7 Best Cold Vietnamese Treats for Summer 2026: Chè, Iced Coffee, Tropical Fruit Desserts to Beat the Heat

Vietnamese summer routinely tops 35°C with 80%+ humidity — and that punishing climate has produced one of the most diverse cold-dessert cultures on earth. Chè layers beans, coconut milk, jelly, and tropical fruit into a single bowl. Cà phê sữa đá pours triple-strength coffee over condensed milk and crushed ice. Yogurt-on-black-sticky-rice somehow works. This guide is a 7-treat playbook for visitors and residents who want to know what to order, where to order it, and how to do it safely — with named restaurants in Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi, a price comparison table, and three FAQs at the end.
Key takeaways
✅ 7 must-try cold Vietnamese treats: chè, cà phê sữa đá, sinh tố, sữa chua nếp cẩm, kem, tropical fruit plate, trà đá.
✅ Price ranges: street stalls 15,000–35,000 VND (USD 0.6–1.4); branded cafés 45,000–85,000 VND (USD 1.8–3.4).
✅ Named restaurant guide: 5 spots in Ho Chi Minh City (Chinatown to Ben Thanh area), 5 in Hanoi (West Lake and Old Quarter).
✅ Compared to Thai desserts: Vietnamese cold treats use less sugar overall, more coconut milk, and far more variety of textures (jellies, beans, sticky rice).
✅ Three safety rules: confirm ice is from bottled water, choose busy stalls, and keep cold-treat intake to 3 servings a day max.
目次
- Where Vietnam’s cold-dessert culture comes from — climate plus trade history
- Vietnamese vs. Thai vs. other Southeast Asian desserts — what makes Vietnam different
- The 7 cold treats to know in Vietnam (with named restaurants)
- 1. Chè (Chè / Vietnamese Sweet Soup)
- 2. Cà Phê Sữa Đá (Cà Phê Sữa Đá / Vietnamese Iced Milk Coffee)
- 3. Sinh Tố (Sinh Tố / Tropical Fruit Smoothie)
- 4. Sữa Chua Nếp Cẩm (Sữa Chua Nếp Cẩm / Yogurt with Black Sticky Rice)
- 5. Kem (Kem / Vietnamese Ice Cream)
- 6. Tropical Fruit Plate (Trái Cây Đĩa / Tô / Mixed Tropical Fruit Plate)
- 7. Trà Đá (Trà Đá / Iced Tea)
- HCMC guide: 5 cold-treat institutions locals love
- Hanoi guide: 5 cold-treat institutions around West Lake and Old Quarter
- Cold treats price comparison (per serving, May 2026)
- Safety: how to eat cold Vietnamese treats without getting sick
- Vietnamese cold-treat FAQ
- Final word: Vietnamese summer is the most dessert-rich season on earth
Where Vietnam’s cold-dessert culture comes from — climate plus trade history
Vietnam’s cold-dessert tradition emerged from French colonial-era ice-making technology (late 1800s–mid 1900s) layered onto centuries of Cantonese, Khmer, and Thai sweet-making traditions.
Saigon’s Cholon district (District 5) — settled by ethnic Chinese in the 19th century — brought Cantonese chè, mango pudding, and herbal jelly into the Vietnamese mainstream. Hanoi’s Old Quarter transformed French café glacé into the now-iconic cà phê sữa đá. Climate and trade routes intersected to create one of the world’s most diverse cold-treat cuisines.
Vietnamese vs. Thai vs. other Southeast Asian desserts — what makes Vietnam different
Travelers familiar with Thai mango sticky rice or Filipino halo-halo often ask what is unique about Vietnamese cold sweets. Three distinguishing features:
- Less sweetness, more texture diversity: a single bowl of Vietnamese chè typically contains 5–10 different ingredients (beans, jellies, fruit, sticky rice) with much less added sugar than halo-halo.
- Coffee culture as dessert: cà phê sữa đá is genuinely a dessert in Vietnam — drunk after meals, sweetened heavily with condensed milk, and served over ice. Thailand has nothing equivalent.
- Yogurt as base: sữa chua nếp cẩm (yogurt + black sticky rice) is uniquely Vietnamese — French dairy heritage meeting Vietnamese rice tradition.
The 7 cold treats to know in Vietnam (with named restaurants)
Each dish below includes verified restaurants in HCMC and Hanoi — name, address, hours, price, and what makes it stand out. Use this as a working shortlist when you are on the ground.
1. Chè (Chè / Vietnamese Sweet Soup)
| Vietnam’s answer to halo-halo — a bowl combining 5–10+ ingredients (beans, taro, lotus seeds, jelly, tapioca, fruit) with shaved ice and coconut milk. Lighter and less syrup-heavy than its Southeast Asian cousins. ◆ Chè Hà Ký — Saigon’s Chinatown classic Address: 138 Châu Văn Liêm, District 5, HCMC Hours: 10:00–23:00 Price: 25,000–45,000 VND (USD 1–1.8) Why it stands out: Cantonese-style chè family-run since the 1970s. Try đậu hũ nước đường (silken tofu in ginger syrup). ◆ Chè 4 Mùa — Hanoi Old Quarter staple Address: 4 Hàng Cân, Hoàn Kiếm, Hanoi Hours: 8:00–23:00 Price: 25,000–40,000 VND Why it stands out: 20+ chè varieties on the menu. Seasonal lychee chè in June. |
2. Cà Phê Sữa Đá (Cà Phê Sữa Đá / Vietnamese Iced Milk Coffee)
| Vietnam’s signature drink. Triple-strong robusta coffee dripped over condensed milk, then crashed into ice. Bitter, sweet, intensely caffeinated — the perfect afternoon antidote to Saigon heat. ◆ Cộng Cà Phê — nationwide retro chain Address: Multiple branches in Hanoi, HCMC, Da Nang Hours: 7:00–23:00 Price: 45,000–70,000 VND (USD 1.8–2.8) Why it stands out: Vietnam War-era aesthetic, famous for coconut coffee. Anchor of modern Vietnamese coffee tourism. ◆ The Workshop Coffee — HCMC specialty pioneer Address: 27 Ngô Đức Kế, District 1, HCMC Hours: 8:00–21:00 Price: 65,000–120,000 VND Why it stands out: Vietnam’s third-wave coffee pioneer with single-origin pours. |
3. Sinh Tố (Sinh Tố / Tropical Fruit Smoothie)
| Fresh fruit (mango, avocado, dragonfruit, jackfruit, sapodilla) blended with condensed milk, a splash of milk, and crushed ice. Sinh tố bơ — the avocado version — is the cult favorite. ◆ Sinh Tố 142 — HCMC local staple Address: 142 Lê Văn Sỹ, District 3, HCMC Hours: 9:00–23:00 Price: 25,000–45,000 VND (USD 1–1.8) Why it stands out: 10+ fruits on the daily menu. Sinh tố bơ (avocado) is the must-order. ◆ Street-side stalls (Old Quarter, around Ben Thanh) Price: 20,000–35,000 VND Why it stands out: Look for the “Sinh Tố” sign and point to the fruit you want. |
4. Sữa Chua Nếp Cẩm (Sữa Chua Nếp Cẩm / Yogurt with Black Sticky Rice)
| Sweet-cooked black sticky rice topped with house-made Vietnamese yogurt — a uniquely northern Vietnamese dessert that pairs French dairy heritage with Vietnamese rice tradition. Surprisingly digestion-friendly for a sweet dessert. ◆ Sữa Chua Trần Quang Khải Address: 12 Trần Quang Khải, Hoàn Kiếm, Hanoi Hours: 9:00–22:30 Price: 20,000–35,000 VND (USD 0.8–1.4) Why it stands out: The Hanoi reference for sữa chua nếp cẩm. Expat morning ritual. ◆ Sữa Chua Trân Châu Hạ Long — nationwide chain Address: Nationwide Price: 25,000–45,000 VND Why it stands out: Tapioca-pearl version popular with younger crowd. |
5. Kem (Kem / Vietnamese Ice Cream)
| French-influenced Vietnamese ice cream — coconut, sticky rice, mung bean, pandan, durian. Sold from cheap sidewalk bars to high-end gelato parlors. ◆ Kem Bạch Đằng — Saigon’s signature ice cream Address: 33 Lê Lợi, District 1, HCMC Hours: 9:00–23:00 Price: 50,000–120,000 VND (USD 2–4.8) Why it stands out: Half a century old. The “kem dừa” (coconut bowl ice cream) is the order. ◆ Kem Tràng Tiền — Hanoi’s national ice cream Address: 35 Tràng Tiền, Hoàn Kiếm, Hanoi Hours: 8:00–23:00 Price: 12,000–25,000 VND Why it stands out: 1958-vintage stand-up ice-cream chain. Local weekend ritual. |
6. Tropical Fruit Plate (Trái Cây Đĩa / Tô / Mixed Tropical Fruit Plate)
| Vietnam is a tropical fruit superpower. A typical plate combines mango, dragonfruit, rambutan, mangosteen, lychee, jackfruit, and pineapple. The “trái cây sữa chua” version adds condensed milk and crushed ice. ◆ Ben Thanh Market fruit corner — HCMC Address: Chợ Bến Thành, District 1, HCMC Hours: 7:00–19:00 Price: 50,000–120,000 VND / plate Why it stands out: Tourist-friendly, fresh-cut, sampling allowed. ◆ Dong Xuan Market food court — Hanoi Address: Chợ Đồng Xuân, Hoàn Kiếm, Hanoi Hours: 8:00–18:00 Price: 40,000–90,000 VND / plate Why it stands out: Local-priced fruit plates with seasonal lineup. |
7. Trà Đá (Trà Đá / Iced Tea)
| 3,000–10,000 VND (USD 0.12–0.40) iced tea from sidewalk stalls. The plastic-stool social fabric of Vietnamese neighborhoods. Green-tea base in HCMC, jasmine and lotus in Hanoi. ◆ Street-side stalls (Old Quarter and HCMC alleys) Price: 3,000–10,000 VND Why it stands out: Look for the “Trà Đá” sign and plastic stools. Sit, point, sip. ◆ Café chains (Highlands, Cộng, Phúc Long) Price: 15,000–35,000 VND Why it stands out: Safer hygiene choice for first-time visitors. |
HCMC guide: 5 cold-treat institutions locals love
- Chè Hà Ký | 138 Châu Văn Liêm, District 5 — Chinatown Cantonese chè patriarch.
- Kem Bạch Đằng | 33 Lê Lợi, District 1 — birthplace of the kem dừa (coconut-shell ice cream).
- Sinh Tố 142 | 142 Lê Văn Sỹ, District 3 — the local sinh tố reference.
- Cộng Cà Phê | nationwide — retro-revolution café chain, coconut coffee originator.
- Hoa Đậu Biếc Chè Thái | 198/2A Lê Văn Sỹ, District 3 — Thai-style chè crossover.
💡 Ho Chi Minh City Street Food Tour (Ben Thanh Market fruit and chè stalls included)
Hanoi guide: 5 cold-treat institutions around West Lake and Old Quarter
- Kem Tràng Tiền | 35 Tràng Tiền, Hoàn Kiếm — Hanoi’s national ice cream since 1958.
- Chè 4 Mùa | 4 Hàng Cân, Hoàn Kiếm — Old Quarter chè staple with 20+ varieties.
- Sữa Chua Trần Quang Khải | 12 Trần Quang Khải — Hanoi shrine for yogurt-on-black-rice.
- Café Đinh | 13 Đinh Tiên Hoàng — lake-view café for the perfect cà phê sữa.
- Kem Hồ Tây | West Lake — summer-only sidewalk ice cream cluster around the lake.
Cold treats price comparison (per serving, May 2026)
Quick reference for budgeting your dessert hopping day. 1 USD ≈ 25,000 VND.
| Item | Street stall (VND) | Café / shop (VND) | Stall in USD |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chè | 20,000–40,000 | 35,000–70,000 | USD 0.8–1.6 |
| Cà phê sữa đá | 15,000–25,000 | 45,000–120,000 | USD 0.6–1 |
| Sinh tố | 20,000–35,000 | 45,000–85,000 | USD 0.8–1.4 |
| Sữa chua nếp cẩm | 20,000–35,000 | 35,000–55,000 | USD 0.8–1.4 |
| Kem (ice cream) | 12,000–25,000 | 60,000–120,000 | USD 0.5–1 |
| Fruit plate | 40,000–90,000 | 90,000–180,000 | USD 1.6–3.6 |
| Trà đá | 3,000–10,000 | 15,000–35,000 | USD 0.12–0.40 |
Safety: how to eat cold Vietnamese treats without getting sick
Three rules every Vietnam expat lives by:
- Confirm ice is bottled-water based. Transparent, regular-shape ice (factory-cut) is safe. Cloudy, irregular ice is high-risk and the leading cause of street-food food poisoning.
- Busy stalls are safer. High turnover = fresh stock. Empty stalls = food that has been sitting.
- Limit cold-treat intake to 3 servings a day. Excessive cold consumption in hot weather strains your GI system and causes the classic “tourist stomach.”
First-time visitors: stick to café chains (Highlands, Cộng, Phúc Long) for your first 1–2 days, then graduate to street stalls once you have built local stomach immunity.
💡 HCMC Vietnamese Cooking Class — covers chè and Vietnamese sweets in a hygiene-controlled environment
[Saily eSIM | Referral code: DOMUEH5022 — light mention]
Translating Vietnamese signage like “Sinh Tố” and finding local chè shops on Google Maps needs reliable data. Saily activates before you leave home; entering referral code DOMUEH5022 at signup nets 5–20 USD in Saily credit.
→ Open the official Saily website
Vietnamese cold-treat FAQ
Q1. Are street-stall chè and smoothies safe for tourists?
A. Yes, at busy stalls. Look for three signs: ice in regular transparent shapes (factory-cut, not handmade), ingredients stored in glass cases, and high customer turnover. Avoid stalls with no line or visibly older ingredients. First-time visitors should ease in with chain cafés (Highlands, Cộng, Phúc Long) for 1–2 days before graduating to street.
Q2. What’s the difference between Saigon and Hanoi cold-dessert culture?
A. Saigon (HCMC) inherits Cantonese chè from Cholon Chinatown and Thai-influenced sweet variants. Coconut-based ice cream (Kem Bạch Đằng) is a Saigon icon. Hanoi specialises in northern traditional desserts — sữa chua nếp cẩm and Kem Tràng Tiền — with stronger French-colonial influence. Visiting both cities, you eat two different dessert cultures.
Q3. Can I bring Vietnamese cold treats home as souvenirs?
A. Fresh chè and sinh tố don’t travel, but commercially-produced Vietnamese ice cream (factory-sealed), dried fruit, Vietnamese coffee drip packs, and canned coconut milk are all flight-safe. Top souvenirs: Cộng Cà Phê drip coffee packs, Vinacafé instant coffee, and Trung Nguyên premium coffee tins.
Final word: Vietnamese summer is the most dessert-rich season on earth
Vietnam’s summer heat is brutal — but the consolation prize is one of the world’s most diverse cold-dessert cultures, spanning a 30× price range from a 3,000 VND iced tea on a plastic stool to a 120,000 VND specialty cà phê sữa at a third-wave roaster. No other country has this density and variety of cold treats per square kilometer.
Browse VIETGOHAN for more curated cold-treat restaurants foreign residents and visitors actually return to — beyond the famous stalls in this guide.

