The Northwest Restaurants
We’ve compiled the best of the best in The Northwest - browse our top choices for Restaurants during your stay.
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We’ve compiled the best of the best in The Northwest - browse our top choices for Restaurants during your stay.
With meat as the staple fare of the Northwest, it comes as some surprise to find that Dien Bien Phu's top restaurant is a wholly vegetarian affair—a delicious one at that. The owner is an English tutor, which ensures that service is much less spotty than it tends to be elsewhere in the more remote regions of Vietnam. Despite Dien Bien's Phu's mythical status in the country's history, there's nothing revolutionary about the food here, but it is tasty, including vegetarian spring rolls.
This cozy restaurant is at the bottom of the Legend Hotel. The chandeliers and bamboo curtains add to the beauty of the rustic interior. There are set lunches and dinners so that groups can eat family-style, which makes this a tour group favorite. However, it's not a bad spot for a date. Upstairs you can see 10 kinds of rice wine on display, all fermented with local fruit; nothing starts the night like a glass.
Off the main road, about 200 yards from entrance to market, this restaurant, attached to a hotel of the same name, does a brisk business with lunching tourists. It serves very basic, but extremely tasty Vietnamese fare, such as pho and a variety of noodle, meat, and chicken dishes. Service can be a little erratic, and simple orders like a cold beer sometimes take awhile to arrive.
True, there's not much in the way of competition, but this is the best dining venue in Bac Ha. The menu will be familiar to students of the region's culinary landscape, with a solid selection of Vietnamese staple noodle and rice dishes along with lots of grilled, fried, and boiled meat.
Catering mostly to foreign tourists, this large restaurant, a short walk from Hill A1–Eliane, serves a wide selection of Chinese, Vietnamese, and Western dishes.
Like most of the restaurants in Sapa, Viet Emotion has a typical Western and Vietnamese blended menu, but they go out of their way to make the building bright and colorful. If you’re hungry, try the Hunter’s Meal, which is sticky rice and pork marinated in a bamboo pipe. They also have a second (smokier) location at 17 Xuan Vien.
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