Visiting Son La without eating Pia
means a failure. Some people say that after just the first try, this dish would
never leave your memory. But what is exactly the great secret behind this
speciality of Son La?
Pia is a typical dish of this
region; it can be served as a sauce or as a main dish in a meal. When cooking
Pia, people can choose the ingredients from the familiar animals such as
buffalo, cow, or goat, but the most popular Pia dishes are Cow Pia and Goat
Pia. Interestingly, along the National Road No. 6 from ChauMoc to ChauThuan,
visitors can easily spot the restaurants selling Pia, which are advertised
carefully and humorously in various ways. You can also order Pia in any
restaurant in Son La, simply because this is an indispensable cuisine of the
region.
Pia dish in Son La somehow resemble
Thanh Co, a speciality of Lao Cai province. However, it is cooked in a totally
different way. In order to cook Cow Pia, we need to prepare everything freshly,
especially the different parts of the cow including the organs. When dissecting
the cow, the local people carefully take the last part of the cow’s RUOT and
preserve it. The next steps to cook the dish are also hard. After boiling the
cow’s bones for hours until the sauce become sweet, we pour all ingredients
into the pot and continue to boil it for hours. When the sauce reaches a
brownish color, the last part of the cow’s RUOT is then added. After about one
more hour, we can take the pot out of the fire!
The next step, and also an essential
one, is to add a local spice called Mac Khen as well as citronella, ginger, and
garlic. When eating, we will notice that Pia tastes bitter at first, but it
then becomes sweet and buttery. If we want to eat it right away, we can pour
Pia into small bowls, use spoons and have it with veggies. However, it is
strongly recommended that you eat the dish as a sauce.