This booklet was devised as means of expressing
his profound feelings of friendship by Didier
Corlou, executive chef of Sofitel Metropole
Hanoi; a lover of Vietnam, its culture and its
cuisine.
Pho soup, like many other myths, has a
mysterious beginning. Historians and fervent
defenders of Vietnamese gastronomy have tried to
penetrate the mystery of the arrival of this
soup, considered for a long time to be the
national dish of the North. The cuisine, like
many other cultural aspects of a nation, is
subject to evolution and it has grown richer and
stronger after having contact with neighbors and
visitors.
The question raised during the press conference
organized by Sofitel Metropole Hanoi and the
Delegation of European Commission at the end of
2002, turns around the origin of 'Pho'. Is this
soup an original Vietnamese creation or an
adoption of some foreign culinary blend, which
has been adapted and integrated into the
Vietnamese culture? The answer? No one, for
certain knows.
Although, the first conference couldn't give out
any definitive answer to the question; please
feel free to express your own ideas and thoughts
on the origins.
Many thanks to Didier Corlou and to Nguyen Dinh
Rao, President of UNESCO Club of Gastronomy.
Frederic Baron, Ambassador
Chief of the Delegation of the European
Commission to Vietnam
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Pho's Art
To have steaming bowl of Pho, crouching on a
stool a tightly-packed shop, crowded with
customers is an art in itself. You order
arrival, a bowl of rare or well-done beef Pho,
with or without onion, and of course, no
seasoning. A few minutes later, the Pho will be
served at your table. The ritual begins, squeeze
on some lemon, add chilies and pepper, then mix
the soup with chopsticks; bring the bowl level
with your mouth and start to swallow it while
drinking the bouillon with a porcelain spoon.
metal spoons are not recommended as they give a
cold taste at the mouth)
It is not advised to leave fresh noodles
standing, they should be eaten within 5 minutes
as they tend to swell up and lose their texture.
After finishing your Pho, pay for it on your
departure, then take the traditional toothpick
and move to the tea shop next door for a cup of
green tea or coffee. Now, you are ready to start
the new day.
In the past, Pho was mostly served in the
morning and when Vietnam experiencing difficult
periods, Hanoians only had the soup on Sundays
or when they were sick. It cost 3 cents (xu) a
bowl in those days. Nowadays, people have Pho
any day, at any time of the day, especially in
the evening. Although lifestyles and habits have
changed Pho remains the hallmark of Vietnamese
cuisine, despite the competition of other
delicacies, such as banh cuon (steamed rice
pancake stuffed with chopped pork).
Pho, the best soup of the world, the
representative of Vietnamese gastronomy, is
equivalent to paella in Spain or the double
pancake of Brittany. It is a unique dish, served
with white noodles, consomm? sliced meat,
fragrant herbs, grilled onion, added with nuoc
mam (fish sauce) and perfumed with lemon, chilli,
herbs and spices.
To us, it is worthy of its title of the best
soup of the world because of its history. Its
identity was created and developed throughout
different periods, from the colonization to the
war years and the US embargo. Today, it has
become the pride of a nation. Popular and
economic, Pho can be an enjoyed by almost
anyone, of any social range or status. This dish
is known to be rich in vitamins and plays an
important role in the staple diet, health and
the morale of the Vietnamese people.
Pho is regarded as an everyday soup, which is
not served during parties, weddings or other
festive occasions. And when someone is not seen
to be taking an interest in festive fare, you
can almost guarantee they will be found some
time later at the local Pho stall devouring
their daily dose of their favorite dish.
Hanoi's streets are the soul of the city and people do say Pho is
synonymous with Vietnam's quaint capital. While
it is served in a great number of restaurants in
Saigon, Paris and New York, somehow it does not
hold meaning as eating it in Hanoi. As we know,
it may be great to enjoy cheese fondue in the
Alps, but for sure, it will be not taste the
same in Hanoi and vice-versa. And for a bowl of
Pho, there is only on place to go - Hanoi!
Pho can be cooked with fish, duck, and
vegetables. In the country-side, people also
make Pho with pork, even the pig's hearts or
kidneys. What you make it with is not important,
after all, Pho will still remain what it was
before; the pride of Hanoi's people.
Didier Corlou, Executive chef
Sofitel Metropole Hanoi
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"Pho soup recalls my childhood's flavor"
The speeches published below are extracted from
the press conference "Pho - Vietnam's Heritage",
organized in Hanoi on November 29th 2002 at the
offices of the Delegation of the European
Commission:
Its birth certificate is packed full of question
marks; where does Pho come from? When was this
soup, together with nem (spring rolls), symbol
of Vietnamese gastronomy, brought into the
world? Nguyen Dinh Rao, a decidedly determined
seventy-year-old man and president of Unesco's
Gastronomy Club in Hanoi expresses his opinion
on this subject; more than an opinion, he
insists he knows Pho's true origins. He says
that the birth place of Pho is in Nam Dinh city,
which is situated in the southern Red River
delta. Its birth's date? Beginning of 20th
century he claims confidently "when a big
industrial zone for textile was established
there".
Rao continues: "Nam Dinh's population included,
in those days, new city dwellers, workers,
salaried employees, officials, as well as French
and Vietnamese soldiers. All of them required a
dish which was less "rustic" than the
traditional soups of the delta's farmers, like
chao (rice soup) or bun (fresh noodles made of
rice)".
This mixed population turned to its culinary
roots to "invent" Pho. A novelty which was
simmered in the pot of traditions. "It
perpetuates the traditional flavor" - Rao
explains "Thus, the bouillon, made of bone and
prawn, rich in amino-acid and sweetly perfumed,
is inherited directly from old coastal roots of
our civilization. Regarding popular fresh and
soft rice noodles, called banh pho, cooked in
vapor, they are definitely from Vietnam.
Finally, to satisfy a modernized demand and to
meet the taste of European people, they add beef
among other ingredients, only once per year, in
occasion of village's festival. It replaces
aquatic products, like crab or shellfish." Rao
concludes: "Pho combines a cultural interference
and local ingredients, the traditional flavor
blending with European taste. The whole blend
creates a universal soup".
Poet Vu Quan Phuong shows himself more pliant in
his views: "They may be right when saying pho
comes from Nam Dinh; I often see the signboard
"Nam Dinh recipe" in front of pho shops.
However, the famous writer Tu Xuong, who was
very devoted to Nam Dinh, fails to mention
anything about Pho in his writings. Pho sustains
certainly the influence of different countries,
but its Vietnamese soul still remains. That's
why, I believe, the most important thing is that
Pho makes up half of Vietnamese national pride;
the second half is the popular war."
More important than different questions related
to the origin and the culinary crossings of Pho,
which prevailed throughout its birth, is the
acknowledgement of Pho as an element of
Vietnam's heritage that nourishes the national
pride. "We understand the Vietnamese culture is
highly discerning to other foreign cultures"
said Dang Huu Hung, deputy editor in chief of
Sciences and Fatherland magazine, "Thus, there
are interferences with French and Chinese
cultures. But we also know how to "Vietnamese" a
Pho soup. Today, Pho becomes a Vietnamese soup,
which makes us proud, that is more important
than the origin of Pho".
Furthermore, Pho's taste and the ingredients to
make it have varied and developed with time. At
the beginning, Pho is cooked with hard-boiled
beef cut into nice slices, then also with rare
beef poached in the bouillon (pho bo tai), with
chicken (pho ga) and even with pork (pho lon)
during hard times in the war. Some people don't
hesitate to evoke the "secrets" of making Pho
soup. An old Pho shop regular cites 3 secrets:
the first one is the cleanliness, the bowl in
which pho soup will be served should not have
any smell, the second, is the way to prepare the
meat, and the third, lies in the bouillon, its
ingredients and the right moment to integrate
them in the water.
Regarding the bouillon, Mr. Huu Bang, Director
of Military Theatre also shares his opinion. He
recalls that, when he was a child, a bowl of pho,
without bouillon, cost one cent (xu), while the
one with bouillon was 3 cents. "The bouillon
should be simmered from the day before, in order
to extract all of vitamins from the bone and the
meat should be boiled together with the bone,
both of them being plunged in cold water at the
start of cooking. ".
Thus, is it right that a "standard" for Pho to
be defined, giving exact details on quantity of
herbs and condiments, the way to prepare the
bouillon and perhaps, eventually leading a label
guaranteeing the quality of Pho ? Poet Vu Quan
Phuong adds the following: "We have to protect
Pho on the one hand and give it a free
development on the other. Pho is the soul of
Vietnam and when I enjoy a bowl of pho, I recall
firstly, the flavors of my childhood".
Synthesis of journalist Franck Renaud
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Portable Earthenware Stoves of Street Hawkers
Today, pho is served in some restaurants as a
specialty or in some small provision shops set
up at night on the pavement. However, Pho was
originally sold by roving street hawkers who
walked around the city carrying on their
shoulders a wooden stick holding a bucket on
either end. The bucket in the back contained a
bouillon's pot and an earthenware stove.
According to Nguyen Dinh Rao, the name of "Pho"
comes from the appellation of earthen stove,
called "coffre-feu" in French.
This stove related directly to the origin of Pho
word. When the customers saw the hawker, they
would shout "Eh! Feu!" and receive a response "Oui!
Feu!". These appellations, by continuous
repetition, may have lead to the name of the pho,
which is familiar with us today. Some people
believe that the word pho comes from from a
Chinese character or even inspired from a real
French dish, for example "le pot au feu." ?
Concerning this subject, Didier Corlou, pointed
out the resemblance between the French dish
mentioned above (le pot au feu) and Pho soup. He
makes the connection between grilled onion in
the French dish and grilled shallot and old
ginger on plate in Vietnamese "Pho" to give it
color nice taste - as these spices keep the
whole of contents concentrated when being
grilled.
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Pho Recipe (for approximately 10 persons)
Ingredients:
- "Pho" noodles (Banh pho): 1kg
- Beef bone: 1kg (approximately)
- Beef rump or shoulder: 400g
- Beef fillet (optional): 150g
- Shallot (Hanh kho): 20g
- Old ginger (Gung gia): 30g
- Star anise (Hoa hoe): 1 unit
- Cinnamon stick (que): 3cm
- Black cardamom (Thao qua): 1 unit
- Lime (Chanh): 3 units
- Spring onion (Hanh la): 100g
- Fresh herbs: sweet mint (rau thom), coriander
(rau mui) and saw coriander (rau mui tau)
- Nuoc mam, fresh chili, salt, pepper grounded.
Preparation:
1/ Wash the bone and the meat. Drain the piece
of beef fillet with kitchen absorbent paper.
2/ Grill the ginger and shallots. Dry the star
anise and the black cardamom, slightly crush
them and put them in a piece of clean cloth
together with a piece of cinnamon stick, tie
well.
3/ Stir the stock with 3 liters of cold water,
put the beef bone and cook on high heat. When it
comes to the boil, skim. Add the spices in the
cloth and the piece of beef rump. Season with
nuoc mam and salt. Simmer on low heat for about
two and a half hours. Take the spices out when
the stock has become fragrant.
4/ Take out the beef bone and meat. Hang the
meat and drain it well. Keep the stock simmering
and check the seasoning.
5/ Slice the herbs, spring onion and the beef.
6/ Blanche the noodles in boiling water for 2
seconds, divide it in individual bowls. Arrange
the meat in each bowl, onion and herbs on top.
Pour the boiling stock.
7/ Serve immediately accompanied with a little
lemon juice, sliced chili or chili sauce.
Note:
For the Pho with rare beef: slice the raw beef
fillet before the serving, marinate it with a
little ginger, put it in a ladle and poach it in
the stock. Pour the meat and stock in each bowl
on the noodles and herbs.
In certain Pho restaurants, some spuncules (sea
worm) are added while making the stock to make
it more tasty.
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Afterword
The voracious appetites and pleasure in
gastronomy of my colleagues and friends,
Frederic Baron, Franck Lafourcade, Nguyen Dinh
Rao, Franck Renaud, Nguyen Thanh Van, Nguyen Thi
Kim Hai, Dang Duc Tue and Jean-Fran?is Mallet,
all helped me to realize my dream of producing
this booklet. This soup, popular and royal at
the same time, remains the chief representative
of Vietnamese cuisine. It continues to develop
and some grand French chefs have already used
the basis of cooking Pho to create frogs' legs
soup with fresh peppermint. It means that this
cuisine is made for traveling and for a simple
pleasure, which is what I would define as
gastronomy.
Bon app?it!
Didier Corlou |