Che Thai Recipe (No Cook Vietnamese Fruit co*cktail) (2024)

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Refreshing, light, fruity, lots of flavor, and so easy to make our Che Thai recipe is the Southeast Asian fruit co*cktail dessert you’ve probably never heard of but need to try.

Che Thai Recipe (No Cook Vietnamese Fruit co*cktail) (1)

Throughout Southeast Asia you can find versions of this fruit co*cktail. The two main names for it are Chè Thái in Vietnam and Thapthim krop (or tub tim krop) in Thailand.

The first time we had this cool dessert was in Thailand. Be sure to reach about our:

Food Guide to Bangkok

The Top Things to do in Chiang Mai

Krabi Thailand Travel Guide

What’s great about this Chè Thái recipe is that it can seriously be made by anyone in minutes.

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You can easily find every ingredient at your local Asian grocer or even if your grocery store has an excellent international aisle.

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This Vietnamese dessert drink recipe is like a combination of a sweet soup, ice cream, shaved ice, and a fruit co*cktail all-in-one.

This Che Thai recipe is a no-cook recipe because we’re removing the cooking element that requires red food coloring, agar agar powder, tapioca starch, water chestnuts, or dry tapioca that require boiling to create red rubies.

When these elements are used they’re made to represent faux pomegranate seeds.

We just prefer the real things for both flavor and health.

Real pomegranate seeds are a super-food that’s packed with nutrients, antioxidants, and have even been found to benefit brain health.

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It starts with a base of either heavy cream, half & half, coconut milk, or a mixture of any of them.

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From there it is a mixture of texture items (toddy palm seeds, grass jelly, tapioca balls, mung beans, pandan jelly, and ai-yu jelly), canned fruit (longan, jackfruit, rambutan, and other tropical fruits), and fresh fruit like the can items mentioned and pomegranate seeds.

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This dessert fruit co*cktail is no stress. If you’re missing one of these fruits or you prefer a different addition you can get creative.

We also like replacing canned fruit with our favorite fruits whenever we find them in season.

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This tasty dessert is a true personal preference, choose your own adventure treat.

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Che Thai Fruit co*cktail Recipe

Cook Time: 15 Minutes

Yields: 12 servings

Ingredients:

  • 1 can of rambutan
  • 1 can longan
  • 1 can sweet jackfruit (or fresh jackfruit slices to add a lot of flavor and texture)
  • 1 can toddy palms seeds
  • 1 can ai-yu jelly or other grass jelly
  • 1 can or jar of nata de coco (coconut jelly)
  • ½ cup fresh pomegranate seeds
  • 2 cups of coconut milk, cream, or half & half
  • ¼ cup crushed ice (for each serving)

Directions:

  • To make che thai you start by chopping your jellies and fruits to small bite shapes like squares and strips.
  • For any of the cans of fruit that you love, reserve half of their juice to add extra sweetener and flavor to the fruit co*cktail punch bowl.
  • From there you add the mix of ingredients all into a bowl with a quarter to half of their canned fruit juices and your cream base of choice.
  • Mix it all together
  • Refrigerate for 15 minutes to get the flavors together.
  • When ready to serve, spoon it into a glass. Top with crushed ice for an additional texture and fun cooling element.
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Che Thai Recipe

Yield: 12 Servings

Prep Time: 15 minutes

Total Time: 15 minutes

This no cook Che Thai recipe is so easy a toddler could make it, and it's packed with delicious tropical fruit and flavors.

Ingredients

  • 1 can of rambutan
  • 1 can longan
  • 1 can sweet jackfruit (or fresh jackfruit slices to add a lot of flavor and texture)
  • 1 can toddy palms seeds
  • 1 can ai-yu jelly or other grass jelly
  • 1 can or jar of nata de coco (coconut jelly)
  • ½ cup fresh pomegranate seeds
  • 2 cups of coconut milk (you can also use cream or half & half)
  • ¼ cup crushed ice (for each serving)

Instructions

  1. To make che thai you start by chopping your jellies and fruits to small bite shapes like squares and strips.
  2. For any of the cans of fruit that you love, reserve half of their juice to add extra sweetener and flavor to the fruit co*cktail punch bowl.
  3. From there you add the mix of ingredients all into a bowl with a quarter to half of their canned fruit juices and your cream base of choice.
  4. Mix it all together and refrigerate for at least 15 minutes to get the flavors together.
  5. When ready to serve, spoon it into a glass and top with crushed ice for an additional texture and fun cooling element.

Notes

  • Reserve adding the crushed ice until each bowl is served.
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    Che Thai Recipe (No Cook Vietnamese Fruit co*cktail) (12)

    In Texas we’d much rather have this Che Thai recipe at a barbecue after eating heavy smoked meats over any traditional dessert or fruit salad because it’s refreshing and can cool you down.

    Che Thai Recipe (No Cook Vietnamese Fruit co*cktail) (13)

    It’s also such a good thing that this easy recipe serves a group, because we always go back for seconds.

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    Che Thai Recipe (No Cook Vietnamese Fruit co*cktail) (14)
    Che Thai Recipe (No Cook Vietnamese Fruit co*cktail) (2024)

    FAQs

    What is Che Thai made of? ›

    Che Thai is a popular Vietnamese dessert that typically consists of a sweet soup or pudding made with coconut milk, mixed with various colorful fruits and chewy jelly, and sweetened with sugar. The fruit mix usually includes items like jackfruit, longan, lychee, coconut, and other tropical fruits.

    What is Vietnamese Che made of? ›

    Chè includes a wide variety of distinct soups or puddings. Varieties of Chè can be made with mung beans, black-eyed peas, kidney beans, tapioca, jelly (clear or grass), fruit (longan, mango, durian, lychee or jackfruit), and coconut cream.

    What is the most popular dessert in Vietnam? ›

    Along with many delighting desserts, 'chè bắp' is the famous one in Vietnamese cuisine. This is a typical Vietnamese pudding, or dessert soup, made with main ingredients including sweet corn, glutinous rice, and is often topped with thick, syrupy coconut milk and toasted sesame seeds.

    What is Nam Wan? ›

    Nam wan is a classic Lao dessert and it translates to sweetened water. You can think of the word “nam wan” as an umbrella word for many other types of sweetened coconut milk drink desserts. It is typically made with sweetened coconut milk with various toppings.

    What fruits are in fruit co*cktail? ›

    A tasty combo of preservative- and fat-free peaches, pears, grapes, pineapple, and cherries, packed fresh in 100% real fruit juice from concentrate.

    What is the Vietnamese version of Halo Halo? ›

    Chè ba màu in Vietnamese translates to “three color dessert,” and is similar to chè Thái, and shares a lot with Filipino halo-halo. While this recipe is fairly easy to make, there are a few steps that require some waiting like the mung bean and pandan jelly layers.

    What is Vietnamese che in English? ›

    Che is a Vietnamese word that refers to any dessert in liquid form. It can be a drink, a pudding, or even a sweet soup. Chè Thái is basically an Asian version of fruit co*cktail with coconut milk. It was inspired by a Thai dessert known as tub tim krob, hence the work "Thai" added to che.

    What is the difference between Thai and Vietnamese cooking? ›

    The Vietnamese cooking process consists of boiling, steaming, deep-frying, and stir-frying. Thai dishes use more base ingredients. There is a large emphasis on the use of coconut milk and shrimp paste. The Thai cooking process is usually achieved through stir-frying, grilling, tossing, and deep-frying.

    Why is Vietnamese food so different? ›

    Vietnamese cuisine is based on fresh ingredients, minimal cooking, lots of leafy greens and fish, very limited amounts of animal protein and fat, and moderate use of sugar.

    What is the most eaten fruit in Vietnam? ›

    1. Vietnamese Jackfruit (Mít) Jackfruit is among the most popular Vietnamese fruits. These oblong-shaped fruits can grow up to 90 centimeters long and weigh 10–20 kilograms per fruit.

    What are candied fruits in Vietnam? ›

    For the Vietnamese, 'jam' is an assortment of dried, candied fruits, made using a sugar syrup to preserve and enhance the natural sweetness of pineapple, kumquat, mango, orange rind, and coconut. All of those golden hues are sure to bring good fortune.

    Where is Nam Van from? ›

    Nam Van is a popular dessert in Southeast Asia, and it's a fruity, coconut milky dessert that's unlike anything you'll ever try. More liquid than a pudding, it's refreshing and not overly sweet.

    Where did Che dessert originate from? ›

    Chè is the Vietnamese term for a wide variety of traditional desserts. They are considered the best-kept secrets of Vietnamese cuisine and we are thrilled to share them with you. Chè comes in various forms. There are warm, hearty chè dishes for the winter breeze.

    What is the green stuff in Thai food? ›

    Thai cuisine often uses fresh (green) peppercorns in stir fried dishes and in certain curries such as kaeng pa (so-called jungle curry). Very large, mild tasting pale-green peppers which can be found in certain stir fried dishes or deep fried stuffed with, for instance, pork.

    What are Pattaya noodles made of? ›

    It's traditionally made with rice noodles (which were borrowed from Chinese cuisine), egg, tofu, dried shrimp, and a salty-sweet-sour sauce. The sauce is usually made simply with palm sugar, tamarind, and fish sauce or soy sauce.

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