic markets like Bio Company, Denn's etc.) to heal skin injuries, like sunburns, scratches, mosquito bites and so on, or dry skin - it just works miracles, much better than any wound cream. You can freeze Aloe Vera really well and then just glide frozen pieces over the skin.
I also love the bitter melon - you can grow them in Germany as well! Just take the seeds out of the fruit, dry and bring them. I plant them indoor in February/March and put them on balcony in May đ
I hope she sees this comment âș
14:53 that one young lady when she realizes she is in the course of a MSG-loving, youtubing Uyen and just politely adjusting her course not to crash your video.
I fell in love with that chili sauce when I visited vietnam a few years ago. Luckily, living in San Diego, I finally found a Vietnamese grocery store that actually sells it!! I always keep a few spare bottles and use it all the time! I live in Little Saigon and I went to all the different little grocery stores trying to find it. I give it away to anyone that says they like hot sauce bc itâs the best.
I just want to say, thank you for sharing your culture. I love learning about the mundane things about how others lives, because that's what encompasses most of our livesđ. Please keep being yourself and feeding the masses
Liebe aus Kölnâ€â€â€â€â€â€
Ancient Romans had garum- a fish sauce made from all the âlesserâ parts of fish that they fermented. They ate it with everything! But that was forgotten by westerners.
In Australia we have a large Vietnamese population, a climate to grow Vietnamese vegetables and fruit, and a mainstream culture that loves Vietnamese food- so you can access all the things you love here. We have a lot of Vietnamese supermarkets in Melbourne and Sydney.
Iâm getting the impression that Vietnamese are really into salt and gourmet salt! đ
There's a huge resurgence of interest in garum. Noma even came out with a recipe using Koji in place of the fish guts for enzymes so the smell isn't quite as pungent and doesn't take as long as traditional garum. Max Miller of Tasting History has made traditional garum if anyone is interested in it.
@@nonamepainter interesting, Iâll have a look, thanks!
This feels like I'm actually in Vietnam visiting a supermarket with a cool friend, thanks Uyen this is so much fun to watch!
A little suggestion for when you travel if you ever come to the United States, thereâs a place in California. Itâs called Garden Grove and it has a large Vietnamese community and the city is actually called Little Saigon. †the only reason I know is I live in Garden Grove and Iâm half Vietnamese . From Vietnam to Little Saigon in Garden Grove the food is authentic and made the same way with lots Asian markets everywhere.
Ahh i love international grocery stores! thank you!
same. from here in Phoenix Azđ”đ
Itâs crazy that they have to lock your bag away or put it in to a plastic bag.. the level of trust is definitely gone đâ€ïž
Creates jobs đ.
But she's still carrying her bag around đ
Yes, there are cultural differences across countries. Not a big deal...
In the United States and Canada, supermarkets have security cameras spying on you everywhere, many stores also have alarm systems at entrance and exits. These days, because of increased shoplifting, Canadian supermarkets have hired shoplifting watchers standing at the entrance watching the customers. At megastores like Costco, they have âgreetersâ at the door who check your card upon entering, and upon exit they check every item you bought and cross it out on your receipt. Guess what? I would rather leave my backpack at the door like in Vietnam (and many other countries btw).
Yeah⊠big brother is watching ypuđ
You're preparing me for my first real trip home to Vietnam! Thank you so much ! These videos make me so much less anxious about visiting!
In Southern California you can find all these things since they have large Vietnamese communities with large grocery stores so thatâs one place in the west you can get them
There are huge Vietnamese markets in Berlin and Leipzig, too đ
Watching this is fun! I live in a vietnamese neighborhood in California so we have a lot of Vietnamese products you are talking about!
After having a holiday in Vietnam, chin-su is my go to hot sauce, it is amazingly good, so good with eggs, pork and chicken, happy to have a Vietnamese store in my hometown with sells this
Already sounds really interesting, especially since I have plans for visiting Asian countries in the future, Vietnam included :)
I love these long form videos.. Iâve been wanting for you to upload another â€â€
Love a good grocery shopping moment đ„čâ„ïž
Your videos are the best. They bring so much joy! Thank you for making them!
I canât believe itâs Big C as I love Big C every time I get to visit my family in Vietnam. Itâs also cool that can easily find some of the food products at Big C in the U.S. like the instant ramen.
Vietnamese supermarket is heaven
A restaurant here thinly slice bitter melon (think almost like shavings with a mandolin), soak it in ice water to keep it crunchy, and then we dip it in honey to eat. It's super awesome!
And I think I need to visit vietnam just for all the unique brands of instant noodles
In southern Vietnam we also thinly slice raw bitter melon, put it on ice to keep in cool and crunchy, and eat it with pork floss
The instant noodles are nice but if you go to Vietnamese you really should eat fresh foodđ
@@lasseb5612 I mean, I would eat other stuff too. But yeah, there's a lot of instant noodle brands I've never seen. And considering how close I live it's q amazing đ
That sounds pretty yum
Lipton tea is by far my favorite!!đ It gives me the greatest feeling of nostalgia making sun tea with Lipton black tea bags. I know it's not considered a very "dignified" tea, but I could care less haha.
I love your content! I've watch every video and short you've uploaded for at LEAST a year, and you're the only youtuber I can watch when I'm sick and have a headache!! So you're my comfort youtuber.
Also, this isn't related to your usual content but I'd be interested to see you interview Vietnamese people on their experience sometime! I expect that interviewing German people might not be as easy since they seem to not want to talk to strangers much, so I don't know, but it was just an idea âĄ
so interesting, and love her energy fr
Going to supermarket is a must-do thing whenever I'm back in Vietnam. Just seeing long aisles of my favourite stuffs is more than enough, and actually be able to buy themmm?!! The supermarket brings out the happiest little girl in me.
Uyen, you got me hooked on Vietnamese coffee
Wow! I really enjoyed this. Nice to see a grocery store in another country. So many neat and different things.
My favorite thing to do when traveling to other countries is to wander around the local supermarkets for hours. This video really hit the spot for me, great work! â€
The food courts in the supermarkets are something I really miss. So convenient.
Two MediaMarkts that I visited in germany also had boxes where they made you locking your bags. But they stopped that some years ago.
I really like your videos! †Thank you for showing us around this Vietnamese shop. I love when you talk about cooking! We can feel how much you like it. †keep it up! Lots of love from France
I love how you talk about food, makes my mouth water even though I don't know the slightest thing about vietnamese food
Super interesting. Thanks for the tour đ
I love your videos about Vietnam, they're so cool!!
Msg is delicious. This was such a cool video thanks for showing off the store.
Thank you so much for sharing this experience đ„°
Thank you for bringing us along, em! Lovely tour đ
Oh this was so helpful. I have some of these products in my Asian market in the us. I can't wait to go try some new things!
Really cool video! I love looking at supermarkets abroadđ
Your videos always make me laugh đ. You are such an amazing human being. God bless đ
Hi cĂŽ QuyĂȘn I realy like the way you make videos that helps bring VietNam to the world â€â€â€â€
This was so cool to learn!!!
To pack more cupnoodle in your luggage is to unpack it. Pack the noodles in ziplock bag and you can stack the cups together.
I just love looking around supermarkets in other countries, so interesting
Love all the selections and options, I could look all day.
This was so incredibly helpful! Inspires me to try new foods đ
I love grocery store tours. I am definitely going to try the shrimp salt + mango idea!
Thank you for this informative Vietnamese market tour! I live in the US and see some of these items at the local Asian market, but was clueless as to what they were.. Iâll be trying some in the future now!
I love the longer video. More long videos please!!! đđ
I love this kind of videos â€
I love the love you have for your culture. †Thank you for showing the world what you love about Vietnam. I am American and I havenât seen much media about/from Vietnam so your videos are so interesting to me! And now I want to try all the foods lol
i love this video! it made me chuckle.
I would love to see more cooking videos with these ingredients, it is so interesting! Thank you for sharing!
best noodle guide ever. always trust and love noodle queen.
I really enjoyed you showing us all the things you love. Im like that when i visit Germanyâ€I wish everything i like could fit into my suitcase
We want a second part! What about the sweets corner? I heard that the mango top jellyâs (?) are super delicious!
This is a great guide to what you can/should do with Vietnamese food productsïŒThank you ïŒïŒ
Very interesting to watch! Amazing market place
2:26 if you ever need it in Germany, we have it here as well, itâs called MilchmĂ€dchen, comes in a can or tube. Itâs usually where the coffee or regular condensed milk is đ
But it's very difficult to find, most supermarkets don't carry "MilchmĂ€dchen" in my experience (Saarland, SaarbrĂŒcken and other cities and in Hessen, I only looked in Frankfurt am Main)
@@SanniSandyBunny2000oh okay weird, I can usually find it in a Kaufland or Rewe where I live (south of Frankfurt) đ€
Condensed milk can usually also be found in the "eastern European food section" (??) in big supermarkets. I have lived in cities/areas where many Russian or Polish people live, e.g. Supermarkets like Rewe etc. in these areas offered a wider variety of groceries from these countries. I always like to explore those aisles and find new interesting foods. :)
@@LovelyDray yeah, it probably depends on how much they sell... Places that had it about six or seven years ago suddenly stopped having it from one day to the other.
And that was a Rewe, too.
Thats interesting. Condensed milk is widely available at any American grocery store. It's called sweetened condensed milk here. Some countries call "evaporated milk" condensed milk, but that is not sweet.
Uyen this was so fun and interesting, thank you! One thing I noticed is the amazing variety, especially in the produce section.
Loooveee this video. My partner and I were so confused by the bag lockers at first haha!
I absolutely loved this video! Made me remember the days when I was living in Hue, and went to to the big supermarket at the mall
â€â€â€â€â€â€â€â€â€đŻI just want to say, thank you for showing off the store. Vietnamese supermarket is heaven.!!!!
This was fantastic to watch! Thank you for your time. Im now hungry đ€€ need to go cook some rich / make rice paper rolls đđŒ
OMG, I LOVE Chin-Su! For those who don't know, it's like this really tasty chilli sauce that has a hint of sweetness, a hint of sourness and a whole lotta heat! They put Wasabi into it as well to give it a more peppery flavour. It's super delicious and goes so well with pretty much anything. I got so excited when I found it in my local Vietnamese supermarket that I just had to buy like, three bottles of it. :D
Beautiful scent! I canât wait to use it!
Make more of these video's please! Really like how you show us the normal things we also have interests in đ
This was great đ
You're so adorable I really enjoyed this videođ
In India they lock your purse but keep your backpack đ
We have grocery stores like this in the West Coast of the U.S. then I moved to central U.S. and I miss this so much.
I had no idea shrimp salt existed until today and now I need it like I need oxygen. :O
I adore how much uyen loves her country đ„č I recently moved out of my home state in the US after living there for 23 years and I feel such a kinship with the love she has for her home. Moving states in the US is nothing compared to moving entire countries but Iâm homesick enough for my home town that this video just brings me some sort of comfort. I think itâs the validation on seeing someone else appreciate their home after having left it since few people in my life validate my wishes to return to NJ. Either way thank you for showing us this cool piece of your culture â€
Great presentation!
Sau 7 nÄm sá»ng á» Äức: ừ nhá», Äi siĂȘu thá» VN pháșŁi gá»i tĂși. T quĂȘn luĂŽn vỄ nĂ y đđđđ
MĂŹnh á» Äức chÆ°a Äáșżn 2 nÄm mĂ ÄĂŁ quĂȘn rá»i =)))
Loved the video!! It is a different experience inside an Asian grocery.
Aloe Vera can be cut open and eaten, it has a slightly crunchy/jelly texture. In Singapore there are bubble tea shops where you can get aloe vera and instead of the bubbles it will be pieces of aloe vera in the milk tea, tastes awesome.
That was fun! Most of those products are available here in FLorida, there are even Vietnamese markets, but nothing on this scale! Giant pan-Asian markets will have a Vietnamese area. We are starting to get actual Vietnamese products in the last few years. Previously there were Vietnamese sounding brands, but the products were mostly from Thailand. In some big cities I have enjoyed small shops that had baked products, the famous sandwiches, interesting meat products, pandan flavored things... all together just a sample from the look of things, but I'm happy to have that!
Ciao and thank you for your very nice Shopping Video, personally i love this kind of Videos Worldwide â€ïž so many greetings from brunswick in germany and please stay safe đ
Garlic pickle is used with olives and cucumbers pickles. And a lot olives varieties here in Spain. It is cool see Vietnam also used it
Thank you for the tour! That was so fun and informative
I only went to a small local grocery in Vietnam so I missed out on big supermarkets.
I ate máșŻm tĂŽm all the time, the ladies at the bĂșn riĂȘu stand loved me when I said it was good. (They were expecting me to hate it I guess!) It is fermented but not ârottenâ really; the salt keeps the wrong bacteria from growing. And the right bacteria are also good for the guts. :-)
I usually get âba cuaâ fish sauce but I hear that the new ChinSu fish sauce is really good! Iâll try it next time.
I wish I could go to Vietnam with you! You would be a great guide for trying new foods!
So early! Love learning about things like this :)
Goodness your such a pleasant human⊠your voice and demeanor is so sweet:)
I need to go to the market soon:)
Very interesting, thank you for sharing!
Thank you for this guide it was very entertaining
This is the most beautiful supermarket Iâve ever seen †dream food
đ€Łi love your vibe. Thanks for showingđđđ
Wow, that store has everything.