Why Morning Glory (공심채) is the Must-Have Vegetable in Vietnamese Cuisine: 5 Health Benefits You Didn’t Know
Daniel Kim Views
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In Korea, people often dismiss it as a roadside weed, but in Vietnam this vegetable shows up on the table almost every day. It’s water spinach, known locally as morning glory. The name might sound unfamiliar, but if you’ve eaten at a Vietnamese restaurant you’ve probably seen it. Stir-fry it quickly over high heat until the garlic scent blooms, and it becomes a light, addictive side—easy enough that even first-timers reach for it without hesitation.

Water spinach has hollow stems. Its Chinese characters—empty (空), heart (心), and vegetable (菜)—give it the name gongshimchae. With long stems and thin leaves, it can easily be mistaken for roadside grass at first glance. That appearance kept many Koreans from seeing it as a food ingredient: it wasn’t common in supermarkets, and people often didn’t know how to cook it at home.
Why water spinach is eaten so often
In Vietnam, water spinach isn’t a special-occasion dish. It’s an everyday side served with rice. Restaurants pair it with meat dishes, and at home families quickly stir-fry it with garlic as a single plate. Think of it more like a staple condiment—something you keep on the table like kimchi.

The reason is simple: it’s easy to prep and cooks in minutes. Rinse it under running water, cut it to a usable length, and it’s ready. You can eat the leaves and stems together, so there’s little waste. With just garlic, oil, and a pinch of salt or a dash of oyster sauce, you can make a whole plate.
Its mild flavor makes it approachable for newcomers. Cook it briefly and the stems stay crisp while the leaves soften. Stir-frying in oil doesn’t weigh it down, so it pairs perfectly with rice. That’s why you’ll often see it served beside spicy or meaty mains.
People even nickname water spinach a “nutritious tonic” because of its nutrients. It contains vitamins A and C, iron, and dietary fiber. Fiber aids digestion, and iron is familiar to anyone watching for anemia. As a single vegetable side, it covers several basic nutrients, which is why it’s a regular on the table.
Because it’s often stir-fried in oil, that fat helps the body absorb fat-soluble vitamins. Quick cooking over high heat preserves texture and nutrients, and eating stems and leaves together delivers a broader nutrient mix in one bite.
For these reasons, Vietnamese people don’t treat water spinach as just a simple side—they see it as a healthful everyday ingredient. Rather than reserving special tonic dishes for occasional use, they build wellness into daily meals.
A simple home recipe for water spinach
The most common way to prepare it is a garlic stir-fry. The method is quick and foolproof at home.
Start with a bunch of water spinach and rinse it several times under running water. If the stems are long, cut them into 5–7 cm (about 2–2.8 in) pieces and trim any overly tough lower parts. Keep and use the leaves.

Heat a pan until very hot, add cooking oil, and sauté minced garlic first. As soon as the garlic releases its fragrance, add the water spinach. Don’t hesitate—keep the heat high and toss quickly. The leaves wilt fast, so you don’t need long on the stove.
Season lightly with salt, or add oyster sauce for a deeper flavor. If you like spice, toss in a few slices of red chili. The total cook time is just 2–3 minutes.
The key is avoiding excess moisture. Stir-fry briefly in a very hot pan to keep a crisp bite. If you cook it low and slow, the stems go limp and the flavor fades.


If frying feels heavy, blanch and toss it instead. Add a pinch of salt to boiling water, blanch for 20–30 seconds, then plunge into cold water and squeeze out the excess. Toss with minced garlic, salt, and sesame oil for a simple seasoned side.
It also works well in soups and stews—add it at the end and cook briefly so the texture stays bright. It’s an easy swap for other greens.
Water spinach may feel unfamiliar at first, but one quick stir-fry can change that. It’s easy to prepare, mild in flavor, and makes a perfect everyday side. You don’t need special ingredients to turn it into a plate, so it’s simple to make part of your regular rotation.

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