Bà & Mẹ: A Vietnamese Pit Stop with Soul in Callicoon, NY
The food industry never held any particular fascination for Nhi Mundy, whose Vietnamese take-away counter in the hamlet of Callicoon, New York, serves one of the most spirit-lifting lunches on the Delaware River. She’d grown up in the restaurant her parents opened when they immigrated to the United States. She had her own aspirations — and eventually moved to New York to pursue them, graduating from FIT and starting a career in advertising. But when Nhi and her husband found themselves flooded out of their Manhattan apartment after Hurricane Sandy (and living in a hotel with their three children), she braced herself for a change of course. “We decided that, financially, it made sense to move upstate. Just for the time being. Just to figure things out,” she says. It wasn’t an easy transition for Nhi, who spent six lonely months working remotely for her Manhattan-based employer, an online marketing agency. Soon, she was thinking seriously about what else she might do in her new domain — and what it most needed. Wholesome, convincing ethnic food, it turned out, was at the top of her list.
“I just kind of jumped into it,” says Nhi, who drew upon childhood memories and her mother’s recipes in the absence of culinary education or experience. “I hadn’t cooked, per se, but I knew how the food was supposed to taste. It was all there; it was just a matter of finding it again as an adult.”
Part of the charm of Nhi’s cooking is that she knows, instinctively, when to hew to tradition and when to let herself adapt freewheelingly; her menu speaks to the richness and complexity of her heritage. “I’m an immigrant,” she says, “but I grew up in the States, so I’m American, too. I have both.” Hence the easygoing mix of classic dishes (lemongrass pork) and playful riffs (kid-friendly organic banh mi hot dogs).
So winning was Bà & Mẹ‘s Callicoon debut, that last year, Nhi opened an encore shop across the river in Honesdale, Pennsylvania. She is also opening a location in Livingston Manor, New York in June of 2021. The restaurants have brought her not only a livelihood, but also the community she craved as a recent transplant. So much community, in fact, that she founded DVEIGHT Magazine, a triannual newsprint publication that celebrates the artists, ruralists, and trailblazers with whom she shares the Upper Delaware Valley. “Each allows me the freedom to create however I want to create,” says Nhi, referring to her culinary and editorial undertakings. “I’ve never really been able to do that. I’ve always worked for someone else, on behalf of someone else’s vision. In that sense it’s been very satisfying.”
Photos by Heidi’s Bridge, Words by Nina Cabell Belk