Vietnamese caramel sauce (nước màu) is not a sweet dessert caramel but a deeply bitter, nearly black caramel used as a colouring and flavouring agent in braises and stews. It appears in ca kho (caramelised fish), thịt kho (caramelised pork), and across the Vietnamese braised dish repertoire. The technique takes sugar to the edge of carbonisation — far darker than any Western caramel application.
Sugar cooked in a heavy pan without any liquid until it reaches a deep mahogany, then a small amount of water added to arrest the cooking. The resulting caramel is bitter, complex, and intensely dark — used in small quantities to colour and flavour braised dishes.
Vietnamese caramel in a braise performs the same role as soy sauce in Chinese cooking — it adds depth, colour, and a slight bitterness that prevents the dish from reading as sweet despite the sugar content. Without it, a Vietnamese braised pork dish reads as pale and flat. With it, it reads as complex and deeply seasoned.
- Use a dry pan — no water in the initial cooking. Water-started caramel produces a lighter colour and more even cooking but lacks the depth of dry caramel [VERIFY method] - Take the caramel to near-black — the colour should be significantly darker than the golden-amber of Western caramel. At this depth the bitterness balances the sweetness of the braise it flavours - Add the water carefully and stand back — the steam eruption is violent at this temperature - The finished sauce stores indefinitely — make in advance and use by the tablespoon Decisive moment: The colour and smoke — when the caramel is deep mahogany and beginning to smoke slightly, add the water immediately. The first wisps of smoke indicate the edge of carbonisation is approaching.
VIETNAMESE FOOD ANY DAY — Technique Entries VN-01 through VN-20