15 Best Restaurants in The Central Coast, Vietnam

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We've compiled the best of the best in The Central Coast - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Happy Heart Cafe

$$ Fodor's Choice

There’s nothing fancy about this charity-run diner, just good Western food at cheap prices and heartwarming service. Repurposed from an English center, this café employs minority and deaf workers, and is a favorite among expats and visitors. Most come for the cause, but return for the vegetarian chili, English breakfast, or burgers and pizzas.

Soul Kitchen

$$ Fodor's Choice

The most social spot on the beach, Soul Kitchen attracts a year-round mix of expats and local visitors, with frequent live music and open mike events. During the day the shady grass frontage, pool table, and board games keep kids entertained, leaving parents free to relax in raised cabanas with a Vietnamese-French menu, wine list, and cold draft beer. Friday through Sunday, rain or shine, Soul Kitchen hosts live music events.

Vy's Market Restaurant and Cooking School

$$ Fodor's Choice

As the first fully interactive street food experience in Vietnam, this buzzy, upscale food hall, owned by local-celebrity chef Ms. Vy, attracts a steady stream of enthusiastic foodies keen to take a culinary tour of Hoi An’s gastronomic classics. The menu here is visual, and diners are invited to wander among the various food stations where traditional dishes like cau lao noodles, banh mi, and savory country pancakes are made to order, to be devoured on simple bench seating arranged in the central courtyard.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Beach Bar Hue

$$

This inspired little beach club 15 km (10 miles) from Hue has shady beach cabanas, hammocks, and a large cobalt-blue fishing boat that serves as the bar. It's a laid-back place, with a simple Vietnamese seafood menu, where you feel a world away from the annoyances of the city. They make it easy to stay with a few huts housing dorm-style accommodations. Its sister accommodation Villa Louise with tastefully designed ocean view villas and a swimming pool is a gem in the crown of this stretch of pristine beach. The Beach Bar is on private land, and you pay 100,000d on weekdays and 150,000d during weekends and on holidays to enter (which is refundable against food and drink orders).

Cardi

$$

For many purists, Neapolitan-style pizza—a simple combination of fresh ingredients and a dough made from wheat flour, yeast, salt, and water—offers the ultimate in wood-fired wonderment. And this segment is ably served in Danang by Cardi, which enjoys a plum position by the banks of the Han River. The formula is very simple. Combine a base sauce made with the freshest tomatoes with your dough to produce pies that have a pillow-soft crust with judicious charring and offer the perfect marriage of acidity and sweetness.

124 Bach Dang, Danang, Vietnam
098-923--2315
Known For
  • Excellent pies with pillow-soft crust
  • House wine
  • Steaks

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Chez Maïs

$$

From your table in this tiny family restaurant hidden in an alley of a backpackers’ area, you can smell the mouth-watering fragrance from the open kitchen where Mr. Hung is preparing your fresh meal. His amiable wife Hue, and sister Ha (who is a French tour guide) serve delicious plates with a warm smile, adding a homely touch to the experience. All meals are finished with abundant complimentary seasonal fresh fruits. Their beautiful cooking and exceptional service compensates for their tasteless interior and narrow space.

2 Kiet 67 Vo Thi Sau, Hue, Vietnam
Known For
  • Special combo of pork sausage on lemongrass sticks, fresh spring roll, banh xeo, nem ran and mango salad
  • Complimentary seasonal fresh fruits
  • Beautiful cooking that makes up for a small space

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Dingo Deli

$$

A popular rainy-day hangout for expats and families, this homey Western bakery, restaurant, and delicatessen midway between Cua Dai beach and the Old Town offers a large adventure playground and a menu packed with huge portions of home favorites, including delicious Aussie meat pie, home-baked cakes, and a great kids' menu.

Hanh Restaurant

$$

It might be overcrowded during lunch and dinner, but this open restaurant's wide range of Hue specialties such as nem lui (grilled pork sausage on lemongrass stick), banh khoai (savory pancake), tapas like beo, nam, loc, and noodles with grilled pork and salad are all worth the wait.

11 Pho Duc Chinh St., Hue, Vietnam
Known For
  • Local favorite
  • Wide range of Hue specialties
  • Savory pancake and grilled pork sausage on lemongrass

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The Hill Station

$$

This wine bar and delicatessen pays homage to the French colonial era, which left an indelible mark on Vietnamese cuisine. Indeed, the cheese and charcuterie at the lively venue would earn the approval of even the most discerning Gallic customer. Beyond delectable food and drinks (one of Hoi An’s best value drinks happy hours can be enjoyed here), guests can immerse themselves in various events and exhibitions by local and visiting artists and photographers.

Miss Ly

$$

Miss Ly was one of the first cooks in town to open her humble, market-edge restaurant to the trickle of travelers astute enough to have put Hoi An on their itinerary almost 20 years ago. Two decades later, Ly is still in the kitchen pouring her heart and soul into each dish served. Her Hoi An wontons, crispy rice-flour shells with a pocket of minced pork and shrimp, dressed with a fruity, Chinese-style sweet-and-sour salsa, are some of the best in town.

22 Nguyen Hue St., Hoi An, Vietnam
090-523--4864
Known For
  • White Rose, steamed pork-and-shrimp dumplings
  • Cao lau, chewy udon-like noodles with a thick five-spice gravy
  • A wait that's worth it

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Monkey Bridge Farm

$$

A couple of kilometers downstream from the Pub With Cold Beer, this rustic jungle hut, formerly called Wild Boar Eco Farm, is run by local tour operator Captain Cuong. The scenery here is awe-inspiring—swinging hammocks overlook the wilderness and Cuong’s prize collection of free-range Euro-Asian wild boar.

Bong Lai, Phong Nha, Vietnam
096-901–3681
Known For
  • Amazing views
  • Traditional jungle dishes
  • Pork dish cooked in bamboo shoots

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My Casa Fusion Restaurant

$$

This garden restaurant with mostly outdoor seating is an expat favorite. Founded by Spanish and Italian natives, My Casa blends the two cuisines together to create a unique array of options. Choose from a selection that encompasses homemade pastas, delicious paella, pizza, classic tapas like tortilla, Iberico ham, and chorizo as well as hearty mains like a slow cooked lamb shank. 

53 Morrison, Danang, Vietnam
0769-900--8603
Known For
  • Homemade pastas
  • Excellent tapas
  • Laid-back villa setting

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Risotto Restaurant

$$

The Italian menu at this decent little cafeteria is one of the best in the city—and the cheapest, too. Think plates piled high with herby olive oil–drizzled beef carpaccio, al dente creamy risotto, and real Italian pizza, each coming in at under $7 a pop. Nothing is served quickly (everything on the menu is made fresh to order), but the location in the bustling Night Pedestrian Zone makes it a great spot to kick back and people-watch when the sun goes down.

69 Vo Thi Sau St., Hue, Vietnam
0826-774--203
Known For
  • Low-budget Italian food
  • Crowded table arrangement

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Shiva Shakti Indian Restaurant

$$

There are times when only a good old-fashioned curry will do, and the talented Indian chefs here make some of the best. Highlights of the menu include anything from their tandoori oven, soft buttery naan, mixed vegetable or meat grilled dishes, and tikka. For vegetarians the channa masala and paneer dishes come in belt-slackening-size servings, and for upset stomachs, the honey lassi is a great cure.

2 Vo Thi Sau St., Hue, Vietnam
0234-393–5627
Known For
  • Tandoori dishes
  • Authentic Indian food
  • Central location

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Tam Tam Café

$$

In a tastefully restored former teahouse, this café-restaurant is the perfect place to unwind over a coffee and French pastry or a cold beer during a busy day of sightseeing. For people-watching grab a balcony table; for shady seclusion there's a quiet courtyard garden; and for rainy days there's a pool table and games room. Despite a promising dinner menu offering both French and Vietnamese delights, meals can be a bit disappointing.