BATAAN | Loleng’s Hu Tieu-an ~ Going Vietnamese in Morong

Thursday, February 04, 2016

Loleng’s Hu Tieu-an in Morong, Bataan

One of the things that made its lasting mark on me during our Vietnam trip a few years back is banh mi; a bread snack hawked along the sidewalks of Ho Chi Minh. Imagine this; French bread sliced in half and filled with all sorts of veggies, meat, pâté, and cheese (Laughing Cow, at that), all for almost next to nothing. Never, in my wild imaginings that I would be mouth to mouth with this Vietnamese delight once again during our Pawikan Festival trip in Bataan.

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Loleng’s Hu Tieu-an in Morong, Bataan
LOLENG’S SIMPLE STREET FACADE

Loleng’s Hu Tieu-an is a humble non-descript eatery located on one of the narrow side streets of Barangay Binaritan in Morong. The place is not air-conditioned, the furnishing is very simple, and its floor—left unfinished. You’d hardly take a second look if not for its peculiar name and the number of people going in and out of its door.

Loleng’s Hu Tieu-an in Morong, Bataan
OPEN-AIRED INTERIORS

This Vietnamese eatery opened during the nineties as Vietnamese, Laotian, and Cambodian refugees started to immigrate into the United States from Bataan’s Philippine Refugee Processing Center (PRPC). Loleng, whom the restaurant was named after, was a former cook in the center, and had since learned the art of Vietnamese cuisine from the refugees seeking temporary asylum in the country during the Vietnam War.

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Loleng’s Hu Tieu-an in Morong, Bataan
HU TIEU NOODLES WITH ITS SOUP ON A SEPARATE BOWL

The end result is Loleng’s Hu Tieu-an, hu tieu being a noodle soup quite similar to pho, only with a golden brown pork broth usually topped with slices of meat, toasted garlic, beans sprouts, leeks, and other leafy veggies. The an from Hu Tieu-an, I assume, comes from the Filipino way of indicating a place of happening via suffix, think lugaw-an.

Loleng’s Hu Tieu-an in Morong, Bataan
BUN CHA GIO?

Besides Vietnamese dishes, the eatery also offers Filipino favorites like palabok, spaghetti, lumpiang shanghai, to name a few. But, really, why have these when you can try something much more unique? So, off we went, ordering one foreign-sounding Vietnamese food after another.

Loleng’s Hu Tieu-an in Morong, Bataan
BUN TIT NUONG, I THINK?

Bun cha gio, Bun tit nuong, Bahn mi. Hu tieu special. Apologies if I could not remember which one was which as each dish started to overwhelm the next as they came along. All I can say was everything’s good. Not over-the-top this-is-almost-Vietnam good, but just right. For it’s price (and probably, the availability of legit Vietnamese ingredients in our country), you’d never really expect something that would swoosh you back to the streets of Vietnam.

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Loleng’s Hu Tieu-an in Morong, Bataan
BANH MI! I’M SURE!

Me, I’m just happy with my bahn mi. They’re using some sort of hotdog bun instead of the typical French bread, they don’t have any Laughing Cow, and the meat tastes different—but hey, we’re still in Bataan here, not Ho Chi Minh. A meal to bring back a few fond memories of Vietnam for fifty pesos ain’t that bad at all.

~ MY GRATITUDE GOES OUT TO OUR FRIENDS FROM BATAAN TOURISM FOR SPONSORING OUR MEAL


Loleng’s Hu Tieu-an
Address: Mayor's Street, Barangay Binaritan, Morong, Bataan
Contact Number: (0949) 565-7466
Opening Hours: 7:00 AM to 9:00 PM Everyday
Facebook | Menu
GPS Coordinates Map: 14.681561, 120.268551



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12 comments

  1. Wow! They have amazing and delicious foods. It's an interesting place. Thanks for sharing!

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  2. 1 words for this food : Wonderful. What place you tried that food?

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    Replies
    1. Hi Halong, this is in Morong, Bataan in the Philippines :)

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  3. Yeah. I tried Hu Tieu at here. It tastes really great!

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  4. I enjoy Hu tieu very much, it must be delicious and must eat here

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  5. Hi, thanks for sharing! My parents were refugees at the Bataan processing center in the 80's. Just curious, does anyone know if the processing center is still open to visitors or tours? I will be visiting PI in March.

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    1. Hi, unfortunately, I'm not sure if the processing center have tours or is even open for visitors since we didn't go there

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    2. Hello, I'm from Bataan. The used-to-be processing center is still open for the public. It's now called BTPI- Bataan Technological Park, Inc. Inside the compound are the place where the Pope visited, The Boat People Museum, Freedom Plaza and Kai Lodge. Oh, they also have an olympic size pool, basketball court, and a function hall. Although they improve the place, you can still see the traces of the past. The old buildings are still there but some of them are not functionable or habitable.

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