Albert Calmette’s menu
The Sweet Fermented Offering (ritual sweet of the Vietnamese Tết Đoan Ngọ)

Saigon Fermented Glutinous Rice (Cơm Rượu)

OfferingDocumented🫙 🍯moyen1 h + fermentation 2 to 4 days

Glutinous rice cooked then inoculated with a ferment, which becomes in a few days sweet, slightly fizzy, and mildly alcoholic. Eaten with a spoon, inspired by the sweetness served during the Vietnamese Tết Đoan Ngọ festival.

The Sweet Fermented Offering (ritual sweet of the Vietnamese Tết Đoan Ngọ)

Glutinous rice cooked then inoculated with a ferment, which becomes in a few days sweet, slightly fizzy, and mildly alcoholic. Eaten with a spoon, inspired by the sweetness served during the Vietnamese Tết Đoan Ngọ festival.

In Saigon, I was told that the Asians made their rice rise and ferment with mysterious little yeast cakes — I wanted to get to the bottom of it. Under the microscope, I found a remarkable ferment, which first saccharifies the starch, then alcoholizes it: two invisible workers working in chain. The people, for their part, did not await my conclusions to enjoy it: this rice turned sweet and fizzy, they offered it at festivals and ate it with a spoon. Taste it, and you will be eating, in a way, my first lesson in tropical microbiology.
Albert Calmette
Ingredients
  • Glutinous riceone measure (starchy base)
  • Chinese ferment cakes (men / Asian yeast)a few, crushed (fermentation agent)
  • Pure watera little (moisture)
How it was made : In Indochina, these ferment cakes (men) were traditionally prepared and sold, blending wild yeasts and molds. Cơm rượu was consumed young, still low in alcohol, as a festive sweet; pushed further, the same fermentation gave the rice alcohol that Calmette sought to rationalize industrially.
Sources : A. Calmette, 'Contribution à l'étude des ferments de l'amidon : la levure chinoise', Annales de l'Institut Pasteur, 1892