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How to Eat Pho and Finding Your Own Pho - A Primer For First-Time Diners

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Cuong Huynh
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Updated 03-14-15. OK let's get back to the basics. Here's a primer for those new to Vietnamese pho. For the pho connoisseurs, please share your views and experience, or check out other posts at the end of this article.

When it comes to pho, a Vietnamese would have the distinct advantage of knowing how to enjoy the noodle dish. Regardless of whether he or she grew up in the homeland or in an immigrant household overseas, he or she would have a mother or a grandmother who made this heart-filling noodle soup for breakfast each day, cooked using snippets of a recipe and with memories of how it is done in their own mother's kitchen. Or at the very least, he or she would have a mother who would herd the family to a restaurant every so often whenever they feel the urge. Eating pho is natural to a Vietnamese.

A non-Vietnamese will not have the same experience. Aside from having to deal with the chopsticks, pho will always look and smell foreign to anyone who did not grow up eating it. When faced with a steaming bowl of this noodle, and especially if it is your first time to sample the national dish of Vietnam, you may have a challenge on your hand. Here are some tips.

Simple Process of Enjoying Pho

If you find yourself in a pho shop for the first time, it's likely that a Vietnamese friend or a friend who knows this dish has invited you. But in the event that you are a real brave soul and decide to go try by yourself, figuring out how to eat pho can be a dilemma.

Thankfully, eating pho is not like eating Western food or even Japanese food. There is no unspoken etiquette that must be observed. This dish is meant to be enjoyed with some noise and a lot of slurping is just fine. So here's the process in a nutshell.

The best way to attack a steaming bowl of pho is to have chopsticks in one hand and a soupspoon in the other. Take in a little broth with your spoon, slurp in some to get a taste of it. Follow it up with the rice noodles using your chopsticks. Then select pieces of ingredients from the bowl and enjoy them individually or together with the broth and noodle. Easy. But there's more.

Taking in the Aroma

Of course, before you start eating pho, you cannot miss noticing the aroma created by the piping-hot broth. Just taking in the rich aroma of beef stock simmered for a really long time with spices, roasted onion and roasted ginger thrown in is enough to whet the appetite. The aroma of the broth really kicks up the anticipation of the poetry that is about to come from that bowl of pho.

The fragrance of the broth is also a good indicator of its quality. Just one sniff will tell you if the spices are balanced in making the soup, if the broth is too salty, if there is monosodium glutamate sprinkled in it, or if the beef stock itself is poorly made. Remember that the soul of pho is in the broth. So enjoying the scent is definitely an important part of the dining ritual.

What to Do With the Garnishing

Primer for first-time pho dinersWhen you are served southern style Vietnamese pho, you will always be provided with a plate of garnishing. This plate would typically contain bean sprouts, culantro, Thai basil, sliced chili and lime wedges. Also you will have hoisin sauce and hot chili sauce available at the table.

Is there a specific order by which you should place these herbs in your bowl of pho? The answer to this is no. With the garnishing, you can think of it as finding the best combination that will fit your taste. Each individual garnish contributes its own distinct smell and taste to an already good bowl of pho. You do not want to dump all the garnishing into the bowl at the same time. Rather, just try a few at a time to get your preferred mix. More importantly, give the ingredients several chances (on different visits) and you'll appreciate their roles in this noodle dish.

Here are a few tips on consuming the ingredients:

  • Bean sprouts are put in raw for the crunchy factor. Add a little at a time to maintain the crunchiness as you eat, or add them all while the broth is hot to cook them. The downside here is it takes heat to cook your sprouts, and as a result your broth will cool before you finish your bowl of pho. This is why many people request blanched sprouts.
  • Dipping the sliced chili in the hot broth releases the oil and makes the broth taste spicier. You can keep them in if you dare. Many do. But really, about half of the jalapenos are not all that hot. I prefer the smaller but hotter Thai peppers or similar varieties.
  • Lime juice adds tartness to the broth, which is good if the broth tastes bland, too salty, or too sweet for you. The saltiness and tartness together provide a delicious combination that many people love - I'm one of them. I can do without the other things, but lime I must have.
  • The herb leaves are stripped from the stems and can be shredded to bits by hand before they are placed in the bowl. For the best aroma and taste, don't drop them all in at the same time in the beginning. I tear the leaves in smaller pieces, and add them as I go to maintain freshest and uncooked flavor. Even down to my last few chopstickfuls of noodle, I'm still dropping in some fresh bits of basil and culantro. The fragrance is incredible.

Eating pho is always an adventure, even for those who have had it all their lives. For first-time diners, the key is to relax and enjoy. You'll find your own pho in no time.

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(@Gary Lam)
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Hi Cuong. I like your site. I usually just order a #1 at whatever restaurant I go to. I add some rooster sauce and don't bother with the veggies. Delicious.

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Cuong Huynh
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Hi Gary Lam: Yes #1 on the pho menu would get you pretty much what pho is all about, though I would highly suggest that you slow down and maybe enjoy a leaf of culantro or some basil just for the heck of it 😉

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(@Vietnamese food)
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Huynh, you have a good site, I'm making a blog about Food va recipes. I hope you can help me something ? My blog is: http://www.vietnamesefood.biz .

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Cuong Huynh
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Hi Vietnamese food: I appreciate your comment and I'll be happy to help with anything you need. But first I would like to request that you remove articles on your site that are copyright infringement of 3 of lovingpho.com's articles. They are:

http://www.vietnamesefood.biz/2010/09/pronouncing-pho-and-other-vietnamese.html
which is an unauthorized reproduction of this article:
/pho-opinion-editorial/pronunciation-vietnamese-words-phrases/

http://www.vietnamesefood.biz/2010/09/pronouncing-pho-you-can-say-it.html
which is an unauthorized reproduction of this article:
/pho-opinion-editorial/how-to-pronounce-pho/

http://www.vietnamesefood.biz/2010/09/pronunciation-of-bun-bo-hue-and-hu-tieu.html
which is an unauthorized reproduction of this article:
/pho-pronunciation-menu-ordering/pronounce-bun-bo-hue-hu-tieu-nam-vang/

Further actions are being taken to protect our content.

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(@Vietnamese Food)
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I am sorry to have 3 posts by https://www.lovingpho.com on http://www.vietnamesefood.biz without permission. I have removed that articles from http://www.vietnamesefood.biz . And again, if there is any hope for me to be associate with https://www.lovingpho.com for introduce online about good foods of our country.

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(@Mariah)
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Great comments. I enjoy my pho a little spicier than others so I put the chili sauce on the side in the little white dish that they usually have and I dip the meat or the noodles in the dish rather than pouring a bunch in and over powering the delicate broth.

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(@New to Pho)
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Cool site, I got hooked on pho ever since my sister took me. I am south korean, so I wouldn't know "good"/traditional pho, but have you ever heard of the restaurant pho 32? It's run by other koreans, so it probably isn't authentic, but it does have all the garnishes, sriracha sauce, and some brown sauce. What do you think of the place?

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