Searching for Hanoi's Ultimate Pho
With more Americans sampling Vietnam's savory soup, a noted food critic and an esteemed maestro track down the city's best
- By Mimi Sheraton
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
Chef Corlou regards Vietnamese cuisine as one of the most original and interesting he has experienced; he values its ingenuity with humble products, its emphasis on freshness, the counterplay of flavors and the harmonious fusion of foreign influences, most notably from China and France. The pho we know today, he told me, began as a soup in and around Hanoi just a little over 100 years ago. “It is the single most important dish,” he said, “because it is the basic meal of the people.”
Pho bo is an unintended legacy of the French, who occupied Vietnam from 1858 to 1954 and who indeed cooked pot-au-feu, a soup-based combination of vegetables and beef, a meat barely known in Vietnam in those days and, to this day, neither as abundant nor as good as the native pork. (Corlou imports his beef from Australia.) But just as North American slaves took the leavings of kitchens to create what we now celebrate as soul food, so the Vietnamese salvaged leftovers from French kitchens and discovered that slow cooking was the best way to extract the most flavor and nourishment from them. They adopted the French word feu, just as they took the name of the French sandwich loaf, pain de mie, for banh mi, a baguette they fill with various greens, spices, herbs, sauces, pork and meatballs. Vietnam is perhaps the only country in the Far East to bake Western-style bread.
“The most important part of the pho is the broth,” Corlou said, “and because it takes so long to cook, it’s difficult to make at home. You need strong bones and meat—oxtail and marrow-filled shinbones—and before being cooked they should be blanched and rinsed so the soup will be very clear. And you must not skim off all of the fat. Some is needed for flavor.”
The cooking should be done at an almost imperceptible simmer, or what cooks sometimes describe as a “smile.” (One instruction advises that the soup simmer overnight for at least 12 hours, with the cook staying awake to add water lest the broth reduce too much.) Only then does one pay attention to the width (about a quarter-inch) of the flat, silky rice noodles, and to the combination of greens, the freshness of the beef and, finally, to the golden-brown knots of fried bread, all added just moments before the pho is served. Despite his stringent rules, Corlou is not against the variations of pho that come with distance from Hanoi; in Saigon, far to the south, it’s closer to the pho usually found in the United States, sweetened with rock sugar and full of mung bean sprouts and herbs, both rarely seen in the north.
A tasting dinner that night at La Verticale included Philharmonic president Zarin Mehta and his wife, Carmen; Gilbert and his mother; pianist Emanuel Ax; and Eric Latzky, the orchestra’s director of communications. We were served about a dozen French-Vietnamese creations, including two haute phos, a rather mild one based on salmon with an astringent hint of coriander and another enriched with superb local foie gras, black mushrooms and crunchy cabbage.
The next day, Corlou guided a group of us through the teeming, winding aisles of the Hang Be market, close to willow-rimmed Hoan Kiem Lake, a habitat of Sunday strollers and early-morning practitioners of tai chi. He pointed out various fruits—among them seed-filled dragon fruit and russet, spiky-skinned rambutans—and introduced us to banana flowers, the pale mauve blossoms and creamy-white slivers of trunk shaved from newly sprouted banana trees. Dark gray, spotted snake-like fish swam in tanks, hard-shelled crabs writhed in their boxes, slices of pork sausages sizzled on grills and live rabbits and chickens plotted escapes from their cages. As lunchtime neared, market workers stretched out on cloths they draped over crates and mounds of produce and snoozed, their conical straw hats shielding their faces from light and flies. Hanging over all was the almost stifling fragrance of ripe tropical fruit, cut flowers and pungent spices, sharpened by the nose-twitching scents of nuoc mam sauce and medicinally sour-sweet lemon grass.
I sought pho recommendations from United States Ambassador Michael W. Michalak and his wife, Yoshiko. During a reception for the orchestra at the U.S. Embassy, a villa in the 20th-century palatial style, they introduced us to Do Thanh Huong, a local pho buff who owns two fashion gift shops named Tan My. With her recommendations added to Corlou’s, we expected easy success in our forays, and, when it came to pho ga, we had no problems.
But looking for pho bo at midday proved a mistake. Hungrier by the minute, we searched out such recommended pho redoubts as Pho Bo Ly Beo, Pho Bat Dan, Pho Oanh and Hang Var, only to find each shuttered tight. Thus we learned the hard way that the beefy broth is traditionally a breakfast or late-night dish, with shops opening between 6 and 8 a.m. and again around 9 or 10 at night.
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Comments (11)
I do want to question the "historic" notion that the Vietnamese PHO owes its roots to the French. It may be that servants used the left-over beef bones from their colonial masters to make the broth, and the slow-cooking method ("feu") was the only way to cook if one only has low grade charcoal in one's kitchen. But nothing in the herbs and spices (these key ingredients that define food) used in the Vietnamese Pho is traditional in French cuisine: ginger, cinnamon, star anises, and fish sauce.
Posted by Chinh T le on February 26,2011 | 04:28 PM
Just curious, why would anyone step inside the Sofitel Metropole in search of good Vietnamese food? I can safely say you would not find one Hanoian let alone any expat living in Hanoi setting foot inside the Sofitel Metropole in search of great Vietnamese cuisine. If you don't believe me, ask any of of the 6 million people living in Hanoi.
Did the writer even talk to any locals or was this more of an advertorial for her sponsors?
Posted by J Rouzaire on July 16,2010 | 11:13 AM
In a comparison between pho in Vietnam and pho in the US, you'll find the pho in the US generally better largely due t the quality of ingredients. On average, the quality of ingredients in the US is much better than it is in nearly all parts of Vietnam excepting the higher end establishments and hotel, but you'll certainly pay for it.
The techniques and recipes have immigrated with the Vietnamese people in 1975, 1980, and on so much of the world has doubly benefited from the cooking heritage as well as quality ingredients. Making good pho is a labor of love and therein is the trick - finding a pho shop run by someone who loves making it.
Those looking for pho recipes, there are probably thousands of different recipes but they all basically contain the same thing - beef stock, bone marrow, ox tail (should!), caramelized onions, and carrots simmered for many hours. Additional ingredients add more subtle and nuances to the broth.
(And yes, Pho24 is terrible.)
Posted by John Carey on February 26,2010 | 08:49 AM
As soon as I finished the article Iwent on-line to find a Pho restaurant in my area. Imagine my delight to find one less than two miles away! I'm sure it's not the Hanoi Pho but by golly it's Pho.
Glorious and complex,it is a "foodies" delight. I'm afraid another addict has been created.
Posted by Michael Spaulding on February 24,2010 | 04:24 PM
Pardon me, I should've written "it's the incorrect pronunciation everywhere."
Posted by Threewolfy on February 23,2010 | 06:07 PM
Nice article, but to be fair, "foe" is not the American pronunciation. It is the incorrect pronunciation. I have lived in both Coastal Texas and California, and I've always heard it pronounced sort of like "fuh."
Posted by Threewolfy on February 23,2010 | 06:05 PM
Recipe,recipe,recipe? Puhleeze? Thanks, Mr.Mike
Posted by Mike Miller on February 23,2010 | 01:22 PM
Very interesting review of Phở Hà Nội. Mimi, you got the right advice to taste Pho in small stalls, not McPho (Pho24). I am from Hanoi and not only Pho, I miss all the foods in Hanoi.
@Kastner, Pho as well as other Vietnamese foods is not difficult to cook, but you may only create the alike, but not the authentic. Even just outside Hanoi, Pho is different.
Posted by Nana Tran on February 23,2010 | 11:21 AM
I was very surprised to read of 'motorbikes and cars that stream unimpeded by stoplights--an amenity missing from the burgeoning capital". That they don't exist is simply untrue. I was in Hanoi about a year ago, and there certainly were stoplights on the streets of the old city, where we stayed. Agreed, there is quite a stream of motorbikes, and if one does not want to walk to a corner with a stoplight and wait for the walk signal, then one must walk into that stream as though parting an ocean wave.
Posted by Christina Gullion on February 22,2010 | 12:52 AM
There's a really good recipe for Pho here:
http://steamykitchen.com/271-vietnamese-beef-noodle-soup-pho.html
And also, because it doesn't include the rice noodle recipe, you might want this recipe as well:
http://asiarecipe.com/forum/lofiversion/index.php?t28.html
I have tried both recipes with great success and enjoy the flavor of the freshly made rice noodles, they are far superior to those in the package. You will need a steamer and a good, small non-stick cakepan for the noodles, it's not really very hard to do at all.
Good luck, the pho is delicious with fresh rice noodles!
Posted by Johnnyboy on February 22,2010 | 11:55 PM
Where is the recipe? I've done plenty of difficult things -- am sure I could master pho if given the recipe.
Posted by Barbara Kastner on February 22,2010 | 04:11 PM