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Van Phuc

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Thanh Trì is a district ( huyện ) of Hanoi , the capital city of Vietnam .

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9-563: (Redirected from Vạn Phúc ) Van Phuc may refer to: Vạn Phúc, Hà Đông , a ward of Hà Đông District, near Hanoi, known for silk weaving Vạn Phúc, Thanh Trì  [ vi ] , a rural commune of Thanh Trì District , Hanoi Vạn Phúc, Hải Dương  [ vi ] , a rural commune of Ninh Giang District People with the given name [ edit ] Hoàng Văn Phúc (born 1964), Vietnamese football manager Nguyễn Văn Phúc (born 1981), Vietnamese powerlifter Topics referred to by

18-488: Is composed of one town (Văn Điển) and 15 communes: Thanh Liệt, Đông Mỹ, Yên Mỹ, Duyên Hà, Tam Hiệp, Tứ Hiệp, Ngũ Hiệp, Ngọc Hồi, Vĩnh Quỳnh, Tả Thanh Oai, Đại Áng, Vạn Phúc, Liên Ninh, Hữu Hòa and Tân Triều. On April 8, 2008, an Antonov An-26 aircraft on a training mission crashed into a field in Thanh Trì, killing five Vietnamese military pilots. It had taken off from Gia Lâm Airport , and crashed on its way back. The cause of

27-558: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Thanh Tr%C3%AC District Thanh Trì is located on the southeastern side of Hanoi, on the western bank of the Red River . It is adjacent to Thanh Xuân district in the northwest, Hoàng Mai district in the north, Hà Đông in the west, Gia Lâm district in the east (across the Red River), and Thanh Oai district and Thường Tín district in

36-560: The Qin dynasty when people from northern China invaded the south. Due to climatic conditions, the northern Chinese have traditionally preferred wheat and millet which grew in cold weather while the southern Chinese preferred rice which grew in hot weather. Noodles are traditionally made out of wheat and eaten throughout northern China so to adapt, northern cooks tried to prepare "noodles" using rice, thus inventing rice noodles. Over time rice noodles and their processing methods have been introduced around

45-506: The crash was unknown. A Vietnamese military official who declined to be named said the plane belonged to Vietnam's 918 Air Transport Regiment. Thanh Trì is famous for its variety of the rolled rice noodle dish bánh cuốn , called bánh cuốn Thanh Trì . This article about a location in Hanoi , Vietnam is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Rice noodle Rice noodles are noodles made with rice flour and water as

54-512: The principal ingredients. Sometimes ingredients such as tapioca or corn starch are added in order to improve the transparency or increase the gelatinous and chewy texture of the noodles. Rice noodles are most common in the cuisines of China , India and Southeast Asia . They are available fresh, frozen, or dried, in various shapes, thicknesses and textures. Fresh noodles are also highly perishable; their shelf life may be just several days. The origin of rice noodles dates back to China during

63-469: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Van Phuc . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Van_Phuc&oldid=992890011 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Disambiguation pages with given-name-holder lists Hidden categories: Short description

72-472: The south. Thanh Trì's terrain is mostly low-lying, gradually descending towards the southeast in the direction of flow of the Red River. The Tô Lịch River flows into the Red River within the district, and the many ponds, lakes and swamps nearby no doubt influenced the district's name; "Thanh Trì" means "blue/green pond", and the district's historical name, Thanh Đầm, means "blue/green lagoon". Thanh Trì district

81-648: The world, becoming especially popular in Southeast Asia . In India, idi-appam , strings of cooked rice, was known in ancient Tamil country around 1st century AD, as per references in the Sangam literature , according to food historian K. T. Achaya . The shelf life may be extended by drying and removing its moisture content. Studies of drying rice noodles were conducted by the International Food Research Journal. Pasta made from brown rice flour

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