Vietnamese Restaurant Search
The end of the war, an influx of Vietnamese refugees headed to Santa Ana (CA), Bay Area (CA) and other cities in U.S. and formed pockets of concentrated Vietnamese population called Viet Nam Towns, and some of these refugees opened restaurants to make ends meet. Now, they are the second largest Southeast-Asian group, after Chinese. You can cruise your own yellow pages to find good Vietnamese restaurants. A couple of clues: a concentration of noodle shops or Banh cuon (very popular with Vietnameses but not with Americans) in any one area like Little Saigon in LA, Dorchester in Boston or Argyle Street in Chicago is a pretty good indicator of a large Vietnamese population -- and, hopefully, a sign of food quality and authenticity. If the Vietnamese restaurants in your city are principally soup places, you likely have a large North Vietnamese population -- as in Los Angeles Little Saigon and in San Jose, California. You can try these dishes at local Vietnamese restaurants in your area. Since most of the really authentic ones are the kind of "MOM & POP" joints, run by family and tailored to local Vietnamese community, don't expect a great ambience, but look forward to a delightful culinary adventure. Some places only accept cash and the waiters can rarely speak English, the service is far from elegant but friendly. In this page, I intend to assist you in search of authentic Vietnamese restaurant using Online Search Engines. Please share with other visitors and me your though, comments, suggestions, inputs, or any thing else to be included. Your comments may be written in Vietnamese or English http://www.xuvn.com/foodofvietnam/restaurant search.htm
Thanks You for Visiting Chd
Thanks You for Visiting Chd


I tried Pho at a local Pho joint, the food was great but the service and ambient were kind of “goofy”.
Reply to this
For the Vietnamese, eating out is to enjoy the best dishes that they cannot prepare at home, the ambience is a secondary concern. Frankly, Vietnamese food tastes great and healthy, but is not for a romantic date, I don’t think that it can be “consumed” elegantly.
Reply to this