Marguerite Duras’s menu
The Vietnamese street sweet, sold at market corners

Chè Chuối — Banana in Coconut Milk from Childhood

Street foodEvocation🍯facile30 min

Soft bananas simmered in sweetened coconut milk, sometimes thickened with tapioca or sticky rice. A warm, comforting spoon dessert — the bright side of the Mekong Delta markets.

The Vietnamese street sweet, sold at market corners

Soft bananas simmered in sweetened coconut milk, sometimes thickened with tapioca or sticky rice. A warm, comforting spoon dessert — the bright side of the Mekong Delta markets.

At the market, over there, there were women selling warm sweets, coconut milk with bananas in it. For a few cents you got a bowl. We had almost nothing, but that, sugar and coconut on the tongue, was a child's wealth. I think I never found that taste again except in memory.
Marguerite Duras
Ingredients
  • Very ripe bananasa few (soft fruit)
  • Coconut milkas needed (creamy base)
  • Cane sugarto taste (sweetness)
  • Tapioca or sticky ricea handful (thickener, optional)
  • Salta pinch (balance)
How it was made : Chè refers to a whole family of Vietnamese sweets — sweet, often with coconut milk, served warm or cold. Sold by street vendors, they were an affordable pleasure even for modest families, made from local ingredients: coconut, banana, sticky rice.
Sources : Marguerite Duras, *L'Amant*, Éditions de Minuit, 1984 (childhood memories of Indochina)

See also