Hanoi Halal Food Guide: Where Muslim Travelers Eat Well
Hanoi's halal dining scene is small but real — here's where to find certified restaurants, Muslim-friendly menus, and Cham-run kitchens in the Old Quarter.
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Hanoi's halal dining scene is small but real — here's where to find certified restaurants, Muslim-friendly menus, and Cham-run kitchens in the Old Quarter.
Saigon has a real halal dining scene if you know where to look — from Cham-Muslim street stalls near the central mosque to Malaysian-run kitchens in District 1.
Chau Doc sits at the intersection of three food cultures, and its markets — floating at dawn, sprawling at dusk — are where that collision tastes best.
Ninh Thuan is home to one of Vietnam's largest Cham Muslim communities — and their food is unlike anything else in the country. Here's what to eat and where.
Phan Rang sits in Vietnam's driest province, but its Cham Muslim communities and sun-baked vineyards make it one of the most distinctive food stops in the central region.
Da Nang has a small but real halal food scene — from Cham-Muslim family kitchens to certified restaurants near the beach. Here's where to find it.
Chau Doc's Cham Muslim villages serve halal beef noodles and coconut fish curries that taste nothing like the Kinh Vietnamese food most travelers come expecting.
Ninh Thuan's Cham Muslim villages serve some of central Vietnam's most distinctive food — halal beef stew, hand-rolled flatbread, and slow-cooked curries that owe nothing to the Viet mainstream.
Chau Doc's Cham villages along the Hau River serve some of the Mekong Delta's most distinctive food — halal beef noodles, coconut-laced sweets, and dishes you won't find anywhere else in Vietnam.
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