| If you fail to prepare... |
| Prices on the wall at Pho 49 Bat Dan |
My first chance to taste this stalwart of Vietnamese cuisine was in Hanoi. After some some local badgering and a quick recce I quickly found all fingers were pointing to one place in the old quarter of Hanoi- 'Pho 49', on Bac Dan street. This joint was famous! So famous in fact they'd bloody sold out of the bloody stuff when we got there!!! Undeterred we returned the following day to greet scores of people queueing up for a go! The Pho attracted every strata of the social cake, from the humble sponge that makes up the vast majority of the cake here in Vietnam, to the thin layer of icing at the top, and even right up to the creme de la creme. It wasn't uncommon to see an over sized shiny 4x4 with an equally over sized government official turn up here.
| Some like it hot |
| Heaven, must be missing a...bowl of pho |
What you'll need: for 8 people
Pho Noodles
For the stock;
Water-about 4/5 of any massive pot
Beef bones
Ox tails-the more the merrier
10 Chicken wings
1 Good sized muli
2 Big white onions
Massive bit of ginger- a hand?
5 Star anise
4 whole cloves
1 black cardamon
Stick of cinnamon
Tsp coriander seeds
Tsp fennel seeds
Muslin/tea strainer
Fish sauce/salt/big lump of yellow rock sugar
1 cube chicken stock
Eat with;
Beansprouts
White onion
Spring onion
Coriander
Thai Basil
Limes
Chilli
This dish takes a lot of prepping and running around to get the ingredients, stock takes a while and needs some attention while its bubbling - whack some tunes on and you have yourself a perfect sunday!
For the stock, first clean the meat by running under boiling water and salt, this helps reduce a scummy layer on the broth later. Boil up the water add the bones, peel and roughly chop the muli and throw in. Get the 2 big onions keeping the skins on and char evenly under the grill, do the same for the hand of ginger- smash this first with the flat of a meat clever to help the juices express themselves! I love this part of the process, a sweet, smokey, spicy aroma permeates through the house and it becomes apparent to all that Pho is on the go! Remove the onion skin and any black bits and bang those into the pot, along with the mixture of spices either in a muslin parcel or tea-strainer- roast up the spices in a saucepan first for a richer flavour. Season with the massive lump of rock sugar and a table spoon of salt. You have your stock. Fish sauce once the pots been going for a bout an hour to taste. All in all, the pot should be simmering for about 2 and a half hours when the oxtail meat becomes soft and falls off the bone. All the while the pot needs a bit of attention, don't allow the pot to boil too aggressively-makes for a cloudy broth, and a foamy scum forms which needs to be regularly skimmed off to ensure a nice non-turbid stock.
The key is in the prepping! While the stocks going, get stuff ready. Finely chopped spring onion-the green part, and finely slice the remainder of the spring onion length ways. Coriander finely chopped. Get a bowl of Fresh chilli's chopped for the heros out there. Make some lime wedges. A bowl of hoisin. Finely slice Topside beef ( keep in the fridge before cutting- makes it easier).
If the hard Pho noodles are soaked in water for 1hr and drained, when it come to eating time, a quick 2 minute blanch makes for a speedy meal- as opposed to fully cooking the noodles and draining at time of eating. A sieve immersed in a boiling pot of water is a useful way of individually cooking the noodles at eating time.
Get Bowls ready: A handful of beansprouts at the bottom, Get the noodles in. Layer thinly sliced beef. Sprinkle coriander and spring onion.
Ladle over boiling broth, twist of pepper. Add Thai basil and thinly sliced white onion to taste, as with hoisin and Siracha chilli sauce. Squeeze of lime. You're there! You just need another 8 or so other people to share it with... the easy part!
