If you’ve never heard a sound quite like it, imagine pouring a thin batter into a scorching hot pan — a loud, theatrical sizzle that fills the kitchen and announces to everyone nearby: something extraordinary is about to happen. That sound is exactly how Bánh Xèo got its name.
In Vietnamese, bánh means cake, and xèo (pronounced say-oh) is pure onomatopoeia — the crackling noise the batter makes the moment it hits the pan. Together: Sizzling Cake. A name that tells you everything before you even taste it.
What is Bánh Xèo?
Bánh Xèo is a large, crispy Vietnamese savory crepe — golden yellow from turmeric, paper-thin at the edges, folded in half and stuffed generously with shrimp, sliced pork belly, bean sprouts, and spring onions. But calling it just a “crepe” doesn’t do it justice.
Think of it as Vietnam’s answer to the French galette — but louder, crispier, and infinitely more communal. It’s a festival of textures, aromas, and flavors packed into one street-side bite, eaten with your hands, wrapped in fresh leaves, and dipped into bright, tangy fish sauce.
A brief history
Bánh Xèo is believed to carry French culinary influence — the thin crepe technique shows traces of the French galette, introduced during the colonial era. But Vietnamese cooks transformed it completely: the batter became rice flour and coconut milk, the fillings became unmistakably Southeast Asian, and the serving style — wrapped in wild leaves and dipped in fish sauce — is purely, proudly Vietnamese.
Today, Bánh Xèo is most closely associated with Đà Nẵng and Hồ Chí Minh City, though every region has its own version. In central Vietnam, the crepes are smaller and thinner. In the south, they’re plate-sized, piled generously with fillings, and fried to maximum crispiness.
Authentic Bánh Xèo recipe
The magic of Bánh Xèo starts with the batter. Unlike a French crepe made with eggs and dairy, the Vietnamese version is completely egg-free — a testament to how the dish adapted to local ingredients and climate.
Serves: 4 people | Prep time: 20 min | Cook time: 30 min
Ingredients
- 200g rice flour
- 50ml coconut milk
- 300ml cold water
- 1 tsp turmeric powder
- ½ tsp salt
- 200g fresh shrimp, peeled
- 150g pork belly, thin-sliced
- 200g bean sprouts
- 50g mung beans (cooked)
- 3 spring onions, chopped
- Mustard leaves or lettuce
- Fresh mint leaves
- Perilla (tía tô)
- Vietnamese coriander
- Vegetable oil for frying
Step-by-step instructions
- 1Make the batter. Whisk together rice flour, coconut milk, cold water, turmeric, and salt until completely smooth. Let the batter rest for at least 15 minutes — this helps the rice flour hydrate fully and gives a crispier result.
- 2Prep the filling. Peel and devein the shrimp. Slice pork belly paper-thin (around 2–3mm). Season both lightly with salt and a pinch of pepper. Rinse and drain bean sprouts.
- 3Heat the pan. Use a small non-stick pan (20–22cm). Heat over high heat until very hot. Add 1 teaspoon of oil and swirl to coat the surface completely. The pan must be smoking hot — this is the secret to crispiness.
- 4Add filling first. Place 3–4 shrimp and 2–3 pork slices in the pan. Cook 30 seconds until the shrimp turns pink and the pork begins to brown.
- 5Pour the batter — and listen. Give the batter a quick stir, then pour a thin ladle (about 60–70ml) into the pan in a circular motion. Tilt the pan so it spreads to the edges. You should hear an immediate, loud sizzle. Add bean sprouts, spring onions, and mung beans on one half of the crepe.
- 6Cover and cook. Place a lid on the pan and cook for 3 minutes. This steams the filling through while the bottom crisps up beautifully.
- 7Finish uncovered. Remove the lid. Fold the crepe in half over the filling. Cook uncovered for another 1–2 minutes until the outside is deeply golden and crispy. Shake the pan gently — if the crepe slides freely, it’s ready.
- 8Serve immediately. Slide onto a plate. Repeat with remaining batter. Serve with fresh herbs, wrapping leaves, and nuoc cham. Eat without delay — the crispiness is everything.
Nuoc cham: the soul of the dish
No Bánh Xèo is complete without nuoc cham (nước chấm) — Vietnam’s essential dipping sauce. It’s a beautiful balance of sweet, sour, salty, and spicy, and it ties every element of the dish together.
Classic nuoc cham ratio
:
1 part sugar
:
3 parts warm water
:
1 part lime juice
Then add: 1 clove garlic (minced), 1–2 fresh chilies (sliced thin)
Dissolve sugar in warm water first, then add remaining ingredients. Taste and adjust — more lime for tang, more sugar for balance. Always add garlic and chili last so the flavor stays bright.
How to eat it — the right way
This is where Bánh Xèo becomes a hands-on, fully immersive experience. You don’t eat it with a fork. You eat it with your hands. Here’s the ritual:
Where to find the best Bánh Xèo
Hồ Chí Minh City (Saigon)
Bánh Xèo 46A on Đinh Công Tráng Street is an institution — a packed, steamy little restaurant where cooks fry dozens of crepes simultaneously on rows of small clay pots. It’s as much a performance as it is a meal. Go hungry, go with friends, arrive before noon.
Đà Nẵng & Hội An
Central-style Bánh Xèo is smaller, thinner, and more delicate than the southern version. You’ll find them at tiny plastic-stool eateries down winding alleyways. Ask a local — they always know the right spot, and it’s never on any tourist map.
Everywhere else
The best Bánh Xèo is often the one made at home. If a Vietnamese friend or host ever offers to make it for you — say yes, immediately, without hesitation.
Fun facts to share with your friends
- ◆
The golden yellow color comes entirely from turmeric, not egg. The batter is completely vegan — the fillings typically are not, but the crepe itself is plant-based. - ◆
A skilled street vendor can cook 20–30 Bánh Xèo simultaneously on rows of small clay pots. Watching it is a full sensory performance: heat, sound, steam, and fragrance all at once. - ◆
The crunch is as important as the flavor. A soggy Bánh Xèo is considered a failure. Maximum crispiness is always the goal. - ◆
Some upscale restaurants now serve Bánh Xèo with wagyu beef or truffle oil. Elegant upgrades — though most Vietnamese grandmothers would disagree. - ◆
The dish is one of very few Vietnamese foods where using your hands is not just acceptable but expected and correct.
Bánh Xèo is not just a dish — it’s a moment. The sizzle, the folding, the wrapping, the dipping. It invites everyone at the table to slow down, use their hands, and eat together. That’s the spirit of Vietnamese food at its best: generous, communal, and always a little bit loud.

