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.
Che Thai Recipe (No Cook Vietnamese Fruit co*cktail) (10)

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) (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 does che in Vietnamese mean? ›

    Pronounced with a falling or down tone, the Vietnamese chè is the name of a range of desserts that appear quite daunting at first. Not to be mistaken for any kind of relation to Che Guevara, the Argentine revolutionary, Vietnamese chè is often translated as “sweet soup”.

    What are the fruits in a 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 Che Ba Mau made of? ›

    Chè ba màu consists of vibrant layers of sweet mung beans, soft kidney beans (you'll also see it with red beans), and bouncy pandan jelly. The cups are filled to the brim with ice and coconut milk, which swirl together to create an unexpectedly delicious dessert-drink hybrid.

    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.

    What oil is used in Vietnamese cooking? ›

    Coconut, Sesame and Peanut Oil

    Sesame Oil: Toasted (dark) sesame oil is used in Vietnamese cooking, just like it is in Chinese, Japanese, and Korean cooking. I favor the consistently deep flavor of sesame oil produced in Japan.

    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 che a nickname for? ›

    Che' is a form of colloquial slang commonly used in Argentina and Uruguay in a vocative sense as "friend" and thus loosely corresponds to expressions like "mate," "pal," "man," "bro," or "dude." Ernesto "Che" Guevara earned his nickname from his frequent use of the expression, which to his Cuban comrades in the Cuban ...

    What kind of cake do Vietnamese eat? ›

    Banh bo nuong, or Vietnamese honeycomb cake, is a type of Vietnamese pandan cake. It is one of the most iconic cakes in Vietnamese cuisine. This Vietnamese cake is made from rice flour, yeast, and coconut milk, and flavored with pandan leaves or brown sugar.

    What is the most delicious dish in Vietnam? ›

    1. Phở Phở-real: this world-famous soup differs from north to south. Phở is the quintessential Vietnamese dish, the word phở referring to the type of noodle used in the recipe.

    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. You can find an authentic preparation here from Hot Thai Kitchen!

    How does Thái taste like? ›

    Thai cuisine is renowned for its incredible balance of flavors, combining the perfect blend of sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and spicy tastes. At Thai Luang Restaurant in Herndon, we're excited to take you on a culinary journey through the five essential flavors that make Thai food so extraordinary.

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