PHO (VIETNAMESE RICE NOODLE SOUP)

As some of you know, homemade soup is one of my top 10 favorite foods. And pho (pronounced more like fuh than foe) is one of my favorite soups. (And, its gluten free!)

I almost always order it when I go to a Thai or pan Asian restaurant because I so love the broth. And to actually make the broth the way they do in these really good restaurants takes hours and hours, and even then some days it’s just better than others! So when I discovered this recipe, and for the love of all things noodle I can’t remember where or when, or even how much I mangled the original recipe, I was delighted. So as far as I’m concerned, this broth is pretty darn acceptable for not starting with bones and cooking then for hours and hours, etc. etc. And the rest of the soup is a snap. You just add cooked rice noodles to your hot broth and a few uncooked ingredients (well except for the fried tofu, which is totally optional but absolutely divine) and sit back and think pleasant thoughts. Pretend you are sitting on the veranda of a fabulous water front café at Halong Bay (Bay of descending dragons) watching the sun sparkle on the water as you eat your big old bowl of pho. Just thinking about warm beaches and shimmering water in Vietnam makes me want to hop on a jet. But unfortunately the only hopping I should be doing right now is in the kitchen. I still have more food preparation to do today for the pre-concert JazzVox dinner here tomorrow night! Yikes! If you’ll excuse me, my Italian Cream Cake is calling to me that it is feeling a little naked. Cream cheese frosting sprinkled with toasted coconut and pecans coming right up!

  • 6 c. water
  • 1-2 tsp. beef base
  • 1 T. won ton instant soup mix (You can purchase won ton instant soup mix (like Dragonfly brand) at any decent Asian food store)
  • 1/2 onion, thinly sliced
  • 1 T. finely diced fresh ginger
  • 2-3 oz. pho noodles (rice)
  • 1/3 block firm or extra-firm tofu, opt.** (see recipe and preparation instructions below)
  • ¼ lb. very thinly sliced beef*
  • ½-1 jalapeno, seeded, deveined and thinly sliced
  • 1 c. fresh bean sprouts
  • 1 T. chopped fresh cilantro or parsley
  • several Thai basil leaves
  • 4 green onions, thinly sliced on the diagonal
  • ½ fresh lime, cut into 4 wedges
  • Sriracha sauce
  • hoisin sauce

Combine water, beef stock, won ton soup mix, onion, and ginger in a medium sauce pan. Bring to a boil, cover, reduce heat, and simmer for about 20 minutes. Meanwhile soak the noodles in water for 15 minutes. Bring a pot of water to a boil. When the broth is ready, remove the noodles from the soaking water and cook for about 3-4 minutes in the boiling water. When done, place the noodles in the bottom of two large soup bowls. Add the tofu, raw meat, jalapeno, bean sprouts, and cilantro. Fill the bowls with stock, and garnish with basil leaves, green onions, and 2 lime wedges each. Pass Sriracha and hoisin sauce as “do it yourself” garnishes. (Instead of beef, you can add pre-cooked shrimp, chicken, or pork.)

*To thinly slice beef, place beef in the freezer just until it starts to get hard. Using a very sharp thin bladed knife cut slices as thin as possible against the grain of the meat.

**Optional fried tofu recipe: Slice drained tofu into 1/4-inch slices and coat with 1 tablespoon cornstarch.  Combine 1 tablespoon sesame oil with 1 teaspoon chili oil in a medium frying pan. Bring oil to medium heat and fry the tofu until both sides are a nice golden brown. Remove from pan and drain on a paper towel. When cool cut into bite size pieces.

 

1 thought on “PHO (VIETNAMESE RICE NOODLE SOUP)

  1. Mr. Manhattan

    Pacific, a fine maker of chicken stock ect. now makes soup starters. They make a Pho starter that we have used and is quite good. add noodles, protein and any goodies you want and have a quick good meal. They also make a chicken Pho starter. should be able to find in any good sized store in the soup isle.

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