Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Vietnam: HCMC in March

DAY 2

On the second day of arrival at HCMC, we took a tour to the Cu Chi Tunnel. 

The tunnel is 40km northwest of HCMC and were used by Viet Cong guerrillas as hiding spots during combat, as well as serving as communication and supply routes, hospitals, food and weapon caches and living quarters for numerous guerrilla fighters. The tunnel systems were of great importance to the Viet Cong in their resistance to American forces, and helped achieve ultimate military success.

As the journey to Cu Chi Tunnel takes quite a long while, we visited a painting workshop that employed many 2nd/3rd generation victims of Agent Orange and the Cao Dai Temple.


The painting workshop:-




Above is a 2nd/3rd generation victim of Agent Orange.

For your information, Agent Orange is the combination of the code names for Herbicide Orange (HO) and Agent LNX, one of the herbicides and defoliants used by the U.S. military as part of its chemical warfare program, Operation Ranch Hand, during the Vietnam War from 1961 to 1971. An estimated 400,000 people were killed or maimed, and 500,000 children born with birth defects as a result of its use.



After visiting the workshop, we travelled a distance to Cao Dai Temple.

According to wiki:-

Cao means "high" and Đài means "dais" (as in a platform or altar raised above the surrounding level to give prominence to the person on it). Figuratively, it means that highest spiritual place where God reigns. Caodaiists often use the term Đức Cao Đài (Venerable Cao Đài) as the abbreviated name for God, the creator of the universe, whose full title is Cao Đài Tiên Ông Đại Bồ Tát Ma-ha-tát (translation: Cao Đài [the] Ancient Sage [and] Great Bodhisattva Mahasattva). According to Caodaiists, the full title was purposefully chosen by God because within it are representations of the Three Teachings: Saint, Sage and Buddha. Caodaiists credit God as the religion's founder. They believe the teachings, symbolism and organization were communicated directly from God. 

According to the Cao Đài's teaching of creation, before God existed, there was the Tao, the nameless, formless, unchanging, eternal source referenced in the Tao Te Ching. Then a Big Band occurred, out of which God was born. The universe could not yet be formed and to do so, God created yin and yang. He took control of yang and shed a part of himself, creating the Mother Buddha to preside over yin. In the presence of yin and yang, the universe was materialized. The Mother Buddha is, literally, the mother of the myriad of things in the Universe. Caodaiists worship not only God the Father, but also the Mother Buddha. Note that God's importance and role is higher than that of the Mother Buddha. Also, the Mother Buddha, like all buddhas, is a part of Yang, and therefore is male. Yin is the female side, and the Mother Buddha oversees Yin, but is not a part of Yin. God is symbolized by the Divine Eye, specifically the left eye because Yang is the left side and God is the master of Yang. There are 36 levels of Heaven and 72 planets harboring intelligent life, with number one being the closest to heaven and 72 nearest to Hell. Earth is number 68. It is said that even the lowest citizen on planet 67 would not trade place with a king on 68 and so forth.










Beef Pho. *yums* One of the most common dishes found in Vietnam HCMC!


Lunch break before heading to Cu Chi Tunnels ^.^







We spent approximately 1+ hour there before heading back but the journey there took about twice as long! *faints*



And it's back to HCMC! Check out the scorpion wine! Very good for men's *ahem*! haha.







The best part of the day....Dinner!! 

It was so good! Leonard's uncle brought us to this beautiful, atas version of a hawker centre where they sold a mixture of Vietnamese cuisines from north/south/east/west :) 

The place is Quan An Ngon (18 Phan Boi Chau Str., OR 34 Phan Dinh Phung Str). 

The concept is interesting - you get many different stalls all at one place, each serving different types of dishes. Atmosphere is vibrant, and they serve a huge variety of Vietnamese dishes. It's great for people who would like to try 'Vietnamese street food' in a cleaner setting. 








Thursday, February 21, 2013

FORTY HANDS CAFE



this small cafe is a hidden gem in an up and coming street in Tiong Bahru. 

Forty Hands Cafe
Blk 78 Yong Siak Street
#01-12 Singapore
Tel: +65 6225 8545

the cafe is particularly crowded on weekends and it is almost necessary for you to make a reservation before heading down.

however, the food was nothing amazing. the eggs benedict was by far the worst eggs benedict i have ever tasted. The bread was all wrong and not of the right texture, the hollandaise sauce was too little and not flavorful. It was the very first time i did not finish up my eggs benedict. (On the other hand, Prive@Keppel Bay serves up the best eggs royale in Singapore)

Having said that, people don't go to Forty Hands for the food. It's mainly for the aromatic coffee. As i am not much of a coffee drinker (unlike the bf), the only thing i can comment about it is the wonderful coffee art. All else, you would probably make a better judge.



went to the cafe with the primary school bestie :)




Beat's breakfast, i cannot for the life of me remember what the dish was called though.

And then  we ventured to my fave place on Yong Siak Street....

BOOKSACTUALLY.

an indie book haven.

filled with all the pretty little things you do not need.






they had stacks and stacks of old household stuff from the past. Old envelopes, old porcelain plates/bowls, etc.




TCC FOR CHRISTMAS 2012

yes. this is how overdue i am.

hang out with the besties.

this was also the day when the bf first met my good mates.

:D

i'm glad they got along pretty well during the whole catching up session.

to be honest, i really was quite worried about how it'd turn out especially since dear isn't the most comfortable with unfamiliar social settings.



the signature paul frank smile :D