banh mi bi (shredded pork skin banh mi) with shredded pork skin filling, pickled daikon and carrot, cilantro and jalapeño on dark slate

BÁNH MÌ BÌ (SHREDDED PORK SKIN BÁNH MÌ)

Bánh mì bì is the shredded pork skin version. The filling is not sliced or ground. It is pulled into thin strands, mixed with thinly sliced pork meat, and tossed with roasted rice powder until every strand is coated. The powder is what makes bì taste like bì. It adds a dry, nutty warmth that no other preparation in the archive produces.

The texture is the point. Chả lụa is smooth and bouncy. Nem nướng is charred and springy. Bì is dry, slightly chewy, and fragrant. It sits inside the sandwich with a completely different mouthfeel from every other protein in the archive. The Vietnamese mayonnaise and pâté provide the fat and moisture. The bì provides the texture and the roasted grain flavor that pulls the whole sandwich together.

banh mi bi (shredded pork skin banh mi) with shredded pork skin filling, pickled daikon and carrot, cilantro and jalapeño on dark slate
L. Nguyen

Bánh Mì Bì (Shredded Pork Skin Bánh Mì)

Thinly shredded pork skin and pork meat tossed with roasted rice powder and fried garlic, layered with pork liver pâté and Vietnamese mayonnaise on a Glass Crust baguette. The texture version. [ INTERMEDIATE ]
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Chilling Time 1 hour
Total Time 1 hour 50 minutes
Servings: 4 bánh mì
Course: Sandwich
Cuisine: Vietnamese

Ingredients
  

The Bì Filling
  • 500 g pork skin, cleaned and scored
  • 200 g pork loin, sliced 3mm thick
  • 2 tbsp fish sauce
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • ½ tsp white pepper
  • 3 garlic cloves, finely minced
  • 2 tbsp neutral oil
The Rice Powder
  • 100 g raw white rice
The Fried Garlic
  • 4 garlic cloves, finely minced
  • 3 tbsp neutral oil
The Scallion Oil
  • 4 scallion stalks, thinly sliced
  • 3 tbsp neutral oil
  • ¼ tsp salt
The Pickles
  • 240 g đồ chua (pickled daikon and carrot), drained
The Assembly
  • 4 Vietnamese bánh mì baguettes (Glass Crust standard)
  • 60 g Vietnamese mayonnaise
  • 60 g pork liver pâté
  • 2 Persian cucumbers, sliced lengthwise into thin strips
  • 1 bunch fresh cilantro, stems trimmed
  • 2 jalapeños, sliced thin on a bias
  • Maggi Seasoning Sauce, for finishing

Equipment

  • Bread knife
  • Pâté Spreader / Offset Spatula
  • Mandoline slicer
  • Kitchen scale

Method
 

Make the Rice Powder
  1. Place the raw rice in a dry skillet over medium heat. Toast, stirring constantly, for 8 to 10 minutes until the grains turn deep golden brown and smell nutty. Do not walk away. The rice goes from golden to burnt in under a minute. Remove from heat immediately when the color is right.
  2. Transfer to a mortar and pestle or food processor. Grind to a fine powder. It should look like very fine breadcrumbs, pale tan in color. Sift through a fine mesh strainer if needed to remove any large pieces. Set aside. This powder is the defining ingredient of bì. It coats every strand of pork skin and meat and gives the filling its signature dry, nutty flavor and texture.
Prepare the Pork
  1. Place the pork skin in a large pot of cold water. Bring to a boil and blanch for 5 minutes. Drain and rinse under cold water. This removes excess fat and any impurities from the surface. Repeat once more with fresh cold water, bringing to a boil and simmering for 15 minutes until the skin is just tender but still has some resistance when pressed. It should not be soft or gelatinous at this stage.
  2. Remove the pork skin and lay flat on a tray. Refrigerate uncovered for 1 hour until completely cold and firm. Cold pork skin slices cleanly into thin strands. Warm pork skin tears unevenly and produces a greasy result.
  3. Using a sharp knife or mandoline slicer, cut the chilled pork skin into strands roughly 3mm wide and 4 to 5cm long. They should look like thin noodles. Set aside.
  4. Place the pork loin slices in a small bowl. Add fish sauce, sugar, white pepper, and minced garlic. Mix well and leave to marinate for 15 minutes.
  5. Heat neutral oil in a pan over medium heat. Add the marinated pork loin and cook for 3 to 4 minutes per side until cooked through and lightly colored. Remove from heat and leave to cool completely. Once cool, slice into thin strips matching the width of the pork skin strands.
Make the Fried Garlic
  1. Heat neutral oil in a small pan over medium-low heat. Add the minced garlic and fry gently, stirring constantly, for 3 to 4 minutes until lightly golden and fragrant. Watch closely. Garlic burns quickly and bitter burnt garlic ruins the bì. Remove from heat the moment it turns pale gold. The residual heat in the oil will continue to cook it slightly.
Make the Scallion Oil
  1. Place the sliced scallions and salt in a small heatproof bowl. Heat the neutral oil in a small pan over high heat until it just begins to smoke. Pour the hot oil directly over the scallions. They will sizzle loudly. Stir once and set aside. The hot oil wilts the scallions and releases their flavor into the oil. This scallion oil is drizzled over the bì just before assembly and provides the fresh aromatic finish the filling needs.
Assemble the Bì
  1. Combine the shredded pork skin and sliced pork loin in a large bowl. Add the fried garlic with its oil. Add 4 tablespoons of roasted rice powder. Toss together until every strand is evenly coated. The filling should look dry and nutty, not wet or glossy. Add more rice powder one tablespoon at a time if the filling looks too moist. Drizzle the scallion oil over the top and toss once more.
Assemble
  1. Split each baguette lengthwise, cutting three-quarters through. Do not cut completely. Open the bread. Apply Vietnamese mayonnaise to both cut surfaces. This is the fat barrier. It seals the bread and prevents the bì from making the crumb soggy.
  2. Spread pork liver pâté on the bottom half only.
  3. Add a generous layer of bì filling along the full length of the bread. Press it gently into the pâté so it stays in place.
  4. Add Persian cucumber strips across the bì. Add the drained đồ chua on top of the cucumber. Excess brine will make the sandwich soggy.
  5. Add cilantro in whole sprigs. Do not chop it. Add jalapeño slices. Two to three per sandwich is correct. Add three drops of Maggi Seasoning Sauce across the top. Close the sandwich and press down firmly. Serve immediately.

Notes

On Vietnamese mayonnaise: 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 flavor profile is different enough to affect the finished sandwich.
On the roasted rice powder: Make more than you need and store the excess in an airtight jar. It keeps for up to 3 months at room temperature and is used across multiple Vietnamese recipes including bún bì and cơm tấm. The powder is what makes bì taste like bì. Do not substitute store-bought breadcrumbs or any other powder.
On the rice powder yield: This recipe toasts 100g of raw rice which produces roughly 80g of rice powder. The bì filling uses 4 tablespoons, which is roughly 40g. The remaining powder keeps in an airtight jar for up to 3 months.
On the pork skin: Fresh pork skin is available at most Asian grocery stores. Look for it at the butcher counter, cleaned and scored. Frozen pre-shredded pork skin is also available in the freezer section of Vietnamese grocery stores and saves significant preparation time. If using frozen pre-shredded skin, thaw completely, blanch once in boiling water for 3 minutes, rinse under cold water, and proceed from the chilling step.
On chilling the pork skin: The 1 hour chill is not optional. Warm pork skin is soft and tears rather than slicing cleanly into strands. Cold pork skin holds its structure under a knife and produces the thin uniform strands that define the filling. Do not skip this step.
On the texture: Correctly made bì is dry to the touch, not wet or glossy. If the filling looks wet, add more rice powder one tablespoon at a time until the texture is right. The powder absorbs excess moisture and coats every strand evenly.
On the scallion oil: The scallion oil is a finishing element, not a cooking fat. It goes on last, after everything is assembled in the bowl. The heat of the fresh scallion oil releases aromatic compounds that lift the entire filling. Do not add it during cooking.
On the pickles: The đồ chua recipe on this site produces the correct pickle for this sandwich. Make it at least 1 hour ahead. If you have a jar already made, use it. The pickles keep for 2 weeks refrigerated.
On make-ahead: The rice powder keeps for 3 months. The bì filling keeps for 2 days refrigerated. Assemble the sandwiches to order. Do not pre-assemble.

[ THE SCIENCE ]

Roasted rice powder does two things at once in this recipe. First, it absorbs moisture from the surface of the pork skin and meat, keeping the filling dry and preventing it from making the bread soggy. Second, the toasting process transforms the raw starch in the rice through a reaction called pyrolysis, which breaks down the starch molecules and creates dozens of new flavor compounds including nutty, caramel, and slightly smoky notes. Think of it like the difference between raw flour and toasted bread. The same ingredient, but the heat creates an entirely different flavor profile. This is why you cannot substitute untoasted rice powder or any other starch. The flavor only exists after the heat transformation.

[ THE FAQ ]

What is the difference between bánh mì bì and bánh mì chả bì? Chả bì is a cold cut roll that contains bì as one of its ingredients, steamed and pressed into a firm cylinder, then sliced. Bánh mì bì uses the loose shredded filling directly as the sandwich protein without any further processing. Chả bì is structured and sliceable. Bánh mì bì is loose, dry, and textured. They share the same base ingredient but produce completely different results in the sandwich.

Can I buy bì pre-made instead of making it from scratch? Yes. Pre-shredded pork skin is available in the freezer section of most Vietnamese grocery stores. It comes already cooked and shredded. Thaw completely, blanch briefly, chill, then proceed from the assembly step. You still need to make the rice powder, fried garlic, and scallion oil from scratch. These are what give the bì its flavor.

Why does the pork skin need to be refrigerated before slicing? Cold pork skin is firm and slices cleanly into thin uniform strands. Warm pork skin is soft and gelatinous and tears unevenly when cut. The 1 hour chill is what makes the difference between a clean professional result and a ragged one.

Why is roasted rice powder used instead of regular rice flour? Raw rice flour has no flavor. The toasting process creates the nutty, slightly smoky flavor compounds that define the taste of bì. Regular rice flour would coat the filling without adding any flavor. Roasted rice powder coats and flavors at the same time.

Can I use chicken skin instead of pork skin? No. Chicken skin has a different fat content and collagen structure. It does not produce the same chewy, slightly gelatinous texture that pork skin delivers. Pork skin is the correct ingredient and there is no substitute that produces the same result.

[ THE EQUIPMENT ]

A mandoline slicer produces the consistent 3mm strands that bì requires. Hand-cutting pork skin into uniform thin strands is possible but takes significantly longer and produces less consistent results. A bread knife splits the Glass Crust baguette without crushing it. A pâté spreader or offset spatula applies the pork liver pâté in an even layer across the bottom half of the bread.

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

[ WHAT TO READ NEXT ]

Chả Bì is the cold cut roll that uses bì as its primary ingredient. Where bánh mì bì uses the loose shredded filling directly, chả bì steams and presses that same filling into a firm cylinder and slices it. The component page on this site covers the full preparation from scratch.

The Classic Bánh Mì Thịt Nguội is the sandwich where chả bì appears alongside chả lụa and giò thủ in the standard cold cut combination. Making bánh mì bì first is good preparation for understanding how this filling works within the larger architecture of the classic sandwich.

Đồ Chua is the pickle that appears in this sandwich. The full recipe covers the brine ratio in detail. If you have a jar already made, use it. The pickles in this recipe follow the same formula.