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 3 of 3)
The next day, Gilbert and I were disappointed by a pallid, salty and inept pho bo at a much-recommended branch of a slick, trendy Saigon chain, Pho24; we dubbed it McPho. For the rest of our days in Hanoi, we rose early to find excellent pho in the stalls that had been closed to us at lunch. We also discovered Spices Garden, a very good Vietnamese restaurant in the restored Sofitel Metropole Hanoi, the historic hotel once patronized by Graham Greene, W. Somerset Maugham and Charlie Chaplin. There a verdant, abundant pho bo is part of the lunchtime buffet (no surprise, since Didier Corlou was the chef at the hotel for 16 years, until 2007). On the second and final night of the Philharmonic’s engagement, the audience included a large number of children whose parents had brought them to hear the Brahms Concerto in D major for Violin and Orchestra, with featured violinist Frank Peter Zimmermann. Tetsuji Honna, the Japanese music director of the Vietnam National Symphony Orchestra, explained to me that the violin is the most popular instrument for children in Asia to learn.
After the concert, Honna and one of his violinists, Dao Hai Thanh, invited me to try some late-night pho in the old quarter of Hanoi around Tong Duy Tan Street. Here young Vietnamese gather at long tables at a variety of stalls where meats and vegetables are cooked over table grills or dipped into hot pots of seething broth.
Our destination was Chuyen Bo, a pho stall with stools so low that Honna had to pile three atop one another for me to sit on. The choice of ingredients was staggering: not only eight kinds of greens, tofu, soft or crisp noodles, but also various cuts of beef—oxtail, brisket, shoulder, kidneys, stomach, tripe, lungs, brains—plus cooked blood that resembled blocks of chocolate pudding, a pale pink meat described to me as “cow’s breast” (finally decoded as “udder”) and a rather dry, sinewy-looking meat that one of the workers, pointing to his groin, said was “from a man.” I was relieved to learn that the ingredient in question was a bull’s penis. I opted instead for a delicious if conventional pho of oxtail and brisket. But later I worried that I had missed an opportunity. Perhaps udder and penis pho might have made a more stirring, not to mention memorable, finale to my quest. Maybe next time. Pho better or pho worse.
Mimi Sheraton has been a food writer for over 50 years. She has written more than a dozen books, including the 2004 memoir Eating My Words: An Appetite for Life.
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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