banh mi que (Hai Phong pate sticks) finger-sized Vietnamese baguettes with pork liver pâté and chi chuong chili sauce on dark slate

BÁNH MÌ QUE (HAI PHONG PÂTÉ STICKS)

Bánh mì que is not a smaller bánh mì. It is a different object entirely. The bread is roughly the width of two fingers and the length of one hand, baked until the shell is paper thin and the interior is nearly hollow. There is one filling inside: pork liver pâté. Nothing else. No mayonnaise, no pickles, no herbs, no meat. The restraint is deliberate.

The sandwich is never eaten alone. It comes with a small bowl of chí chương, a fermented chili sauce made from fresh chilies, garlic, tomato, and salt that is left to ferment for several days until the color turns vivid orange-red and the heat develops a sharp, funky edge. Every piece of bread gets dipped before eating. The pâté inside the bread and the chí chương on the outside are the entire dish. Every other bánh mì in the archive builds toward complexity. This one builds toward the minimum and stops there.

banh mi que (Hai Phong pate sticks) finger-sized Vietnamese baguettes with pork liver pâté and chi chuong chili sauce on dark slate
L. Nguyen

Bánh Mì Que (Hai Phong Pâté Sticks)

Finger-sized Vietnamese baguettes with a paper thin hollow shell, filled only with pork liver pâté and served with chí chương, the fermented chili dipping sauce of Hai Phong. The most minimal sandwich in the archive. [ INTERMEDIATE ]
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 18 minutes
Proofing Time 1 hour 30 minutes
Total Time 2 hours 8 minutes
Servings: 16 rolls
Course: Sandwich
Cuisine: Vietnamese

Ingredients
  

The Dough
  • 500 g high-protein bread flour, plus extra for dusting
  • 12 g instant dry yeast
  • 8 g salt
  • 10 g sugar
  • 15 g white vinegar
  • 300 ml water, lukewarm at 40°C / 104°F
  • 15 g neutral oil
The Filling
  • 200 g pork liver pâté, at room temperature
The Chí Chương
  • 8 fresh red chilies, roughly chopped
  • 4 garlic cloves, roughly chopped
  • 2 medium tomatoes, roughly chopped
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp sugar

Equipment

  • Baguette pan
  • Bread knife
  • Pâté Spreader / Offset Spatula

Method
 

Make the Chí Chương (2 to 3 days ahead)
  1. Combine the chopped red chilies, garlic, tomatoes, salt, and sugar in a clean glass jar. Stir to combine. Do not blend. The ingredients should remain roughly chopped, not pureed. Cover the jar with a piece of cheesecloth or a loose lid. Do not seal it airtight. The fermentation process requires airflow.
  2. Leave the jar at room temperature for 2 to 3 days, stirring once daily. The sauce is ready when the color has deepened to a vivid orange-red, the liquid has separated slightly, and the smell has developed a sharp fermented edge. Taste it. The heat should be upfront and the sourness should follow. Refrigerate once ready. It keeps for up to 2 weeks.
Make the Dough
  1. Combine the lukewarm water and yeast in a small bowl. Stir and leave for 10 minutes until the surface is foamy. If no foam appears the yeast is inactive. Do not proceed with dead yeast. The foam is the confirmation the yeast is alive and will leaven the dough correctly.
  2. Combine flour, salt, and sugar in a large bowl. Add the yeast mixture, white vinegar, and neutral oil. Mix until the dough comes together into a rough mass. Turn out onto a lightly floured surface and knead for 10 to 12 minutes until the dough is smooth, elastic, and springs back when pressed with a finger. The vinegar is not optional. It tightens the gluten structure in the outer layer of the dough and produces a thinner, crispier crust during baking. Without it the shell is thicker and chewier.
  3. Place the dough in a lightly oiled bowl, cover with a damp cloth, and leave to proof at room temperature for 1 hour to 1 hour 30 minutes until doubled in size.
Shape and Bake
  1. Preheat the oven to 220°C / 425°F. Place a small oven-safe dish of water on the bottom rack. The steam created during the first stage of baking prevents the crust from setting too early, which allows the bread to expand fully before the shell locks in place.
  2. Punch down the dough and divide into 16 equal pieces, roughly 50g each. Roll each piece into a thin log roughly 12cm long and 2cm wide, tapered at both ends. They should look like thick chopsticks. Place on a lightly floured baguette pan or baking tray, spacing 3cm apart.
  3. Cover loosely and leave to proof for a further 20 minutes. The rolls will puff slightly but should not double. Over-proofing at this stage produces a thick, bready interior rather than the correct hollow shell.
  4. Bake at 220°C / 425°F for 16 to 18 minutes until the crust is pale golden and sounds hollow when tapped on the bottom. Do not open the oven in the first 10 minutes. The steam must remain trapped to produce the correct crust texture. Remove from oven and cool on a wire rack for 5 minutes before splitting.
Assemble and Serve
  1. Split each roll lengthwise, cutting three-quarters through. Do not cut completely. Using a pâté spreader or offset spatula, spread pork liver pâté generously along the full length of the bottom half. The pâté should fill the interior completely. This is not a light spread. It is the entire filling.
  2. Serve immediately with chí chương in a small bowl on the side. Dip each roll into the sauce before each bite. Eat while the bread is still warm. A cold bánh mì que has a leathery crust and loses the textural contrast that defines the dish.

Notes

On the chí chương: The fermented chili sauce is not a shortcut ingredient. It cannot be replaced with sriracha or standard chili sauce. The fermentation develops a sour, funky heat that fresh chili sauce does not have. The fermented flavor is what cuts through the richness of the pâté. If you do not have 2 to 3 days to ferment, the dish is still worth making with a fresh chili sauce. But the authentic result requires the fermented version.
On the dough size: Each roll should weigh roughly 50g before baking. Larger rolls produce a thick-walled interior that does not hollow correctly. Smaller rolls produce a shell too thin to hold the pâté without collapsing. 50g is the correct weight for the authentic finger-sized result.
On the vinegar: White vinegar in the dough is the key technical difference between bánh mì que and a standard small baguette. The acid tightens the gluten network in the outer layer and accelerates crust formation in the oven. The result is a thinner, more brittle shell. Use unseasoned rice vinegar or plain white vinegar. Do not use apple cider vinegar.
On the hollow interior: A correctly made bánh mì que has very little crumb inside. The interior is almost hollow. This is not a defect. It is the correct result. The hollow space fills with pâté when the bread is pressed together after spreading. If the interior is dense and bready the oven temperature was too low or the rolls were over-proofed before baking.
On serving temperature: Bánh mì que is a hot food. The bread should be split and filled within 5 minutes of coming out of the oven. Street vendors in Hai Phong bake continuously throughout the day and sell each batch within minutes of it coming out. At home, bake in two batches if needed so each serving is as fresh as possible.
On the pâté quantity: 200g of pâté for 16 rolls produces roughly 12g per roll. This is the correct ratio. The pâté should be visible when the roll is split open and should coat the full length of the bread. Store-bought pâté works correctly here. Flower Brand pâté is the most widely available and produces a good result.
On serving size: This recipe makes 16 rolls. Four rolls per person is the correct serving for bánh mì que as a snack or light breakfast. Street vendors in Hai Phong sell them individually and most customers eat 3 to 6 at a sitting. Unlike every other recipe in the archive which yields one sandwich per person, bánh mì que is always eaten in multiples.
On storage: Bánh mì que does not store well. The crust softens within 2 hours at room temperature. Bake only what will be eaten immediately. The unbaked shaped rolls can be refrigerated overnight and baked directly from cold the following morning, adding 3 to 4 minutes to the baking time.

[ THE SCIENCE ]

The nearly hollow interior of a correctly made bánh mì que is not an accident of the recipe. It is the direct result of two things working together. First, the high oven temperature and steam create a rapid crust on the outside of the roll before the interior has fully expanded. Second, the vinegar in the dough tightens the outer gluten network, which sets into a rigid shell faster than the interior can fill with crumb. Think of it like blowing up a balloon inside a paper bag. The bag sets hard while the balloon is still inflating. When the balloon deflates as the bread cools, the rigid paper shell stays in place, leaving a gap between the crust and the crumb. That gap is the hollow. It is what makes bánh mì que structurally different from every other bread in the archive.

[ THE FAQ ]

What makes bánh mì que different from a regular small baguette? Three things. The size is smaller, roughly finger-width rather than hand-width. The interior is intentionally nearly hollow rather than fully crumbed. And it is always served with chí chương, the fermented chili sauce of Hai Phong, not with the standard bánh mì condiments of mayonnaise, pickles, and herbs. It is a minimalist sandwich built around two ingredients: pâté and fermented chili.

Can I substitute the chí chương with another chili sauce? A fresh chili sauce made from blended chilies, garlic, and tomato is an acceptable substitute if you do not have time to ferment. The flavor will be sharper and less complex but the dish still works. Sriracha is not a correct substitute. The texture is wrong and the vinegar base produces a completely different flavor profile against the pâté.

Why is the interior of the bread hollow? The hollow interior is the correct result, not a mistake. The high oven temperature and the vinegar in the dough work together to set the outer crust before the interior fully develops. The crumb that does form pulls away from the shell as the bread cools, leaving the hollow space. This space fills with pâté when the bread is pressed together after spreading, which is exactly what is supposed to happen.

Why does this recipe use vinegar in the dough? White vinegar tightens the gluten structure in the outer layer of the dough and accelerates crust formation during baking. The result is a thinner, more brittle shell than a standard baguette. This is the technical reason bánh mì que has a different crust texture from every other bread in the archive.

How many rolls does this recipe make? 16 rolls from 500g of flour. Each roll weighs roughly 50g before baking. This is the correct size for bánh mì que. A standard bánh mì baguette uses roughly 120g of dough. Bánh mì que is less than half the size.

Can I make the dough the night before? Yes. After the first proof, punch down the dough, cover tightly, and refrigerate overnight. The next morning, remove from the fridge, divide and shape while cold, allow a 30 minute room temperature rest, then bake as directed. Cold dough is slightly easier to shape into the thin log form.

[ THE EQUIPMENT ]

A baguette pan produces the correct cylindrical shape for bánh mì que. The perforated channels allow hot air to circulate around the bottom of each roll and produce an evenly crisped crust on all sides. A flat baking tray produces a flat base and uneven crust development. A pâté spreader or offset spatula applies the pâté in an even layer along the full length of the bread without tearing the thin crust. A bread knife splits the rolls cleanly without crushing the hollow shell.

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

[ WHAT TO READ NEXT ]

Pork Liver Pâté is the only filling in this sandwich. The full recipe on this site covers the fat ratio and blending technique that produces the smooth, spreadable texture bánh mì que requires. A coarse or grainy pâté does not work in a roll this small.

The Glass Crust Baguette is the full-size version of the same bread logic. Where bánh mì que is finger-sized and nearly hollow, the Glass Crust baguette is the standard sandwich loaf. Both use high heat and steam to produce a thin shattering crust. The technique is the same. The scale is completely different.

Bánh Mì Bơ is the other minimalist sandwich in the archive. Where bánh mì que strips the sandwich down to pâté and fermented chili, bánh mì bơ strips it down to butter and Maggi Seasoning Sauce. Both are studies in how little a bánh mì needs to be complete.