Wednesday, September 25, 2024

HCMC! JUST LIKE I PICTURED IT

(AHEM) IT’S SAIGON
HCMC SKYLINE

In the ensuing years after the end of the Vietnam War in 1975 if you called Ho Chi Minh City by its original name, you would be invited to the Communist Party’s offices for a cup of tea.

Not good.

Since 1986 though, when the Doi Moi economic renovations were rolled out, the Socialist Republic of Vietnam has risen from one of the world’s poorest countries to a middle-class economy. Things are still very cheap for us while there, but money talks and calling the largest, wealthiest city in Vietnam Saigon is much more relaxed.

Yeah, officially the city is still named after Uncle Ho, and Ho Chi Minh City is listed as such on maps, road signs and airport ticker boards, but HCMC and Saigon are both recognized. Afterall, they never changed the name of the Saigon River, and they still brew Saigon Beer.

“Ho Beer” doesn’t have the same panache, I guess.

WORLDBANK OVERVIEW OF VIETNAM

Saigon…er HCMC… is a sprawling city more reminiscent of say New York than Vietnam, and its wealth is evident in the growing infrastructure. On our recent trip to Vietnam with the small tour group company, Overseas Adventure Travel (OAT), several fellow travelers who had been to Saigon … er HCMC… a few years ago were amazed by all the new skyscrapers that had sprung up in the interim.

CARAVELLE MARTINIS

Yet, despite the gleaming new buildings and models posing for photo shoots on the streets, the high-end shops, and even a few craft beer establishments, there are people in Saigon … er HCMC… using charcoal braziers on the sidewalk preparing street food and the scooters buzz like hornets on the busy streets, and most importantly you still cannot drink the tap water.  

Yes, do not drink the tap water anywhere in Vietnam. Bottled water only. Trust me.


MARTINIS IN SAIGON
Better yet, avoid water altogether in this cosmopolitan town and drink a well concocted martini. Here are a couple of places where we’ve enjoyed a drink and a beautiful view.

CARAVELLE HOTEL for Happy Hour
Go to the rooftop bar for the Caravelle Hotel’s 2 for 1 happy hour. Marvel at the gleaming expanse of Saigon as you linger over your martini perched on their open balcony. With top shelf vodkas and reasonable prices, the Caravelle is just across the street from the Opera House and across the square from our next gin mill.   

THE CONTINENTAL HOTEL
The Continental Hotel, Saigon

First opened in 1880 this hotel was built to accommodate French travelers after the long cruise to Indochina. During the Vietnam War the Continental was where all the press hung out and presumably drank. Notable guests of the Continental were Hunter S. Thompson who covered the last days before the fall of Saigon in 1975 and the British author Graham Greene. Greene was a long-time guest at the Continental and conceived his novel, “The Quiet American”, about the end of French colonialism in Indochina and America’s early involvement in the Vietnam War while staying there. Made into a film twice, the second one stars Brendan Fraser in the titular role.

Proud of her place in history, there is a corridor near the entrance that contains several placards that chronicle the Continental’s past and her storied guests. As it was too hot and humid for us to sit outside at café tables on the street we sat inside in the large airy hotel foyer. The high ceilings were to help dispel the tropical heat and there is a large garden in the interior. Even if you don’t drink you should visit the Continental in Saigon… or whatever you want to call it.

The Opera House is directly across the street.

THE CONTINENTAL SAIGON


HCMC CRAFT BEER
Beer is popular in the tropical temperatures of Vietnam and every city we visited in Vietnam had their own brew. Country-wide you could find 333, Larue and Tiger Beer. The capitol had its Hanoi Beer, a pilsner, and Bia Hoi, a beer brewed daily and found mostly in the bars along Beer Street.
Huda in Hue

Hue had Huda, a lager. While cruising along the spectacular Halong Bay, a Halong pilsner is necessary. Apart from the Hoi An Brewing Company there are also small craft breweries in that tourist town. Heineken has been in Danang since 1997 where they brew all Larue and Tiger brands as well as Bia Viet.

In the tourist town of Nha Trang we had craft beer at the Louisiane Brewhouse situated right on the beach.

Saigon Beer is found everywhere in Vietnam, but there are two notable craft breweries in HCMC. One is Pasteur Street offering a full array of styles. There are 8 taprooms in Saigon and thankfully one was just around the block from our hotel, the Central Palace Hotel.

PASTEUR STREET BREWERY, VIETNAM

Heart of Darkness is another craft brewer. They also have a taproom in DaNang and they name their beers after characters in the film Apocalypse Now. Especially appealing is Kurtz’s Insane IPA.

HEART OF DARKNESS BREWERY VIETNAM 

Central Post Office Saigon

BECAUSE YOU CAN’T DRINK ALL THE TIME

Central Post Office and Notre Dame Cathedral

I know this article so far has been about alcohol, so go visit the Saigon Central Post Office at No. 2, Paris Commune Street. It is one of the oldest buildings in HCMC. 


Central Post Office interior
Construction began in 1886 and the French Colonial building with neo-classical European design elements like arched ceilings and decorated with Asian influences looks more like a train station. It is a working post office, a gift shop and a beautiful building to visit.




The “secret” CIA building

now

then

When you exit the post office look to your left to see the “secret” CIA building a block or so away. History buffs may recall the iconic last helicopter taking off from that building in 1975 during the fall of Saigon. The building is not open to the public, but it is worth a picture. 


Notre Dame Cathedral

If you’re into visiting churches, the Catholic Cathedral across from the post office might be interesting. Erected by French Colonialists in the late 1800s, Catholics were running the government in South Vietnam and were biased towards Catholics at the expense of Buddhists. This led to clashes in the lead up to the Vietnam War.   

If you visit the grounds of the Basilica, be sure to check out the statue of the Virgin Mary.  In 2005 the statue was purportedly shedding a tear down her right cheek which lured thousands of pilgrims.


Ben Thanh Market
Whatever souvenirs you need go to the massive Ben Thanh Market and prepare to haggle, especially if you decide to venture to the interior where vendors will nearly tackle you to get your business. This beautiful massive market has everything. We bought a t-shirt and a carry-on luggage piece that cost about $13 USD.

BROKEN RICE AND PIZZA

Overseas Adventure Travel provides most meals. Though we were in Saigon for just three full days with two of them filled with road trips, we still managed to eat out on our own.

Com Tam Moc
Broken rice are kernels that have been damaged in the handling process and once considered inferior. There’s nothing wrong with the rice, but poor farmers would eat the broken kernels because it was cheaper. It is now a staple of Saigon cuisine and is popular with locals and foreigners. Usually served with pork or eggs, you can eat Com Tam with a fork.

The Com Tam Moc restaurant was a couple of blocks down from the hotel.

COM TAM MOC SAIGON

Ciao Bella Il Primo, 11 Dong Du Street

Sometimes you just need comfort food. After three weeks of Pho and fertilized duck eggs, pizza beckoned.

CENTRAL PALACE HOTEL SAIGON 

 

DAY TRIPS
Using HCMC as a base, OAT took us on a couple of day trips out of HCMC. A couple of hours drive by coach each trip was remarkable and historical.

Cu Chi Tunnels
Cu Chi Tunnel Rat
Cu Chi is a vast network of tunnels that are not far from Saigon proper and during the war served as the Viet Cong’s base of operations during the Tet Offensive. Stretching to over 200 km to the Cambodia border the tunnels were the terminus of the Ho Chi Minh Trail. It’s kind of eerie and even unnerving to some to experience the tunnels like a tourist and one can book a day tour. It is a popular tourist excursion. Outside the entrance there are derelict war machines like a tank and an airplane and there is a firing range for several types of guns used during the war.

There’s a gift shop.

CU CHI TUNNELS

Mekong Delta and Coconut Candy

Another popular day trip out of Saigon was to take a sampan along the Mekong Delta. As a youth the Mekong Delta was mentioned nightly on the news, and it was intriguing to see it. The sampan slipped along the sediment filled water passing fish farms as we drank coconut water from a coconut. We visited a small farm on one of the islands and met with the owner who gave us fruit from his garden. We then transferred to a smaller sampan to visit a coconut candy factory. There’s a gift shop here too. Art, leather goods, artifacts and of course coconut candy are available for purchase.
Sampan on the Mekong

Later we stopped for lunch.

There are several outfitters for similar tours. OAT just told us to get on the bus!

Saigon… er HCMC…. was a great end to the Vietnam portion of our trip.

Up next…it’s a Holiday in Cambodia.

OVERSEAS ADVENTURE TRAVEL 

Thanks for reading.

Love Janet and greg

LUNCH


COCONUT CANDY "FACTORY"

© 2024 by Gregory Dunaj

Thursday, September 5, 2024

NASHVILLE 2024

together again
THE ATHENS OF THE SOUTH
Looking over my entries at the Vacations From Home blog for this year I realized they are all pretty much about Vietnam. That was a great trip, an exceptional trip, and I still need to write more about Vietnam and Cambodia, but I wanted to tell you about our trip to Nashville.

We had been there before, several years ago. My daughter lives in Nashville and we decided it was time to reconnect with her.

On our previous visit to the Music City we did all the touristy things, like renting a car to see the Grand Ole Opry, where we took a backstage tour, and to drive down Music Row, where all the recording studios are located. We visited the Johnny Cash Museum, (not a pay toilet) and bar hopped along the Honky Tonk Highway of Lower Broadway.


IT’S ALWAYS 5 O’CLOCK IN NASHVILLE
Starting at the Cumberland River Broadway stretches out for several blocks and bulges with lively bars. This is perhaps Nashville’s biggest draw, and the city is a popular destination for bachelor and bachelorette parties. The streets are filled with pedal-bar and loud party vans and every single bar has a band playing their heart out for tips and the hope to be discovered. One place, Tootsie’s Orchid Bar, has three stages for music and a rooftop patio. It is right around the corner from the Ryman Auditorium, the original site for the Grand Ole Opry.
the view from Tootsie's
Rooftop patio

TOOTSIE'S NASHVILLE

The bars operate from 10am to 3am and throughout the day Nashville is a constant party scene. For us, day drinking only, the nights are too rambunctious.

LOWER BROADWAY NASHVILLE 


TO THE GODS
If you’re stumbling about on Lower Broadway, you probably know Nashville is called the Music City, but it has been known as “the Athens of the South” for a much longer time. The city is home to many institutions of higher learning, like Vanderbilt and somebody thought Athens of the South was an appropriate nickname.
Athena in Nashville

In 1897 the city held the Tennessee Centennial Exposition and in keeping with the learned-sounding moniker erected an exact replica of the Parthenon in Athens, the most prominent temple on the Acropolis. The one in Nashville’s Centennial Park is in much better shape though and this new one also has inside a 42-foot-tall statue of Athena. We visited the Parthenon last time, and for a fee you can enter the temple to gaze upon the goddess, or you can be cheap and admire the picture.

THE PARTHENON NASHVILLE


TENNESSEE WHISKEY
This time we didn’t rent a car, but took ride shares to get around. We limited our time on Lower Broadway to two short pub crawls, one with my daughter and another with just Janet and I at 11:00 am, because you HAVE to do that at least once whenever you visit Nashville. Most of our time with my daughter was going out to dinners. 
TASTING AT LEIPER'S FORK
One day we hailed a ride to visit my daughter at her job and on another day we had a driver take us out to Leiper’s Fork distillery, a small batch distillery in nearby Williamson County, and in operation since 2016. Before our tour of the rustic facilities, we drank slushy drinks at their outside bar and then sampled several of their whiskies on the tour. On the ride back Janet wanted to crack open one of the bottles we purchased at their store, but I reminded her they were gifts.

Book a tour through them.


We stayed in a Sonder Hotel, there are a few in Nashville, and they have properties around the world. Ours was on Church Street, just across Rosa L. Parks Boulevard and everything on lower Broadway was a short walk. Broadway was the adjacent street, but Church was tree-lined and much quieter. On one of our strolls Janet and I discovered several interesting and quirky places that were the polar opposite of the frenetic revelry just a block away on that Honky Tonk Highway.

Sinatra Bar and Lounge
222 4th Avenue North
This classy joint opened in 2023. Just off Church, the Sinatra Bar and Lounge claims this is where Manhattan meets Palm Springs. Open with high ceilings and brass fixtures at the bar tended to by men in waist coats we imbibed a couple of martinis….not Frank’s preferred Jack Daniels. There was a piano and singer in the middle of the two-tiered restaurant performing classic songs. The whole place exudes “cool’ and is the antithesis cowboy boots and hee-haws.

I had worked as a roadie for FAS in the late 80s and well, we had to go.  

Skull’s Rainbow Room

One of our bar neighbors at Sinatra’s told us about Skull’s Rainbow Room on Printer’s Alley, just around the corner from our perch. Printer’s Alley was the center of publishing in Nashville and now it’s a nightclub scene. Skull’s Rainbow Room is a nightclub that features dining, live music and burlesque shows.


Makeready L&L
Tucked in the Noelle Hotel on North 4th Street, and just up the block from Printer’s Alley, this place pays homage to the printmakers and publishers that would come here after work and their tag line of “work like a dog / drink like a fish” gives a hint at its history.


HIDDEN BAR
Printer's Alley Nashville
Also part of the Noelle, the Sandworm is best described as a speakeasy. Drawn by the lanterns decorating the Makeready that was closed, its entrance on Church Street, our curiosity was aroused by our recent trip to Vietnam. Though it was closed for the night the door was open and we crept in and eventually found the entrance behind a nondescript door in a brightly lit corridor. The tag on the door said utility room. It led to the Sandworm, filled with couches and a full bar and a couple of patrons who greeted us vociferously. A bit unnerving, we felt like we stumbled onto a forbidden world, but this place is another example of life beyond the frenetic Lower Broadway, just a block away.
Good luck finding it.  


GERMANTOWN
This quiet section of Nashville is where my daughter lives and is a few blocks north of downtown. Like Church Street, Germantown is a different world. It is quiet with brick sidewalks and Victorian style buildings, and some great restaurants.


Pelato
1300 3rd Avenue North
Specializing in Italian food in sharable plates portions, Pelato was packed on a Monday night. We ordered way too much food, as always.

Make a reservation.


The Iberian Pig
607 Overton Street
Set in a repurposed industrial building, this tapas bar and restaurant had two levels. Located in the Gulch, an urban area under redevelopment that is between downtown and Music Row. This is a trendy section of town with lots of restaurants and nightlife. Don't miss pigging out on the daily Jamon happy hour from 4 to 6 pm.
THE GULCH, NASHVILLE

 

Hattie B’s
112 19th Avenue South, Midtown
No visit to Nashville would be complete with a visit to Hattie B’s. Spicy hot chicken is what they serve and the sometimes overly lengthy lines just to get in the door is worth the wait.
There are several locations in Nashville, including the airport.


NASHVILLE SOUNDS
19 Junior Gilliam Way, Germantown 
NASHVILLE SOUNDS

This Triple-A affiliate of the Milwaukee Brewers plays in First Horizon Park. There is a massive guitar jumbotron in center field. We took in a game that went into extra innings. We were able to walk from our hotel to the ballpark, but took a ride share back.

It was great to see Nashville and my daughter again. 

Thanks for reading.

Love Janet and greg


You know what they say about big feet...


© 2024 by Gregory Dunaj