A crisp, golden turmeric crepe filled with pork, shrimp, and bean sprouts, wrapped in lettuce and herbs and dipped in nuoc cham. The sizzling cake.
Banh xeo is the sizzling cake: a thin rice-flour crepe stained gold with turmeric, poured hissing into a hot pan, filled with pork, shrimp, and bean sprouts, and cooked until the edges shatter like a chip. You eat it torn into pieces, wrapped in lettuce with a fistful of herbs, and dipped in bright nuoc cham, so every mouthful is crisp, rich, cool, and tangy at once. It is loud, fun, hands-on food, and once you learn the rhythm of the pan, a stack of them comes together fast.
The name banh xeo refers to the sound: xeo echoes the sizzle the batter makes when it hits the hot pan, so this is literally the sizzling cake. It is eaten across Vietnam with regional differences; in the south the crepes are large, the size of a dinner plate and generously filled, while central Vietnam makes smaller, crisper versions. The batter is rice flour and water, usually enriched with coconut milk and colored with turmeric, which gives the crepe its egg-yellow look despite containing no egg. The filling of pork, shrimp, and bean sprouts is the common thread everywhere.
The batter is simple: rice flour, turmeric, coconut milk, water, salt, and sliced scallions, whisked thin. Thin is the operative word, since a thin batter spreads fast, cooks through, and crisps, while a thick one makes a soft, doughy crepe. It pours like light cream. Rest it for half an hour so the flour hydrates. The coconut milk adds richness and helps browning, and the turmeric brings color and a gentle earthiness. Some cooks add a little beer or sparkling water for extra crispness. Stir the batter each time before pouring, since the flour settles between crepes.
Banh xeo succeeds or fails on pan heat. Get a well-oiled nonstick or cast-iron skillet properly hot, sear a few slices of pork and shrimp in it first, then pour in a thin layer of batter and swirl immediately to coat the pan around the filling. It must hiss loudly on contact; silence means the pan is too cool and the crepe will turn out pale and soft. Scatter bean sprouts over one half, cover briefly to steam them, then uncover and let the crepe cook until the underside is deeply golden and crisp, loosening the edges with a spatula.
When the underside is crisp and the edges lift freely, fold the crepe in half over the sprout side like an omelet and slide it onto a plate. The ideal banh xeo is lacy and shattering at the edges, golden and crisp across the base, with the filling just cooked inside. If your first one is soft, the pan needed more heat or the batter was too thick; adjust and the second improves. A generous film of oil in the pan is part of the crispness, so do not be stingy with it. Cook the crepes one at a time and serve them as they come.
Banh xeo is not eaten with a knife and fork. Tear off a piece of the hot crepe, lay it in a lettuce leaf, add mint and cilantro, roll it into a loose bundle, and dip it in nuoc cham, the lime-fish sauce dip with garlic and chili. The cool, crisp lettuce and cold herbs against the hot, crackling crepe, all pulled through the sweet-sour sauce, is the whole experience. Set the table with a big platter of lettuce and herbs and individual bowls of nuoc cham, and let everyone wrap their own. The dish slows down and becomes social, which suits it.
Serve banh xeo hot from the pan, one or two per person, with the greens and sauce alongside. They are at their crackling best in the first minutes and soften as they sit, so cook and serve in waves rather than stacking them all before the table sits down. The batter keeps a day in the fridge, so leftover batter means a fast lunch tomorrow. A vegetarian version with mushrooms and extra sprouts works in the same pan with the same rhythm. Cold beer or iced tea alongside suits the sizzle. Expect the first crepe to be the cook’s snack.
The pan was not hot enough, the batter was too thick, or the layer poured too deep. The batter must hiss on contact, spread thin, and cook in a well-oiled pan until deeply golden underneath. Adjust one variable at a time.
No. The yellow color comes from turmeric, not egg. The batter is rice flour, coconut milk, water, turmeric, and scallions, which makes banh xeo naturally free of egg and dairy despite its omelet-like look.
Southern Vietnamese banh xeo are large, filling a big skillet, while central versions are small and extra crisp. At home, a medium skillet crepe folded in half is the practical middle ground. Smaller crepes are easier to flip out cleanly.
Banh xeo is a crispy Vietnamese crepe of rice flour, coconut milk, and turmeric, named for the sizzle the batter makes in the hot pan, filled with pork, shrimp, and bean sprouts and eaten wrapped in greens.