Phu Quoc flavors
Ghẹ Hàm Ninh (Hàm Ninh Crab)
Small blue swimmer crabs from the seagrass beds off Hàm Ninh village, prized for firm, sweet meat. Usually steamed whole and dipped in salt, pepper, and lime, eaten on stilt-house jetties over the water.
About this dish
Hàm Ninh is one of the oldest fishing villages on Phu Quoc, a cluster of weathered stilt houses on the island's calm eastern coast facing the seagrass beds where its famous crabs are caught. The blue swimmer crabs (ghẹ) trapped here are smaller than mainland varieties but renowned across Vietnam for meat that is firm, white, and exceptionally sweet, with a generous amount of golden roe — a quality locals attribute to the rich seagrass feeding grounds. Tradition demands the lightest possible touch: the crabs are steamed whole within hours of being landed and served with nothing more than a dipping mix of salt, cracked Phu Quoc black pepper, and fresh lime, so their natural sweetness leads. The classic way to eat them is at one of the village's jetty restaurants built out over the sea, where you can watch fishing boats unload the very catch you are about to crack open.
Allergen information
Preparation methods may vary by restaurant. Always confirm with staff if you have severe allergies.
Where to try
Hàm Ninh fishing village jetty restaurants; Biển Xanh Restaurant (Provincial Road 47, Hàm Ninh)