12 comments

  • alex_c1 hour ago
    &gt;How, the novice may ask, does one discover which version is the correct one for oneself?<p>&gt;There is nothing else to it – you must eat a few hundred bowls of phở and find out. If this requires moving to Hanoi, so be it.<p>Not the worst life plan, to be honest!<p>A little bit sad that my own &quot;death bed pho&quot; - chicken pho from that one stall near the market in old quarter - gets just a passing mention as the only acceptable variation to traditional beef pho.<p>This also brings back memories of our &quot;mystery pho man&quot; - who had three tiny stools and one large pot outside his house every morning, looked like a character straight out of an 80&#x27;s movie, and was usually sold out by 8am.<p>Vietnamese food has got significantly better in Toronto in the past 5-10 years - but still haven&#x27;t found anything that comes even close to Hanoi chicken pho.
    • __mharrison__1 hour ago
      My wife, who doesn&#x27;t eat beef, once asked for chicken pho, and got an extreme talking to. She was sad because she had good chicken pho in the past.
  • anonymouscaller1 hour ago
    For us Americans who can’t make it out to Vietnam, I’ve found the best Pho in the US is in Orange County, CA and Boston’s Dorchester neighborhood!
    • datlife17 minutes ago
      You are missing out on San Jose. It has the largest population Vietnamese diaspora.
    • tonymet9 minutes ago
      For those that do visit Vietnam admit that it’s better in the USA, too.
  • vogon_laureate1 hour ago
    I&#x27;ve yet to visit Vietnam, but a phở my daughter and I had in Reykjavík was properly life-changing. I get the obsession.
    • sailorganymede58 minutes ago
      I believe I had the same one? I remember travelling Europe and going to the same place like 3 times while I was in Iceland!
    • mi_lk1 hour ago
      restaurant name if you want to share?
  • dhosek31 minutes ago
    Back when I lived in Orange County (and didn’t know how to pronounce phở), I used to joke about creating a restaurant that served phở made with Italian noodles and calling it Faux Phở.
  • l5870uoo9y24 minutes ago
    Pho is delicious, but Thai boat noodles soup (guay tiew ruea) is godly; dark, robust, and full of diverse flavors and nuances.
  • FlyingSnake47 minutes ago
    I&#x27;ve traveled to Hanoi and absolutely loved the phở there. One perk of living in Berlin is the exceptional Phở we get here. Thanks to the large Vietnamese community we have great phở, Bahn mí (esp at the Dong Xuan center). The phở we get here is top tier too, as confirmed by my Vietnamese friends.
    • pretense939320 minutes ago
      Why do you need Vietnamese people to confirm that noodle soup with bits of meat is &quot;top tier&quot;? Can you not taste it yourself?<p>This thread is properly insufferable.
  • jrimbault3 hours ago
    Cheekily, might not the &quot;purist&quot; want a &quot;pot-au-feu&quot; ? (i have a sincere dislike of purity talk, especially in cookery)<p>The article mentions it, but doesn&#x27;t disprove it.
    • pazimzadeh2 hours ago
      yeah purity seems overrated for almost anything except making drugs
      • doubletwoyou1 hour ago
        And semiconductors and air quality perhaps
  • ValentineC2 hours ago
    Hanoi was where I had one of the best chicken pho ever — their menu allows one to select the parts of the chicken they wanted. I&#x27;ve never had the back meat of chicken in a pho before, and it was phenomenal.<p>And I found out about it from a random cafe barista. Sometimes it pays off just to ask someone where they&#x27;d eat nearby.
  • pazimzadeh2 hours ago
    I was just in Hanoi. I stool in line for pho at &quot;michelin rated&quot; shops and had it in tiny stalls manned by a grandma or old couple. always go for the grandma..the michelin ones seem more dilute and cost more. For example, Pho 10 Ly Quoc Su vs. the stall right next to it.
    • MisterTea1 hour ago
      I have a friend who loves Vietnam and was just visiting. His advice is ALWAYS go out of the tourist areas. To paraphrase his words &quot;The more the locals look at you funny, the more authentic it&#x27;s going to be.&quot; And by funny, not in a bad way but more of &quot;uh, you lost there buddy?&quot;
    • throwup2382 hours ago
      If you can, always ask a local where to go. Most locals don’t want to wait in line unless it’s a special occasion and they know the best underrated and mom and pop restaurants. The ones with lines are usually tourist or internet hype traps and their food gets enshittified quickly.<p>I learned this the hard way during Marti Gras.
      • pazimzadeh1 hour ago
        Yeah. Some locals assume you’ll only like the touristy stuff though
  • CarVac1 hour ago
    I&#x27;ve never been to Vietnam but there&#x27;s a Hanoi-style pho place by me and it is head and shoulders better than any other pho I&#x27;ve ever had in the US.<p>Apparently most pho in the US is southern Vietnamese style?
    • windward36 minutes ago
      Because most Vietnamese people in the US are southern Vietnamese. People who fled during what we&#x27;d call the Vietnam War*, and their descendants.<p>*Not the most recent war in Vietnam
  • __patchbit__1 hour ago
    Is consomme the reference precursor implementation?
  • e402 days ago
    Disappointing that there was not a single picture in the post. And, wow, it’s long!
    • theoriginaldave2 hours ago
      He did speak a little distainfully of taking pictures of your pho or having your phone handy while eating.<p>I think the lack of pictures emphasizes focusing in the moment and enjoying the experience and then remembering it fondly later.
      • kakacik2 hours ago
        .. or skipping reading the article if you look at it during some short break
    • jihadjihad2 hours ago
      The purest phở is the one that exists only in your imagination.