In Search of Coffee in a Clay Pot

Posted on Nov 25, 2015 in Travel

STRONG-COFFEE

We are coffee nuts. We love coffee. Tu and I were in Saigon and investigating our favorite subject – coffee.  We were in search of the oldest and most traditional way of brewing Vietnamese coffee and we were quickly closing in on it.

Traditional Phin Brewing

Now, if you know Vietnamese coffee, you know that it is brewed one single cup at a time using a filter called a “Phin”.  Finely ground coffee beans are placed in the filter and then very hot water is poured over the beans a little at a time and gravity does the rest.

This method of brewing has been around for hundreds of years in Vietnam and it was introduced by the French.  To balance out the very strong coffee it is poured over sweetened condensed milk and then served with ice.   The french used the condensed milk because there was no refrigeration in Vietnam so regular milk spoiled.

While this way of brewing coffee is slow.  It is actually considered by many coffee professionals in the world to be the finest method because it allows the hot water to stay in contact with the beans for the longest amount of time which allows it to collect all of the chocolaty flavor of the coffee – as well as all of the caffeine!

A single cup of very wonderful tasting coffee is brewed this way.

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But like I said.  We were not necessarily searching for this method.  We were looking for another way of coffee brewing that was done before even the french arrived.  We were looking for Coffee brewed in Clay pots.  This method was around before the french even introduced Vietnamese Coffee as we know it.

Finding Coffee in the Clay Pot

After searching some of the oldest and most poor neighborhoods in Saigon, we found a tiny little place with a single man outside.  There was no sign but we had arrived at Ca Phe Vot Ong Thanh, located in one of the oldest parts of Saigon.  The elderly man outside sat reading his paper and smoking a cigarette.

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This small lone cafe was one of the last standing traditional Coffee in Clay Pot cafe’s left in all of Vietnam.  They serve coffee in the oldest and most traditional ways in Vietnam.  It is a dying tradition but this place keeps it alive by brewing their coffee in small clay pots.  Over time, the Clay pots begin to become seasoned with the coffee and they begin to create rich coffee flavors that are unlike any coffee you can experience.

Imagine our disappointment however when we asked for some coffee and they told us they were closed!  How could this be?

Ca Phe Vot Ong Thanh was closed!

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But, Tu is very convincing and kindly asked the man to brew her just one cup of coffee.  He said ok.  The coffee was cost 5 cents.

To brew the coffee in the clay pot the coffee beans and hot water are boiled together in old clay pots. As the coffee boils in the clay pot over time it gets a very rich and powerful flavor.  In this cafe, we were surprised that they used wood and charcoal to boil the water.  They did not have stoves or water heaters or any new technology to help them.

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When the coffee is ready, it is poured into a glass through a cloth strainer.  The cloth strainer removes the beans and lets the rich coffee fall into the glass.   The coffee is strong, but it has a sweet chocolaty taste to it as well.  That is because this method makes the coffee taste a little bit like a cafe mocha.

After the brew is complete, coffee is poured through cloth strainers.

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Just as with the Phin brewing technique, the coffee is served over rich creamy condensed milk and then served over ice.  It produces a combination of bitter, sweet and cool that is the hallmark of Vietnamese Coffee.  There is no other iced coffee in the world that can compare to Vietnamese Coffee.

The rich and creamy coffee is a real treat.

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Tu sampled the coffee and said, “Wow, this is amazing”.  The flavor was perfect and after all of that it was so cheap.  Apparently during the morning rush hour, this coffee shop is packed, just like Starbucks and poor old man has to boil coffee like crazy just to keep up.

Tu sat down on the rickety wooden chairs and the tiny table in the front of the cafe.  This was the most rustic cafe in the city. What could you expect from one of the oldest coffee houses in the whole country?

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The coffee was wonderful and the ambience was great.  We had come and found what we were looking for – the oldest coffee brewing method in Vietnam and it was great.  If you want to go to try the coffee here in Saigon you can find it at 313 Tan Phu oc, Quan 11 Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam.  And tell them the Coffee Lady sent you – Tu McKenna.

Tackle Machine Pioneer

Posted on Nov 22, 2015 in Family

On the field he is Geno aka “The Terminator”.  Feared, Revered, Captain of the Pain Brigadier, Tackle Machine Pioneer, Commandeer of the Football Stratosphere – Geno McKenna.

But off the field, he is still Geno getting a kiss from his mom after the game.  Check out Geno Football 2015 Fiscal Year.

You gotta be a football player, to get a along with the beautiful girls.

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Geno is ready to inflict some damage on the opposing team

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Sorry for knocking you out kid.

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Kiss from Mom

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On the Streets of Saigon

Posted on Nov 21, 2015 in Travel

There is perhaps no better place in the world to practice street photography than in Saigon.  You see, everything in Saigon is on the street.  Whether it is a coffee shop, a restaurant, a repair shop, a barber – it is all literally on the street.   Even the transportation is on the street.  People don’t drive in enclosed cars, they ride scooters everywhere. There are over 2 million scooters bustling around the city of Saigon.  I went for a few days and took lots of pictures on the streets of Saigon.  You can check out the whole gallery here – Streets of Saigon

Dressed in army gear, your typical Saigon Scooterist

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A street vendor selling his magazines. John Lennon on the wall.

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A father and daughter sell newspapers, probably their only source of income.

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She goes door to door with this, selling soup to anyone who will buy it.

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He collects cardboard for recycling and sells it.

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Man pointing to something in the sky.

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A security guard picks his teeth after a meal.

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An elderly lady sits outside her home.

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A begger counts the few dollars he made that day whole he heads home.

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A security guard washes his hands from a bottle of water.

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A man sits outside of his store for a short break.

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Taxi driver in the rear view mirror

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He lays on his motorcycle with his stomach hanging out and his big eyebrows

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They are cooking small pigs directly over fire.  I won’t lie it looked good.

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At dusk a girl rides home amongst all of the other scooterist

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A rush of scooters fills the city at night

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The BathTub Incident of 1979

Posted on Nov 20, 2015 in Family

Danny was a Good Boy

Danny was a good boy when he was growing up.  The only mischievous thing he ever did was the “disappearing act” where he would magically disappear when it was time to do chores every night.  Danny was a magician of sorts but a very good boy.

The disappearing act.  Also known as “DishPan Diarrhea”

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Patrick was a Good Boy Too

Little Patrick was a good boy too.  There was a very brief time that he went to Military School to get back on the straight and narrow but while he was there he was an exemplary boy, always doing the right thing.

Patrick was a model citizen at Military School

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Saturday Bath Nights

Saturday was the one day of the week where Danny and Patrick could take baths.  It wasn’t because the family was rationing water, it was mostly because baths are inconvenient and you get cold when you get out of the bathtub so they were not fun.

Since Danny and Patrick were close in age and they were boys.  They got to take baths together to save time, money and water.  It mostly went good.  One time Danny turded in the water and they made it into a naval ship and pretended they were on the high seas bombing the ship from above.

Mom made them drain the water that day and they had to take two baths that week!  Can you believe it.

Moments before Danny turded the water forcing the evacuation

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The BathTub Incident 1979

I believe it was 1979 when the incident occurred.  It was Saturday night.  It was close to Holiday Season so there was a general celebratory atmosphere and everyone was happy.  Mom filled the tub and Patrick and Danny jumped in.

Things were going smoothly and Dan didn’t turd the water that day.  Patrick and Dan were finishing up and they stood up to get ready to leave the bathtub.  They were clean.

As they were leaving, Patrick bent down to pick up the soap.  At that moment a series of ill-timed things occurred.  1) Patrick was bent over.  2) Danny gripped him from behind to make sure he did not fall over, and 3) Dad came walking into the bathroom.

What Actually Occurred

What actually occurred was an innocent picking up of the soap.  Patrick bent over and Danny just happened to be behind him.  It was innocent.  Kind of like this picture where Patrick is wearing a crown, large overstretched underwear and has his shirt hiked up over his stomach while a naked Danny stands behind him gently resting his brotherly hands on Patrick’s shoulders.

An innocent scene had unfolded

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What Dad Saw

What Dad saw was a little different.  He saw a scene of complete debauchery.  Something straight out of the Roman Empire where anything goes.  Dad was furious.  But what can you expect?  One time he found a small spoon under Bill’s bed when Bill was 8 years old and thought Bill was using it for heroin. He tended to jump to conclusions.

Dad let his imagine run wild with what he saw

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I have my eye on you boys

From that point on, Dad always seemed to watch Danny and Patrick carefully.  He would close the door to their room and then burst in during the middle of the night to see if there were any shenanigans occurring.  He breathed a sigh of relief every time.  Danny and Patrick were good kids.

Worth a Six Pack

Posted on Nov 19, 2015 in photography

I approached this couple in the middle of the desert.  They had a garage sale outside of their tiny mobile home full of all sorts of interesting odds and ends.  I asked them if they would let me take a picture of them for $5.  They said “Hell Yeah”

They were running low on Miller Lite Beer but that didn’t stop them from keeping those tall boys in hand when I took the photo.   They thought I was the biggest fool on the planet for giving them so much money to take a dumb photo.  They immediately took that money down to 7-11 and got another 6 pack of Miller.

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Rainy Day Motorcycle

Posted on Nov 19, 2015 in photography

Taken in Saigon on a Rainy Day.

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Shopping with a 4 Year Old

Posted on Nov 16, 2015 in Family

This is Toi (Tu’s niece).  I took her shopping in a big store.  I put her in the basket and said, “Let’s Shop for Food for Your House”.  She didn’t understand me since she only speaks Vietnamese.

We wandered up and down the aisles without saying anything and she pulled stuff off the shelves and put it in the basket.  She chose.

1) Cheese, 2) Candy Fish, 3) Candy Sprinkles, 4) Potato Chips, 5) Candy suckers, 6) Gummy Bears, 7) Vietnamese Red Bull and 8) An assortment of other candies.

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This Guy

Posted on Nov 15, 2015 in photography

One of my more popular pictures on 500px this week.  This was a picture I took in Westminster London.  I walked a lot that day and didn’t think I got any good pictures but this turned out pretty good.

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