A restaurant where vegetables speak of home.
“Home” is a word that resists definition. It doesn’t simply refer to a house or a city or a place on a map. It’s a feeling, elusive yet deeply familiar, that lingers in the smell of steaming broth, the weight of chopsticks in hand, the taste of something your grandmother once made. At Hum Signature, that sentiment becomes the foundation of an entire culinary philosophy. There, home is not something you return to. It’s something rediscovered, one dish at a time.


This rediscovery begins with a journey, not a linear path, but a sensorial voyage across the varied landscapes of Vietnam. The restaurant’s new tasting menu, Từ Đồng bằng đến Non cao (From Delta to Highlands), is designed as a pilgrimage through terroir. It is a sequence of flavors that carries diners from the silt-rich banks of the Mekong to the windswept peaks of northern mountains. Each course acts as a chapter in that journey, with ingredients speaking in their own quiet dialects of place and memory. “We want to let the land tell its story,” says Culinary Director Bảo Trần. “Our role is simply to listen and to translate it onto the plate.”


Dổi leaves paired with Sóc Trăng rice (left) and kolrabi from the far north (right).
Listening, in this case, means understanding ingredients not as mere components of a recipe, but as living storytellers. The kitchen treats local produce with reverence by exploring their textures, rhythms, and histories rather than subduing them under layers of technique. When a humble fig, abundant on the trees of Central Vietnam, is braised and wrapped gently in aromatic dổi leaf, its earthy sweetness and deep, smoky perfume evoke a sense of community and abundance, the way fruits once collected in a courtyard might have tasted decades ago. “We don’t try to force vegetables into something they’re not,” Bảo Trần explains. “Instead, we let their natural character lead the way. Technique should follow ingredient, not the other way around.”


Lotus wine (left) and passion fruit chili salt beverage from Sơn La (right).
That philosophy runs through every course at the restaurant, which is one of the pioneer plant-based fine dining names in Saigon. A dish of An Giang soybeans and Tien Giang watermelon pays homage to the simple comfort of tào phớ, silken tofu pudding, while imparting it with delicate playfulness: ginger-scented coconut blossom soy, crisp fried tofu, and sweet green peas swirl together into something familiar yet startlingly new. Elsewhere, a pairing of spring shoots and mashed ginkgo from Lào Cai conjures the purity of mountain forests, crowned with a whisper of cardamom broth and ruby goji berries. Even kohlrabi from the far north, roasted beneath a golden crust, finds new life in a light, earthy broth, followed by the refreshing crispness of chilled lặc lè, a journey within a journey, from warmth to coolness, from lowland to highland.


An Giang soybeans and Tiền Giang watermelon (left) and spring shoots and ginkgo from Lào Cai (right).
Yet Hum Signature’s ambitions stretch far beyond reimagining Vietnamese landscapes on a plate. The restaurant is also quietly rewriting the language of plant-based cuisine itself. In a country where vegetables have often been cast as supporting players rather than protagonists, Bảo Trần and his team want to prove they can carry the entire story. “Plant-based cooking is often misunderstood as limited or simple,” he reflects. “But to us, it’s a language, one that can be as expressive, complex, and luxurious as any other.”

This belief gives rise to what the team calls ẩm thực thanh lành or mindful cuisine. It’s a way of cooking that considers every part of the plant, from leaf to root, and honors every stage of its journey from soil to plate. Ingredients are sourced seasonally and responsibly, often from small farms that practice traditional cultivation methods. Nothing is wasted: skins, stems, and seeds are repurposed into broths, ferments, or powders, adding a narrative of sustainability to the creative process. In this context, a meal becomes more than nourishment; it’s a gesture of balance, a quiet act of reciprocity with nature.



Hum Signature’s ethos extends beyond its kitchen walls. The dining room, a century-old villa bathed in soft light and the scent of warm ceramics, blurs the line between meal and memory. Each course is plated like a chapter in a book, unfolding at its own rhythm, inviting guests not just to eat, but to listen. In the subtle pacing of the service and the delicate choreography of flavor and form, one begins to feel the deeper intention behind it all: to remind us that food, at its best, is about connection to land, to people, to something that once felt familiar and perhaps forgotten.

By the time the final course arrives, the journey has become something deeply personal. The dishes may have spoken of mountains and rivers, farms and forests, but they have also spoken of childhood kitchens and communal tables, of things that root us to who we are. In that sense, From Delta to Highlands is more than a tasting menu. It is an invitation to return, to remember, and to find home in places we never thought to look for it.

+84 899 189 229
32 Vo Van Tan Street, Xuan Hoa Ward, HCMC.
