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Trump threatens Vietnam, which has been benefiting from U.S. tariffs on China

Nonsense. our over 1,000 km northern border is fortified and hefty defended by arrays of bunkers and tanks.

I recommend you bring back the massive Nazi concrete bunker towers from the WW2 era.

Hitler's Atlantic Wall was an extensive network of these fortifications built along the coast of continental Europe facing outward towards the Atlantic Ocean in anticipation of the Allied invasion that was sure to come.

You can build these along the China-Vietnam border.

xwonPzt.jpg


Place your machine gunners in there. Much better protection than a tank. Zero maintenance. No need for spare parts or fuel. A well built bunker will stand for decades, maybe centuries.:lol:
 
Yes we have money we have factories we have technology. We can make 1,000,000 fish sauce bottles a week.

Fascinating.. Who do you think is your number one customer?
 
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Vietnam wont be affected as much as some people might think by American tariffs against their products because Vietnam has a big, powerfull & reliable neighbor to their north that they can do trade with & that is China.

those anti-China Vietnamese members here on this forum (mainly Viva viet) do not represent the Vietnamese government at all, regardless of land disputes..Vietnam's trade relations with China are thriving because Vietnam realizes that it's future lies with China not with white supremacist who look down on "gooks".
We don't like gooks here. Mark Wahlberg do not like gooks. I do not like gooks.
 
I recommend you bring back the massive Nazi concrete bunker towers from the WW2 era.

Hitler's Atlantic Wall was an extensive network of these fortifications built along the coast of continental Europe facing outward towards the Atlantic Ocean in anticipation of the Allied invasion that was sure to come.

You can build these along the China-Vietnam border.

xwonPzt.jpg


Place your machine gunners in there. Much better protection than a tank. Zero maintenance. No need for spare parts or fuel. A well built bunker will stand for decades, maybe centuries.:lol:
Keep laughing

China imports condoms from America.

Can’t you make the plastic?

You can make tanks but not condoms?

Weird!

Fascinating.. Who do you think is your number one customer?
Not sure do US consumers eat fish sauce?

:D
 
Keep laughing

China imports condoms from America.

Can’t you make the plastic?

You can make tanks but not condoms?

Weird!


Not sure do US consumers eat fish sauce?

:D

I obviously can’t speak for all US consumers, but I’d estimate not too many Eat fish sauce.

Now importing Vietnamese fruit is another story.
 
Yes we have money we have factories we have technology. We can make 1,000,000 fish sauce bottles a week.
Hi, fish sauce from Vietnam has high levels of arsenic. You should stop consuming them and stop exporting to other parts of the world.

https://www.seafoodsource.com/news/...om-vietnam-found-to-contain-excessive-arsenic

Nearly 70 percent of fish sauce samples analyzed in a recent survey by the nonprofit Vietnam Standards and Consumers Association (Vinastas) contained more than the legal limit of arsenic.

Results showed 67.33 percent of the samples contained from 1 to 5mg of arsenic per liter of sauce, whereas the maximum allowable arsenic content limit is 1 mg per liter.

The survey covered 150 samples produced by 88 different fish sauce manufacturers and analysts found that only 16.67 percent of the products met Vietnamese standards, Vinastas told reporters in Hanoi.

The tested fish sauce products were collected from trade centers, small markets and food stores in 10 different Vietnamese provinces and cities
 
Vietnam wont be affected as much as some people might think by American tariffs against their products because Vietnam has a big, powerfull & reliable neighbor to their north that they can do trade with & that is China.

those anti-China Vietnamese members here on this forum (mainly Viva viet) do not represent the Vietnamese government at all, regardless of land disputes..Vietnam's trade relations with China are thriving because Vietnam realizes that it's future lies with China not with white supremacist who look down on "gooks".
We just sign FTA wt EU, so we can export more to EU now.

CN is under trade war, million Cnese r jobless. Xi keep begging hep from VN-Russia, but just like Putin said that he will sit and watch US-CN fighting, VN also sit and watch who is loser.

No one give a dam care to CN loser :cool:
 
Keep laughing

China imports condoms from America.

Can’t you make the plastic?

You can make tanks but not condoms?

Weird!


Not sure do US consumers eat fish sauce?

:D

I'm still wondering if you can manufacture a pickup truck or not!

eDAB0ln.jpg
 
I obviously can’t speak for all US consumers, but I’d estimate not too many Eat fish sauce.

Now importing Vietnamese fruit is another story.

If you go to viet restaurant and order the noodle (vermicelli) dish with some meat and veg...it will come with fish sauce as condiment on side in a little bowl to add to your taste (at least here).

It's like a clear fermented fish sauce (and they sometimes add like shredded carrot on top etc)....but its not too strong flavour/smell....nice aromatic umami kind of stuff....I always dunk it into the noodle bowl first thing generally (dunno if thats the correct thing to do, but hey works for me), adds a little sour/umami body to the noodles.

I also add sriracha, hoisin or chilli paste as I feel like it. Viet cuisine is really good.
 
Fish sauce.. Sounds interesting
FIsh sauce is also an European sauce since Roman time. Thats why VN export lots of fish sauce to EU.

---------------------

A BRIEF HISTORY OF FISH SAUCE
JUNE 24, 2019BY JODI ETTENBERG12 COMMENTSFOOD HISTORY

Out of the corner of my eye, I noticed something twisting and turning, rhythmic and precise. It was only when I was directly in front of the Saigon street stall that I realized what was unfolding: the owner, a smiling man in his 40s who always greeted me as I walked by, was packaging nuoc cham, a condiment made from fish sauce, water, lime juice, and sugar. He was also adding thin slivers of pickled carrots to the tiny bags that piled in front of him.


What he was doing happens all over the city at street stalls and restaurants. Nuoc cham, or pure fish sauce, nuoc mam, accompanies many Southern Vietnamese dishes, and fish sauce is consumed by 95% of Vietnamese households.

But his motions – pouring the fishy liquid into tiny plastic bags, delicately deploying slender sliced carrots into the mix, and then elegantly curling his wrist for three turns of an elastic band – were mesmerizing. Each symmetrical package took only three seconds to make, and then waited to be added to a takeaway meal.

P5229686-XL.jpg

Fish sauce packets, ready to be consumed.

The History of Fish Sauce
In my travels, I’ve heard others cite fish sauce as one of those tastes that takes some getting used to for Western palates, along with stinky tofu and durian fruit, and the bright purple fermented shrimp paste that accompanies Vietnamese bun rieu soup. Its lingering smell leaves no mystery about its strong, fishy contents.

Used in Thailand as nam pla and Myanmar as ngan bya yay, as well as Laos, Cambodia, and the Philippines under other local names and variations, one thing is certain regardless of preference: fish sauce plays a crucial role in flavouring food in Southeast Asia.

It has become my first ingredient of choice in a new city, something I use in homemade soups and curries, chicken marinates and salads, and even omelettes, adding a taste of Vietnam to my meal. To my taste buds, it is as evocative of my years in Southeast Asia as lime, garlic and chilies.

P2269531-XL.jpg

Street side banh cuon with fish sauce for dipping.

“This is more than just a condiment,” founder of Red Boat fish sauce, Cuong Pham, has said. “It’s so good, it’s like gold.”

In it purest form, the sauce is made from two ingredients: fish (usually anchovies) and salt, fermented together for months. Despite the fact that some fish sauce labels depict squid, shrimp, or even a man carrying a giant shrimp over his shoulder (my favourite, for obvious reasons), the ingredients remain the same: fish and salt. Both are placed into huge vats – usually three parts fish to one part salt – and weighted down to prevent the fish from floating to the surface as fermentation begins.

Once liquid begins to seep out of the fish, it is drained and reintroduced to the vat for the full fermentation process, which lasts “long enough for it to reach concentration, but not long enough for hydro-sulfuric acid to appear, which would spoil the taste.” Usually this process takes nine months to one year, with the vats sitting in the sun as the fish sauce takes form.

Fish Sauce in Ancient Times
The earliest origins of fish sauce date back to Green and Roman times, where the condiment was known as gàros or garum respectively. Italian archaeologist Claudio Giardino notes that garum was mentioned in Roman literature all the way back to the 4th century BC, and that remains of garum factories have been excavated in Spain, Portugal and Northern Africa.

Roman fish sauce was used in a variety of recipes, like those from Apicus’s cookbook De Re Coquinaria – available for free online – as well as a general substitute for salt and a base for sauces. Pompeii was famous in ancient times for its production of garum. The many mentions in ancient texts and cookbooks implies a quotidian use within the ancient Mediterranean footprint.

i-M6vJhDX-XL.jpg

Some of the fish sauce available at a Thai supermarket — there were many more!

In his piece about fish sauce in the ancient world, Declan Henesy notes:

The Carthaginians were also early makers and traders of fish sauce, producing it along the coast of the Lake of Tunis, in modern day Tunisia. A Punic shipwreck from 5th century BCE, found off the coast of Ibiza, may have been carrying a cargo of fish sauce stored in amphorae made in Gades (modern day Spain) and Tingi (modern-day Morocco). There are many early Graeco-Roman literary references to fish sauce, from writers such as Aristophanes, Sophocles and Aeschylus.

In modern day cuisine, fish sauce is almost completely absent from Italian food with the exception of colatura di alici, a fish sauce still made in factories in the village of Cetara in Italy’s Salermo’s region.

Why did Romans stop using fish sauce?
Some historians believe garum fell out of fashion because salt was too difficult to procure following the collapse of the Roman Empire. The heavy salt taxes drove up the cost of producing fish sauce, and slowed production down. In addition, without Roman protection of the coasts, pirates began to cut off trade as the empire waned and cut into traditional trade routes. One thing is certain: with the decline of the Roman empire, so too did fish sauce production decline until it ground to a near-halt.

What about Asia’s modern day fish sauce? Is it the same as Roman garum?
In his book Salt: A World History, Mark Kurlansky theorizes that the two fish sauces were not a result of the other, but instead developed in the East and West at separate times.

“The sauce appears to be, as some historians believe of the domesticated pig, an idea that occurred independently in the East and the West. The Asian sauce is thought to have originated in Vietnam, though the Vietnamese must have taken it in ancient times from the Chinese soy sauce, in those early times when the Chinese fermented fish with the beans.”

Kurlansky also goes on to note that, upon entering Vietnam, the French were horrified to find that the Vietnamese ate “rotten fish.” The Pasteur Institute in Paris then spent years studying nuoc mam (Vietnamese fish sauce) to ascertain how it was fermented. Such a small amount of this condiment adds a punch of flavour to any meal, almost magically so.

In contrast, food historian Laura Kelley suggests on her blog that garum was the parent of modern day fish sauce, passing along the trade routes from West to East.

“So, once again, we can identify a product that flowed from west to east and was eagerly adopted by Asians on the Silk Road. The recipes for garum changed and adapted as they moved east and became nuoc mam and nam pla according to cultural preferences and what gifts the Asian seas had to offer. Archaeologists and food scientists are working to confirm these flows and linkages, so stay tuned to this channel to learn more about garum production in the ancient world and in the kitchen of Chez Kelley.”

Back to Declan’s piece, where he notes that while some historians claim fish sauce was introduced to Asia via the Silk Road, others think it was independently invented.

Either or both may be true. Interestingly, in 2010 CE, a team of researchers analysed samples of garum taken from containers preserved at Pompeii. They found that Roman fish sauce from the 1st century CE had an almost identical taste profile to those produced today in southeast Asia.

These days, fish sauce is a staple in Southeast Asia, with the version from the Vietnamese island of Phu Quoc being the first product in Southeast Asia to receive a Protected Designation of Origin certification from the EU Commission. I personally love Red Boat Fish sauce, and was thrilled to find it in Montreal upon my return. There’s a huge bottle in my fridge. It’s also fully gluten-free, which isn’t the case for all fish sauce these days.

While the production depends on the availability of fish, for the moment it appears to be on the rise in the West, both with Asian recipes and to add flavour to more traditional staples.

Truly, I can’t eat without it.

While we travel for the people and the culture, for the stories and the food, we sometimes take the origins of individual ingredients, like fish sauce or chili peppers, for granted.
If this short overview of fish sauce was interesting you might want to read:

Salt, by Mark Kurlansky: From the book page: “The only rock we eat, salt has shaped civilization from the very beginning, and its story is a glittering, often surprising part of the history of humankind. A substance so valuable it served as currency, salt has influenced the establishment of trade routes and cities, provoked and financed wars, secured empires, and inspired revolutions.”

The Fish Sauce Cookbook, by Veronica Meewes. Pretty self explanatory!

History of Ketchup, an article by Dan Jurafsky (spoiler: it also involves fermented fish)

And for those who are vegan or don’t like the taste, a fish sauce substitution can be found in this vegan fish sauce recipe.

Bon Appetit!

-Jodi
https://www.legalnomads.com/fish-sauce/

Not sure do US consumers eat fish sauce?

:D
The West eat fish sauce cos its Roman sauce coming to VN tks to Silk road trading
 
Good move. This will slow down the growth and cause social unrest in vietnam, which makes carrying out colour revolution there more effective. Bye Bye :enjoy:
 
FIsh sauce is also an European sauce since Roman time. Thats why VN export lots of fish sauce to EU.

---------------------

A BRIEF HISTORY OF FISH SAUCE
JUNE 24, 2019BY JODI ETTENBERG12 COMMENTSFOOD HISTORY

Out of the corner of my eye, I noticed something twisting and turning, rhythmic and precise. It was only when I was directly in front of the Saigon street stall that I realized what was unfolding: the owner, a smiling man in his 40s who always greeted me as I walked by, was packaging nuoc cham, a condiment made from fish sauce, water, lime juice, and sugar. He was also adding thin slivers of pickled carrots to the tiny bags that piled in front of him.


What he was doing happens all over the city at street stalls and restaurants. Nuoc cham, or pure fish sauce, nuoc mam, accompanies many Southern Vietnamese dishes, and fish sauce is consumed by 95% of Vietnamese households.

But his motions – pouring the fishy liquid into tiny plastic bags, delicately deploying slender sliced carrots into the mix, and then elegantly curling his wrist for three turns of an elastic band – were mesmerizing. Each symmetrical package took only three seconds to make, and then waited to be added to a takeaway meal.

P5229686-XL.jpg

Fish sauce packets, ready to be consumed.

The History of Fish Sauce
In my travels, I’ve heard others cite fish sauce as one of those tastes that takes some getting used to for Western palates, along with stinky tofu and durian fruit, and the bright purple fermented shrimp paste that accompanies Vietnamese bun rieu soup. Its lingering smell leaves no mystery about its strong, fishy contents.

Used in Thailand as nam pla and Myanmar as ngan bya yay, as well as Laos, Cambodia, and the Philippines under other local names and variations, one thing is certain regardless of preference: fish sauce plays a crucial role in flavouring food in Southeast Asia.

It has become my first ingredient of choice in a new city, something I use in homemade soups and curries, chicken marinates and salads, and even omelettes, adding a taste of Vietnam to my meal. To my taste buds, it is as evocative of my years in Southeast Asia as lime, garlic and chilies.

P2269531-XL.jpg

Street side banh cuon with fish sauce for dipping.

“This is more than just a condiment,” founder of Red Boat fish sauce, Cuong Pham, has said. “It’s so good, it’s like gold.”

In it purest form, the sauce is made from two ingredients: fish (usually anchovies) and salt, fermented together for months. Despite the fact that some fish sauce labels depict squid, shrimp, or even a man carrying a giant shrimp over his shoulder (my favourite, for obvious reasons), the ingredients remain the same: fish and salt. Both are placed into huge vats – usually three parts fish to one part salt – and weighted down to prevent the fish from floating to the surface as fermentation begins.

Once liquid begins to seep out of the fish, it is drained and reintroduced to the vat for the full fermentation process, which lasts “long enough for it to reach concentration, but not long enough for hydro-sulfuric acid to appear, which would spoil the taste.” Usually this process takes nine months to one year, with the vats sitting in the sun as the fish sauce takes form.

Fish Sauce in Ancient Times
The earliest origins of fish sauce date back to Green and Roman times, where the condiment was known as gàros or garum respectively. Italian archaeologist Claudio Giardino notes that garum was mentioned in Roman literature all the way back to the 4th century BC, and that remains of garum factories have been excavated in Spain, Portugal and Northern Africa.

Roman fish sauce was used in a variety of recipes, like those from Apicus’s cookbook De Re Coquinaria – available for free online – as well as a general substitute for salt and a base for sauces. Pompeii was famous in ancient times for its production of garum. The many mentions in ancient texts and cookbooks implies a quotidian use within the ancient Mediterranean footprint.

i-M6vJhDX-XL.jpg

Some of the fish sauce available at a Thai supermarket — there were many more!

In his piece about fish sauce in the ancient world, Declan Henesy notes:

The Carthaginians were also early makers and traders of fish sauce, producing it along the coast of the Lake of Tunis, in modern day Tunisia. A Punic shipwreck from 5th century BCE, found off the coast of Ibiza, may have been carrying a cargo of fish sauce stored in amphorae made in Gades (modern day Spain) and Tingi (modern-day Morocco). There are many early Graeco-Roman literary references to fish sauce, from writers such as Aristophanes, Sophocles and Aeschylus.

In modern day cuisine, fish sauce is almost completely absent from Italian food with the exception of colatura di alici, a fish sauce still made in factories in the village of Cetara in Italy’s Salermo’s region.

Why did Romans stop using fish sauce?
Some historians believe garum fell out of fashion because salt was too difficult to procure following the collapse of the Roman Empire. The heavy salt taxes drove up the cost of producing fish sauce, and slowed production down. In addition, without Roman protection of the coasts, pirates began to cut off trade as the empire waned and cut into traditional trade routes. One thing is certain: with the decline of the Roman empire, so too did fish sauce production decline until it ground to a near-halt.

What about Asia’s modern day fish sauce? Is it the same as Roman garum?
In his book Salt: A World History, Mark Kurlansky theorizes that the two fish sauces were not a result of the other, but instead developed in the East and West at separate times.

“The sauce appears to be, as some historians believe of the domesticated pig, an idea that occurred independently in the East and the West. The Asian sauce is thought to have originated in Vietnam, though the Vietnamese must have taken it in ancient times from the Chinese soy sauce, in those early times when the Chinese fermented fish with the beans.”

Kurlansky also goes on to note that, upon entering Vietnam, the French were horrified to find that the Vietnamese ate “rotten fish.” The Pasteur Institute in Paris then spent years studying nuoc mam (Vietnamese fish sauce) to ascertain how it was fermented. Such a small amount of this condiment adds a punch of flavour to any meal, almost magically so.

In contrast, food historian Laura Kelley suggests on her blog that garum was the parent of modern day fish sauce, passing along the trade routes from West to East.

“So, once again, we can identify a product that flowed from west to east and was eagerly adopted by Asians on the Silk Road. The recipes for garum changed and adapted as they moved east and became nuoc mam and nam pla according to cultural preferences and what gifts the Asian seas had to offer. Archaeologists and food scientists are working to confirm these flows and linkages, so stay tuned to this channel to learn more about garum production in the ancient world and in the kitchen of Chez Kelley.”

Back to Declan’s piece, where he notes that while some historians claim fish sauce was introduced to Asia via the Silk Road, others think it was independently invented.

Either or both may be true. Interestingly, in 2010 CE, a team of researchers analysed samples of garum taken from containers preserved at Pompeii. They found that Roman fish sauce from the 1st century CE had an almost identical taste profile to those produced today in southeast Asia.

These days, fish sauce is a staple in Southeast Asia, with the version from the Vietnamese island of Phu Quoc being the first product in Southeast Asia to receive a Protected Designation of Origin certification from the EU Commission. I personally love Red Boat Fish sauce, and was thrilled to find it in Montreal upon my return. There’s a huge bottle in my fridge. It’s also fully gluten-free, which isn’t the case for all fish sauce these days.

While the production depends on the availability of fish, for the moment it appears to be on the rise in the West, both with Asian recipes and to add flavour to more traditional staples.

Truly, I can’t eat without it.

While we travel for the people and the culture, for the stories and the food, we sometimes take the origins of individual ingredients, like fish sauce or chili peppers, for granted.
If this short overview of fish sauce was interesting you might want to read:

Salt, by Mark Kurlansky: From the book page: “The only rock we eat, salt has shaped civilization from the very beginning, and its story is a glittering, often surprising part of the history of humankind. A substance so valuable it served as currency, salt has influenced the establishment of trade routes and cities, provoked and financed wars, secured empires, and inspired revolutions.”

The Fish Sauce Cookbook, by Veronica Meewes. Pretty self explanatory!

History of Ketchup, an article by Dan Jurafsky (spoiler: it also involves fermented fish)

And for those who are vegan or don’t like the taste, a fish sauce substitution can be found in this vegan fish sauce recipe.

Bon Appetit!

-Jodi
https://www.legalnomads.com/fish-sauce/


The West eat fish sauce cos its Roman sauce coming to VN tks to Silk road trading
Suggested by a blogger? It was suggested it came from Romans and hence you are happy ? This was clearly an Asian invention independent of Romans, why do you have so little pride in your heritage that you need to claim it originate from the west to feel proud. Almost all asian culture has some sort of fermented fish product. I don't claim China invented fish sauce but fish sauce is only popular in coastal regions due to availability of salt and fish. From this I can understand your inferior complex, no wondr u love papa trump and Japs even after massacres, rape and agent orange. Gosh, your country is destined to be colonized
 
Suggested by a blogger? It was suggested it came from Romans and hence you are happy ? This was clearly an Asian invention independent of Romans, why do you have so little pride in your heritage that you need to claim it originate from the west to feel proud. Almost all asian culture has some sort of fermented fish product. I don't claim China invented fish sauce but fish sauce is only popular in coastal regions due to availability of salt and fish. From this I can understand your inferior complex, no wondr u love papa trump and Japs even after massacres, rape and agent orange. Gosh, your country is destined to be colonized
The West and VN eat fish sauce, thats why VN export lots of fish sauce to EU.

CN eat soy sauce and everyone know that CN import soybean to feed pigs...thats why some Cnese IQ like u is as low as pig.

Stop eating soubean and soy sauce, its pig's food, dude. Eat fish sauce to get higher IQ :lol:
 

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