Hands assembling a classic bánh mì thịt nguội on a Hanoi street cart

The bánh mì thịt nguội is the original. Before the grilled pork, before the tofu, before every variation that came after, there was this: a combination of Vietnamese cold cuts on a Glass Crust baguette, built according to a logic that has not changed in decades.

Thịt nguội means cold cuts. In a bánh mì, that means chả lụa, chả bì, and head cheese, layered in a specific order on a specific bread, with pickled daikon and carrot, fresh cilantro, cucumber (fresh or pickled), and jalapeño. Mayonnaise on both sides. Pâté on the bottom. Maggi Seasoning Sauce at the end.

Every component has a function. None of them are decorative. This recipe builds the sandwich the way it is built at every street cart in Hà Nội and Sài Gòn that does it correctly.

L. Nguyen

Classic Bánh Mì Thịt Nguội

The definitive cold cut bánh mì. Chả lụa, chả bì, and pâté layered on a Glass Crust baguette with pickled daikon and carrot, fresh cilantro, and jalapeño. Every component has a job. [ INTERMEDIATE ]
Prep Time 30 minutes
Pickle Time 1 hour
Total Time 1 hour 30 minutes
Servings: 4 sandwiches
Course: Sandwich
Cuisine: Vietnamese

Ingredients
  

The Bread
  • 4 bánh mì baguettes
The Cold Cuts
  • 200 g chả lụa (Vietnamese pork roll) thinly sliced
  • 150 g chả bì (shredded pork skin sausage) thinly sliced
  • 100 g head cheese or pâté de campagne
The Spread
  • 60 g Vietnamese mayonnaise (recipe at banhmilabs.com/vietnamese-banh-mi-mayonnaise-recipe) or Kewpie if using store-bought
  • 60 g liver pâté store-bought is fine
The Pickles
  • 200 g daikon radish, julienned
  • 200 g carrots, julienned
  • 120 ml unseasoned rice vinegar
  • 120 ml water
  • 30 g sugar
  • 8 g fine sea salt
The Finish
  • 1 English cucumber, thinly sliced lengthwise
  • 1 large handful fresh cilantro
  • 2 jalapeños, thinly sliced
  • Maggi Seasoning Sauce, to taste

Equipment

  • Bread knife
  • Mandoline slicer
  • Mixing bowl
  • Kitchen scale

Method
 

  1. Combine the rice vinegar, water, sugar, and salt in a bowl and stir until the sugar and salt dissolve completely. Add the julienned daikon and carrots. Press them down so they are fully submerged. Leave at room temperature for at least 1 hour. The vegetables are ready when they have softened slightly and taste sharp and clean. They will keep in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks.
  2. Split each baguette lengthwise, cutting about three quarters of the way through. Do not cut all the way through. The hinge keeps the sandwich together. Open the bread and press it flat gently with your palm.
  3. Spread a thin, even layer of mayonnaise on both inner surfaces of the bread. Then spread the pâté on the bottom half only. The mayonnaise goes on both sides. The pâté stays on the bottom. The fat layers create a moisture barrier that keeps the bread from going soggy. Do not skip either one.
  4. Lay the chả lụa slices on the pâté layer first. Add the chả bì on top. Finish with a thin layer of head cheese if using. The cold cuts should cover the full length of the bread without stacking too thick in any one spot.
  5. Lay the cucumber slices along the length of the sandwich. Add a generous amount of drained pickled daikon and carrot. The pickles should be piled slightly higher than you think is right. They compress when you close the sandwich.
  6. Add the cilantro sprigs whole. Do not chop them. Lay the jalapeño slices over the top. Add 3 to 4 drops of Maggi Seasoning Sauce directly onto the filling. Close the sandwich and press down firmly with your palm. Serve immediately.

Notes

Vietnamese mayonnaise is the correct choice here. The recipe is on this site. If you do not have time to make it from scratch, Kewpie is the correct store-bought substitute. Do not use standard mayonnaise. The flavour profile is different enough to affect the finished sandwich.
Chả lụa and chả bì are available at Vietnamese grocery stores and most Asian supermarkets. If unavailable, substitute with good quality mortadella for the chả lụa and roast pork for the chả bì.
If you are outside a major Vietnamese market, build the sandwich with chả lụa and pâté only. A two-component thịt nguội is still correct. A thịt nguội made with poor substitutes is not.
 

 

[ THE SCIENCE ]

The pickle brine in this recipe is a 1:1 ratio of rice vinegar to water with 25% sugar by weight. That ratio produces pickles that are sharp enough to cut through the fat of the pâté and mayonnaise without being so acidic that they overpower the cold cuts. The balance is precise. Adjust the vinegar up and the sandwich becomes sour. Adjust it down and the pickles taste flat.

The fat barrier is the other critical element. Vietnamese mayonnaise on both inner surfaces creates a waterproof layer between the bread and the wet ingredients. Pâté on the bottom half adds a second layer of fat between the bread and the pickles. Without both layers, the bread absorbs moisture from the pickles within minutes and goes soft. With both layers, the sandwich stays structurally sound for up to 30 minutes after assembly. That is why bánh mì street carts in Vietnam wrap and hand you the sandwich immediately. The clock starts when the bread is cut. For a Maggi dipping sauce to serve alongside the sandwich, see the Maggi Dipping Sauce recipe.

[ THE FAQ ]

Q: What is thịt nguội? Thịt nguội means cold cuts in Vietnamese. In a bánh mì, it refers to a combination of Vietnamese pork charcuterie, typically chả lụa, chả bì, and head cheese, layered together on a single sandwich. It is the most common bánh mì filling and the one most people encounter first.

Q: What is chả lụa? Chả lụa is a Vietnamese steamed pork sausage made from lean pork, fish sauce, and tapioca starch, wrapped and steamed in banana leaves. It has a smooth, dense texture and a clean pork flavor. It is the foundational cold cut in a thịt nguội bánh mì.

Q: Can I make this ahead of time? The pickles can be made up to 2 weeks ahead. That includes the Quick Pickled Cucumber if you are using it. The cold cuts can be sliced the night before. The sandwich itself should be assembled immediately before eating. A fully assembled bánh mì does not keep. The bread softens within 30 minutes.

Q: Where do I get Vietnamese cold cuts? Any Vietnamese grocery store will carry chả lụa and chả bì. In cities with large Vietnamese communities, these are standard grocery stock. If you cannot find them, substitute with good quality mortadella for the chả lụa and roast pork for the chả bì.

[ THE EQUIPMENT ]

A mandoline slicer produces the uniform julienned daikon and carrot that define the pickle texture. A bread knife with an offset handle cuts the baguette cleanly without crushing the Glass Crust. A kitchen scale ensures the brine ratio is exact.

The full equipment list with specific recommendations is on The Equipment page.

[ WHAT TO READ NEXT ]

This sandwich starts with the bread. The Glass Crust Bánh Mì Baguette recipe covers the exact flour ratio and steam method that produces the baguette used here.

The Equipment page covers every tool referenced in this recipe with specific product recommendations.