Lam rice is a specialty of Sapa as well as mountainous provinces, a familiar dish loved by many tourists. In Sapa, people go to the forest to cut bamboo tubes, wash them, and then use fragrant upland sticky rice harvested from terraced fields in Bat Xat, Bac Ha… for processing. After the rice is mixed with a little salt, put it in another tube and then boil it on embers, until it’s cooked, remove the tube and remove the intestines.
The rice is flexible, sweet, has a rich taste and has many colors because the ethnic people use the leaf juice to dye it. When eaten with sesame salt, grilled chicken is also excellent. Coming to Sapa, it is not difficult to find a place that sells Lam rice, in the market, on the roadside or at the foot of Silver Waterfall, with an average price of 80k – 100k/bundle of 10 tubes.
Source: Collected internet.
With a history of fighting against invaders to protect the land, win freedom, independence and build the country dating back thousands of years by the Vietnamese people and the convergence of 54 other ethnic groups. each other has contributed to the diversity, richness and uniqueness of Vietnam's culture.
Officially Vietnamese (the language of the Vietnamese (Kinh) people). This is the mother tongue of about 85% of the Vietnamese population, along with nearly three million overseas Vietnamese, most of whom are Vietnamese Americans. Vietnamese is also the second language of ethnic minorities in Vietnam. Although Vietnamese has vocabulary borrowed from Chinese and previously used Chinese characters (Confucian script) to write, then converted to Nom script, today Vietnamese uses the Latin alphabet, called Quoc Ngu. , with diacritics to write...
Religion in Vietnam is quite diverse, including Buddhism (both Mahayana, Theravada and some modified groups such as Hoa Hao, Tu An Hieu Nghia); Christianity (including Catholicism and Protestantism); endogenous religions such as Cao Dai; and some other religions (Hinduism and Islam). Different types of folk beliefs also have a lot of influence. The majority of Vietnamese people consider themselves non-religious, even though they still go to religious sites several times a year...
Lang Son, the prime land of the Fatherland, on spring days is more poetic with blooming peach blossoms and white apricot gardens stretching out. Traveling in the spring to Lang, visitors can not only explore the majestic mountain scenery but also immerse themselves in the spiritual cultural space of the residents of this place such as: Ky Cung Temple Festival, Ta Phu Temple Festival, Festival Dong Dang, Thanh Pagoda, Tam Thanh Pagoda, Tien Pagoda...