Hitting the Mekong

An Incursion into Indo China

Nonfiction, Travel, Asia
Cover of the book Hitting the Mekong by Evan Scarlett, Xlibris AU
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Evan Scarlett ISBN: 9781499015096
Publisher: Xlibris AU Publication: August 8, 2014
Imprint: Xlibris AU Language: English
Author: Evan Scarlett
ISBN: 9781499015096
Publisher: Xlibris AU
Publication: August 8, 2014
Imprint: Xlibris AU
Language: English

Phuong can wake up in the morning, declare herself hungry, and walk one hundred meters to a freshly cooked bowl of soup or a mini-baguette filled with meat pate and vegetables. Pho and banh miwe have a choice at least between those two in the space of a two-minute stroll on the street. Phuong will then come home and devour half a kilo of lychees while I eat the leftovers from the night before because she will not touch them. Its funny that she eats my cooking, because maybe she has toshe is the only Vietnamese woman I ever met who could not and did not want to cook. Then its off to town for a com tom for her and a pork baguette roll for me. Then we hit the market. Tonight it will be pork stir-fry with rice, of course. We stock up on fruit as well, and today she insists on buying one of those deadly, spiky, stinky-shoe-shock smelly fruit: a jackfruit or durian. I am not sure which. This is the less smelly one, and I actually enjoy eating it with her. Its a lesson to Western women to watch these women eat so much food and still remain slim. Then she gathers the seed pods, boils them up, and peels them for me, and I am surprised at how much they taste like chestnuts.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Phuong can wake up in the morning, declare herself hungry, and walk one hundred meters to a freshly cooked bowl of soup or a mini-baguette filled with meat pate and vegetables. Pho and banh miwe have a choice at least between those two in the space of a two-minute stroll on the street. Phuong will then come home and devour half a kilo of lychees while I eat the leftovers from the night before because she will not touch them. Its funny that she eats my cooking, because maybe she has toshe is the only Vietnamese woman I ever met who could not and did not want to cook. Then its off to town for a com tom for her and a pork baguette roll for me. Then we hit the market. Tonight it will be pork stir-fry with rice, of course. We stock up on fruit as well, and today she insists on buying one of those deadly, spiky, stinky-shoe-shock smelly fruit: a jackfruit or durian. I am not sure which. This is the less smelly one, and I actually enjoy eating it with her. Its a lesson to Western women to watch these women eat so much food and still remain slim. Then she gathers the seed pods, boils them up, and peels them for me, and I am surprised at how much they taste like chestnuts.

More books from Xlibris AU

Cover of the book Return to Carlisle by Evan Scarlett
Cover of the book A Chronological History of Australian Composers and Their Compositions - Vol. 2 by Evan Scarlett
Cover of the book Scopolaust by Evan Scarlett
Cover of the book Whispers from Within by Evan Scarlett
Cover of the book Sirens and Grey Balloons by Evan Scarlett
Cover of the book The Soundpost in the Violin by Evan Scarlett
Cover of the book Tales of Gilarn by Evan Scarlett
Cover of the book Trails of Light by Evan Scarlett
Cover of the book Hoof Beats in Africa 2 by Evan Scarlett
Cover of the book A Land Fit for Heroines by Evan Scarlett
Cover of the book An Appreciation of Dorrit Black Paintings by Evan Scarlett
Cover of the book Dial “M” for Machiavelli by Evan Scarlett
Cover of the book To Evince the Blue by Evan Scarlett
Cover of the book Sweet Scent of Revenge by Evan Scarlett
Cover of the book Why Are We Here? by Evan Scarlett
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy