Best 5 Banh Xeo Recipes

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**Bánh Xèo: A Crispy and Flavorful Vietnamese Rice Pancake**

Bánh xèo is a crispy and flavorful Vietnamese rice pancake that is a popular street food and a staple dish in many Vietnamese households. It is made with a batter of rice flour, coconut milk, and turmeric, and filled with a variety of savory ingredients such as shrimp, pork, bean sprouts, and onions. The pancake is cooked on a hot griddle until it is crispy on the outside and tender on the inside. It is typically served with a dipping sauce made from fish sauce, lime juice, and garlic.

This article provides two recipes for bánh xèo: a traditional recipe and a modern recipe. The traditional recipe uses a fermented rice batter, which gives the pancake a slightly sour flavor. The modern recipe uses a non-fermented rice batter, which makes the pancake easier to make and results in a crispier texture. Both recipes are delicious and easy to make, and they are sure to be a hit with your family and friends.

Let's cook with our recipes!

BANH XEO (VIETNAMESE CREPES)



Banh Xeo (Vietnamese Crepes) image

Banh xeo (bahn SAY-oh) is a popular street snack in Vietnam, especially in the south. The name means sound crepe, and refers to the sound the batter makes when it hits the hot skillet. Serve with fresh herbs. The shrimp-studded crepe is rolled up in a leaf of lettuce and dipped in nuoc cham dipping sauce before it gets popped in your mouth.

Provided by foxyamf

Categories     100+ Breakfast and Brunch Recipes     Crepes

Time 25m

Yield 4

Number Of Ingredients 14

1 cup rice flour
½ teaspoon white sugar
½ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon ground turmeric
1 cup coconut milk
½ cup water
2 tablespoons vegetable oil, divided, or as needed
2 tablespoons minced shallot
2 cloves garlic, minced, or more to taste
¾ pound fresh shrimp, peeled and deveined
2 tablespoons fish sauce, or more to taste
salt to taste
1 pound mung bean sprouts
4 lettuce leaves, or as needed

Steps:

  • Mix rice flour, sugar, 1/2 teaspoon salt, and turmeric together in a large bowl. Beat in coconut milk to make a thick batter. Slowly beat in water until batter is the consistency of a thin crepe batter.
  • Heat 1 1/2 tablespoon oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add shallot and garlic; cook and stir until fragrant but not browning, 1 to 2 minutes. Add shrimp; saute until cooked through and opaque, 3 to 4 minutes. Season with fish sauce and salt. Transfer filling to a bowl.
  • Preheat oven to 200 degrees F (95 degrees C).
  • Wipe out skillet and reheat over medium heat. Add remaining 1 1/2 teaspoon oil. Stir crepe batter and pour 1/2 cup into the hot skillet, swirling to coat the bottom. Lay 3 or 4 of the cooked shrimp on the bottom half of the crepe. Top with a small handful of bean sprouts. Cook until batter looks set and edges start to brown, about 1 minute. Fold crepe over and slide onto an oven-safe plate.
  • Place crepe in the preheated oven to keep warm. Repeat with remaining batter and filling.
  • Serve lettuce leaves alongside filled crepes. Break off pieces of crepe and roll up in lettuce leaves to eat.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 788.4 calories, Carbohydrate 107 g, Cholesterol 129.2 mg, Fat 21.5 g, Fiber 20.3 g, Protein 45.2 g, SaturatedFat 12.5 g, Sodium 1052.7 mg, Sugar 8.8 g

VIETNAMESE SHRIMP AND PORK CREPES (BANH XEO)



Vietnamese Shrimp and Pork Crepes (Banh Xeo) image

These crisp golden crêpes, filled with shrimp, pork, and vegetables, are both delicious and fun to eat. Simply wrap each crêpe in a lettuce leaf, tuck in fresh herbs like mint and basil, and dip it in the sweet-and-sour sauce.

Provided by Lillian Chou

Categories     Blender     Bean     Citrus     Fish     Garlic     Leafy Green     Herb     Mushroom     Onion     Pepper     Pork     Vegetable     Stir-Fry     Gourmet

Yield 4 servings

Number Of Ingredients 34

For crêpe batter
1/4 cup dried peeled yellow split mung beans
1 cup unsweetened coconut milk (from a well-stirred 13 1/2- to 14-ounce can)
6 tablespoons water
1 cup Asian rice flour (not from sweet or glutinous rice)
1/2 teaspoon sugar
1/4 teaspoon turmeric
1/4 teaspoon salt
For dipping sauce
1/4 cup Asian fish sauce (preferably Vietnamese nuoc mam)
1/4 cup fresh lime juice
1 1/2 teaspoons sugar
1/4 teaspoon minced garlic
1/4 teaspoon chopped fresh Thai chile, including seeds, or to taste
For filling
1/4 pound boneless pork shoulder, trimmed
3/4 pound medium shrimp in shell (31 to 35 per pound), peeled
2 tablespoons Asian fish sauce
1 teaspoon packed light brown sugar
1 fresh lemongrass stalk, root end trimmed and 1 or 2 outer leaves discarded
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
1 cup thinly sliced onion
1 cup thinly sliced mushrooms
1 tablespoon finely chopped garlic
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
For cooking and serving crêpes
4 teaspoons vegetable oil
6 ounces fresh soybean or mung-bean sprouts (2 1/2 cups), trimmed
1/4 cup chopped scallions
1 small head green or red leaf lettuce
1/2 cup loosely packed fresh mint leaves
1/2 cup loosely packed fresh basil leaves
1/2 cup loosely packed fresh cilantro sprigs
Lime wedges

Steps:

  • Make crêpe batter:
  • Cover dried mung beans with water by 2 inches in a bowl and soak at room temperature, at least 30 minutes. Drain in a sieve, then rinse under cold water until water runs clear.
  • Purée drained mung beans, coconut milk, and water (6 tablespoons) in a blender (mixture may appear curdled). Add rice flour, sugar, turmeric, and salt and purée until smooth. Transfer to a bowl.
  • Make dipping sauce:
  • Stir together sauce ingredients until sugar is dissolved.
  • Make filling:
  • Cut pork across the grain into 1/2-inch-thick slices, then cut slices into 2 1/2- by 1/2-inch strips. Stir together pork, shrimp, fish sauce, and brown sugar.
  • Mince enough of lower portion of lemongrass stalk to measure 2 teaspoons.
  • Heat oil in a 12-inch nonstick skillet over high heat until hot but not smoking, then stir-fry onion, mushrooms, lemongrass, garlic, and pepper until mushrooms are golden, about 3 minutes. Make a well in center of mixture and add shrimp and pork and stir-fry until shrimp turns pink, about 3 minutes. Transfer to a clean bowl. (Shrimp and pork will not be cooked through.)
  • Cook crépes:
  • Put oven rack in middle position and preheat oven to 200°F.
  • Heat 1 teaspoon oil in cleaned skillet over moderately high heat until hot but not smoking. Stir batter, then pour 1/2 cup into skillet, immediately tilting and rotating skillet to coat bottom. Sprinkle one fourth of fresh bean sprouts over half of crpe, then stir filling and spoon one fourth of filling evenly on top of bean sprouts. Sprinkle one fourth of scallions on top. Reduce heat to moderately low and cook, covered, until edge of crpe begins to pull away from side of skillet (check occasionally), about 3 minutes. Reduce heat to low and cook crépe, uncovered, until underside and edge are crisp and golden, 2 to 3 minutes more (lift with a spatula to check underside; shrimp and pork will be fully cooked). Fold crépe over and gently slide onto a large rack on a large baking pan and keep warm in oven. Make 3 more crépes with remaining oil, batter, bean sprouts, filling, and scallions in same manner.
  • Have each guest tear crépes in half and wrap each half in lettuce, then tuck in herbs. Serve with lime wedges and dipping sauce.

SIZZLING SAIGON CREPES-BANH XEO



Sizzling Saigon Crepes-banh Xeo image

This is a Cook's Illustrated recipe. It sounds delicious! Here's what they had to say about them: Sizzling Saigon Crêpes (Banh Xeo) are paper-thin omelets stuffed with shrimp, pork, and bean sprouts, wrapped in lettuce and herbs, and dipped in a sweet-tart dipping sauce. For our cookbook The Best International Recipe we found a way to recreate this popular Vietnamese street food at home. The hardest challenge was folding the crêpes; they were so thin they kept breaking under the weight of the meat. The answer was to move all the meat to one side of the pan before pouring in the batter, and then to fold the light side of the crepe over the filling.

Provided by darthlaurie

Categories     Pork

Time 45m

Yield 5 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 20

1/3 cup fish sauce
1/4 cup warm water
2 tablespoons limes, juice of
2 tablespoons sugar
2 fresh Thai chiles, serrano or 2 jalapenos, seeds and ribs removed, chiles minced
1 medium garlic clove, minced (about 1 teaspoon)
2 heads red leaf lettuce or 2 heads green lettuce, washed and dried, leaves separated and left whole
1 cup loosely packed fresh Thai basil (or regular basil)
1 cup loosely packed fresh cilantro leaves
2 cups water
1 3/4 cups rice flour
1/2 cup coconut milk
4 medium scallions, sliced thin
1 teaspoon ground turmeric
1/2 teaspoon salt
5 tablespoons vegetable oil
1/2 lb ground pork
1 small onion, halved and sliced thin
1/2 lb medium shrimp, peeled, deveined, and sliced in half lengthwise (31 to 40 per pound)
3 cups bean sprouts

Steps:

  • For the dressing and garnish: Whisk the fish sauce, water, lime juice, sugar, chiles, and garlic together in a small bowl until the sugar dissolves, then divide among 6 small dipping bowls and set aside. Arrange the lettuce, basil, and cilantro on a serving platter and set aside.
  • For the crepes: Adjust 2 oven racks to the upper- and lower-middle positions and heat the oven to 200 degrees. Whisk the water, rice flour, coconut milk, scallions, turmeric, and salt together until uniform.
  • Heat 1 tablespoon of the oil in a 12-inch nonstick skillet over medium-high heat until shimmering. Add the pork and onion and cook until the pork is no longer pink and the onion is softened, 5 to 7 minutes. Add the shrimp and continue to cook until they curl and turn pink, about 2 minutes. Transfer the mixture to a bowl and set aside.
  • Wipe out the skillet with a wad of paper towels, add 2 more teaspoons of the oil, and return to medium-high heat until just smoking. Add 1/3 cup of the pork-shrimp mixture and let heat through, about 30 seconds. Scrape the pork-shrimp mixture to one side of the skillet. Quickly stir the batter to recombine, then pour 1/2 cup of the batter into the skillet while swirling the pan gently to distribute it evenly over the pan bottom, keeping the meat mixture to the side. Reduce the heat to medium and cook the crêpe until the edges pull away from the sides and are deep golden, about 2 minutes.
  • Sprinkle 1/2 cup of bean sprouts on top of the pork-shrimp side of the crêpe, then gently fold the opposite side of the crêpe over the sprouts. Slide the crepe out of the skillet onto an individual serving plate and transfer to the oven to keep warm. Repeat five more times with the remaining 10 teaspoons oil, remaining batter, and remaining pork-shrimp mixture. Serve the crêpes with the individual bowls of sauce, passing the garnish platter separately. (To eat, slice off a wedge of the crêpe, wrap it in a lettuce leaf, and dip it into the sauce.).

Nutrition Facts : Calories 649.7, Fat 30.5, SaturatedFat 10.3, Cholesterol 111.8, Sodium 1558.9, Carbohydrate 64.7, Fiber 5.5, Sugar 12.7, Protein 30.4

BANH XEO - VIETNAMESE CREPES



Banh Xeo - Vietnamese Crepes image

My husband loves these. They look like they have eggs in the batter, but they don't. Makes for a great light supper or brunch item.

Provided by PalatablePastime

Categories     Curries

Time 34m

Yield 5 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 18

1/2 lb boneless pork loin
20 medium shrimp
10 fresh cilantro stems
10 fresh basil sprigs
10 fresh mint sprigs
2 cups rice flour
1/2 cup self-rising flour
2 1/2 cups water
1 cup coconut milk
1/2 teaspoon curry powder
1 teaspoon sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 green onion, chopped
1 medium onion, coarsely chopped
3 cups bean sprouts
5 tablespoons oil
nuoc cham sauce (1 batch; recipe ID #25375)
red leaf lettuce

Steps:

  • Place pork loin in a saucepan; cover with water and bring to a boil over medium heat; simmer until cooked through, about 20 minutes.
  • Allow pork to cool, then julienne into strips.
  • Shell and devein shrimp; slice each one in half lengthwise.
  • Rinse herbs and drain; set aside.
  • In a mixing bowl, prepare batter by mixing rice flour, self-rising flour, water, coconut milk, curry powder, sugar, salt, and green onion until smooth.
  • Divide pork, shrimp, onion, and bean sprouts into 5 separate little piles for easy access during cooking.
  • Heat 1 tbsp oil in non-stick frying pan until hot; cook pork shrimp and onion until it starts to sizzle; add 1/2 cup of batter and swirl to cover pan and get batter underneath.
  • Place one pile of bean sprouts towards the center of the crepe, then cover the pan tightly.
  • Turn the heat down to medium and cook for 2-3 minutes, then uncover and loosen edges of crepe and fold over with a spatula to form an omelette.
  • Transfer the crepe to a serving platter.
  • Repeat process with rest of batter.
  • Do not cover the cooked crepes or stack them (they will lose their crispness- they should remain light and airy).
  • To serve, place one crepe on a plate with some lettuce leaves, herbs also with a small bowl of nuoc cham.
  • The person cuts a portion of crepe, wraps it in a leaf of lettuce with some herbs, and dips it in the sauce.

SIZZLING SAIGON CREPES—BANH XEO



SIZZLING SAIGON CREPES—BANH XEO image

Categories     Sandwich     Sauté     Dinner

Yield 6 Servings

Number Of Ingredients 22

Dressing and Garnish
1/3 cup fish sauce
1/4 cup warm water
3 tablespoons juice from 2 limes
2 tablespoons sugar
2 fresh Thai chiles , serrano, or jalapeno, seeds and ribs removed, chiles minced (see note)
1 medium garlic clove , minced or pressed through a garlic press (about 1 teaspoon)
2 heads red or green lettuce , washed and dried, leaves separated and left whole
1 cup loosely packed fresh Thai basil leaves (see note)
1 cup loosely packed fresh cilantro leaves
Crêpes
2 cups water
1 3/4 cups rice flour (see note)
1/2 cup coconut milk
4 medium scallions , sliced thin
1 teaspoon ground turmeric
1/2 teaspoon salt
5 tablespoons vegetable oil
1/2 pound ground pork
1 small onion , halved and sliced thin
1/2 pound medium shrimp (31 to 40 per pound), peeled, deveined, and sliced in half lengthwise
3 cups bean sprouts

Steps:

  • 1. For the dressing and garnish: Whisk the fish sauce, water, lime juice, sugar, chiles, and garlic together in a small bowl until the sugar dissolves, then divide among 6 small dipping bowls and set aside. Arrange the lettuce, basil, and cilantro on a serving platter and set aside. 2. For the crepes: Adjust 2 oven racks to the upper- and lower-middle positions and heat the oven to 200 degrees. Whisk the water, rice flour, coconut milk, scallions, turmeric, and salt together until uniform. 3. Heat 1 tablespoon of the oil in a 12-inch nonstick skillet over medium-high heat until shimmering. Add the pork and onion and cook until the pork is no longer pink and the onion is softened, 5 to 7 minutes. Add the shrimp and continue to cook until they curl and turn pink, about 2 minutes. Transfer the mixture to a bowl and set aside. 4. Wipe out the skillet with a wad of paper towels, add 2 more teaspoons of the oil, and return to medium-high heat until just smoking. Add 1/3 cup of the pork-shrimp mixture and let heat through, about 30 seconds. Following the illustrations below, scrape the pork-shrimp mixture to one side of the skillet. Quickly stir the batter to recombine, then pour 1/2 cup of the batter into the skillet while swirling the pan gently to distribute it evenly over the pan bottom. Reduce the heat to medium and cook the crêpe until the edges pull away from the sides and are deep golden, about 2 minutes. 5. Sprinkle 1/2 cup of bean sprouts on top of the pork-shrimp side of the crêpe, then gently fold the opposite side of the crêpe over the sprouts. Slide the crepe out of the skillet onto an individual serving plate and transfer to the oven to keep warm. Repeat five more times with the remaining 10 teaspoons oil, remaining batter, and remaining pork-shrimp mixture. Serve the crêpes with the individual bowls of sauce, passing the garnish platter separately. (To eat, slice off a wedge of the crêpe, wrap it in a lettuce leaf, and dip it into the sauce.)

Tips:

  • Use fresh ingredients: The quality of your ingredients will greatly impact the taste of your bánh xèo. Use fresh shrimp, pork, and vegetables to ensure the best flavor.
  • Make sure your batter is thin: The batter should be thin enough to easily spread out in a thin layer on the pan. If your batter is too thick, it will be difficult to cook evenly and will turn out doughy.
  • Use a non-stick pan: A non-stick pan will help prevent the bánh xèo from sticking and will make it easier to flip.
  • Cook the bánh xèo on medium heat: Medium heat will allow the bánh xèo to cook evenly without burning.
  • Flip the bánh xèo carefully: Once the bottom of the bánh xèo is golden brown, carefully flip it over using a spatula.
  • Serve the bánh xèo hot: Bánh xèo is best served hot, so make sure to enjoy it immediately after cooking.

Conclusion:

Bánh xèo is a delicious and versatile Vietnamese dish that can be enjoyed as an appetizer, main course, or snack. With its crispy exterior and flavorful filling, bánh xèo is sure to please everyone at your table. So next time you're looking for a new and exciting dish to try, give bánh xèo a try!

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