You’ll take a boat from Hoi An to a small island village, meet Grandma and her family, and cook classic Vietnamese dishes together in their home kitchen before sharing lunch in their garden. Expect laughter over rolling rice paper, fresh fruit juice on arrival, and local stories along the way—a day that feels more like visiting old friends than any ordinary class.
Li handed me a glass of something bright and cold the moment we stepped off the boat—she called it nước ép, some sort of fresh fruit juice, but honestly I was too busy watching her grandma wave at us from the porch. The river was quiet except for a couple of kids splashing near the bank. I’d expected a class, but not this—more like walking into someone’s real life for a few hours. Grandma’s laugh is sharp and quick; she showed me how to roll rice paper for eggrolls and then grinned when mine fell apart. “Try again,” she said, patting my hand.
The kitchen smelled like lemongrass and wood smoke. We made banh xeo—those crispy crepes that crackle when you fold them—and grilled pork on sticks over charcoal. The guide (Li’s cousin?) explained every ingredient, but also kept telling stories about growing up on the island. At one point I tried to say “papaya salad” in Vietnamese; everyone laughed, including me. The sky was heavy with clouds but warm, so we ate outside under mango trees—pumpkin soup first, then everything we’d cooked ourselves. There was black sesame pudding for dessert, which tasted earthy and sweet at the same time.
I didn’t really want to leave after lunch. The boat back to Hoi An felt slower somehow, maybe because I kept thinking about Grandma’s hands shaping rice paper or just the way the whole family moved around each other in that kitchen. It wasn’t what I expected from a cooking class—it felt more like being invited home by people you barely know but wish you did. Still thinking about that garden table under the trees.
The tour departs at 9:30 am and returns around 3:00 pm.
Yes, lunch is included and features dishes you help prepare plus dessert.
Yes, there’s a vegetarian menu available on request with local specialties.
Yes, round-trip boat transfer between Hoi An and the island village is included.
You’ll make banh xeo crepes, grilled pork brochettes or vegetarian options, green papaya salad, fish or tofu clay pot, pumpkin soup, and black sesame pudding.
The class is limited to 12 people per group.
Yes, you receive a recipe book with all the dishes prepared during your visit.
Your day includes a 35-minute boat trip each way between Hoi An and the island village, bottled water throughout, a welcome fruit drink on arrival at Grandma’s house, all ingredients for your hands-on cooking lesson (with both regular and vegetarian menus), full lunch in the family garden with dessert, plus a recipe book to take home before returning by boat in the afternoon.
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