Hanoi beef and rice noodle soup, also known as pho bo, is a traditional Vietnamese noodle soup originating from Hanoi, the capital of Vietnam. This flavorful and aromatic soup is a beloved dish in Vietnam and has gained popularity around the world. The broth, which forms the base of the soup, is typically made from beef bones, herbs, and spices, resulting in a rich and savory flavor. The soup is traditionally served with thin rice noodles, tender slices of beef, and a variety of fresh herbs and vegetables, such as basil, mint, lime wedges, and bean sprouts. The combination of these ingredients creates a harmonious balance of flavors and textures, making pho bo a delectable and comforting dish.
Check out the recipes below so you can choose the best recipe for yourself!
ASIAN-THEMED BEEF AND RICE NOODLE SOUP
A wonderful soup for using up leftover steak with a kick of ginger. Try not to eat the entire pot before anyone else shows up for dinner!
Provided by Islandartist
Categories Soups, Stews and Chili Recipes Soup Recipes Noodle Soup Recipes
Time 35m
Yield 4
Number Of Ingredients 16
Steps:
- Heat oil in a stock pot over medium heat and cook and stir steak until it begins to brown, about 2 minutes; season with onion powder and garlic powder. Stir chopped onion into steak mixture; cook and stir until onion is translucent, about 3 minutes.
- Stir beef broth, brown sugar, soy sauce, ginger, and sriracha sauce into beef mixture; bring to a rolling boil. Reduce mixture to a simmer, and stir in rice noodles, carrots, cabbage, green bell pepper, red bell pepper, and celery; cover and simmer on low, stirring occasionally, until rice noodles are tender, about 8 minutes.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 386.1 calories, Carbohydrate 69.2 g, Cholesterol 22.5 mg, Fat 5 g, Fiber 3.4 g, Protein 14.7 g, SaturatedFat 1.6 g, Sodium 1403.3 mg, Sugar 17.5 g
HANOI BEEF AND RICE-NOODLE SOUP
Provided by Nancy Harmon Jenkins
Categories dinner, main course
Time 7h
Yield Six to eight servings
Number Of Ingredients 23
Steps:
- Make the beef broth (this takes about a day to prepare but can be made ahead of time and frozen). Clean the beef bones under cold running water, then place them in a pot, cover with water and soak overnight at room temperature.
- The next day, place the beef bones, oxtails and short ribs in a large stockpot. Cover with water and bring to a boil. Cook for 10 minutes, then drain and rinse the pot and the bones.
- Return the bones to the pot, add 6 quarts of water and boil. Skim the foam off the surface and stir occasionally. Add 3 quarts of water and bring to a boil. Skim whatever residue rises to the top. Turn heat to low.
- Meanwhile, char the clove-studded onions, shallots and ginger - either by piercing them with a fork and holding them over a gas flame or by putting them in the broiler - until they release their fragrance. Tie the charred vegetables, star anise and cinnamon stick in a double thickness of dampened cheesecloth. Add the spice bag, parsnips and salt to the broth and simmer for 1 hour.
- Remove the short ribs and cut the meat away from the bones. Reserve the meat, discard the fat and return the bones to the pot. Continue simmering the broth, uncovered, for 4 to 5 hours. Keep an eye on it; as the liquid boils away, add enough water to cover the bones.
- Meanwhile, cut the sirloin steak against the grain into paper-thin slices, roughly 2 inches by 2 inches. Slice the meat from the short ribs paper-thin. Set aside.
- In a small bowl, combine the scallions, coriander and half the onion slices. Place the remaining onion slices in another small bowl and stir in the hot chili sauce, blending well.
- Soak the rice sticks in warm water for 30 minutes. Drain and set aside.
- Discard all the bones from the broth. Strain the broth into a clean pot through a strainer or colander lined with a double layer of dampened cheesecloth. Refrigerate for several hours to allow the fat to rise to the top and harden. Remove the fat, heat the broth and add the fish sauce. When the broth boils, reduce the heat and simmer.
- In another pot, boil 4 quarts of water and put in the soaked rice sticks. Drain immediately. Divide the rice sticks among 6 to 8 large soup bowls and top them with the sliced meats. Bring broth to a rolling boil and ladle it directly over the meat in each bowl (the boiling broth will cook the raw sirloin instantly). Garnish with the scallion mixture and freshly ground black pepper.
- Serve the onions in hot chili sauce and the accompaniments on the side.
QUICK AND EASY BEEF AND RICE NOODLE SOUP
This recipe is my version of Vietnamese beef pho. It's perfect for a weeknight and full of flavor.
Provided by Jeff Mauro, host of Sandwich King
Categories main-dish
Time 45m
Yield 4 servings
Number Of Ingredients 17
Steps:
- Bring the stock to a very light simmer in a large pot, then add the beef base, fish sauce, hoisin, scallion halves, ginger, cloves, star anise, cinnamon stick and 1 tablespoon of the soy sauce. Simmer for 30 minutes.
- Using a spider or strainer, remove all the solids, leaving you with just the broth. Taste and adjust the seasoning with the additional tablespoon of soy sauce if it needs more salt, or hoisin if it needs more sweetness. Bring the broth back to a light simmer.
- Meanwhile, set up your bowls. On the bottom, divvy up the rice noodles, then top with the shaved beef. Pour in some simmering broth. Garnish with the bean sprouts, cilantro, mint, scallions sliced on the bias, jalapenos and lime wedges. Drizzle with extra hoisin if desired.
PHO (VIETNAMESE BEEF AND RICE-NOODLE SOUP)
Steps:
- Put the oxtails into a large stockpot and add enough water to cover the bones by 4 inches (about 2 gallons). Bring to a full boil and then lower the heat to a rapid simmer. Skim the scum that rises to the surface.
- Meanwhile put the ginger and onion halves on a baking sheet and char them under the broiler until lightly blackened, 10 to 15 minutes. Turn them over halfway through cooking. When cool enough to handle, rinse the onion and ginger under running water, using a knife to scrape away some of the charred surface. Cut the ginger into 3 pieces and toss it and the onion halves into the simmering broth, along with 1 tablespoon salt and the fish sauce.
- Put the star anise, cloves, and cinnamon stick in a small skillet and toast them on top of a stove burner over medium heat. Turn the spices a couple of times until they're slightly darkened (3 to 4 minutes) and until you smell their aroma. Put the toasted spices and fennel seeds in a small square of double thick cheesecloth and tie the bundle with a long piece of kitchen twine. Add the spice bundle and the bay leaves to the broth, tying the end of the twine to the pot handle for easy retrieval.
- Let the broth simmer, uncovered, skimming occasionally. After 4 hours, remove the spice bundle, onion, bay leaves and ginger from the pot and discard. Remove the oxtails from the pot and set aside. Let the broth continue to simmer. When the meat is cool enough to handle, pull the meat from the bones. Set the meat aside and return bones to the broth. Continue simmering, uncovered, until the broth is rich and flavorful, about 1 hour. Taste the broth and add more salt or fish sauce as needed.
- Meanwhile, soak the rice noodles in cold water for at least 20 minutes. Arrange the sliced scallions, cilantro, parsley, basil, bean sprouts, lime wedges, and chiles on a platter in separate piles.
- Bring a large pot of water to a boil and add the drained noodles. Give the noodles a quick stir and cook until tender but firm, about 1 minute. Rice noodles can quickly become gummy, so don't let them overcook. Drain the noodles. Warm 6 large bowls by rinsing the with hot water and divide the noodles among the bowls.
- Just before serving, return the broth to a full boil. Arrange the slices of raw filet and pieces of cooked oxtail meat over the noodles in each bowl. Carefully ladle the boiling broth over all; the raw beef should be submerged in the broth. Serve immediately, along with the platters of garnish.
VIETNAMESE BEEF AND RICE NOODLE SOUP (PHO)
If you've ever eaten Vietnamese food and not had this, you have been missing out. Very good and pretty healthy. I'm sure someone from Vietnam could critique this to death. I've had lots of Vietnamese food and this tastes pretty authentic.
Provided by Kevin Young
Categories Meat
Time 9h
Yield 4-6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 22
Steps:
- Place the oxtails in a large stockpot and add the water.
- Bring the water to a full boil, then reduce heat and bring water to a simmer.
- Scrape any scum off the top of the water and discard.
- Cut the onion in half and peel off the outer portion.
- Place on a baking sheet along with the ginger and broil in the over about 20 minutes, making sure not to blacken it.
- Turn over halfway through.
- Allow to cool.
- Place the star anise, cloves, cinnamon, and fennel seeds in a piece of cheesecloth and tie it shut with twine.
- Add the spice pack, onion halves, ginger, bay leaves, salt, and fish sauce to the broth.
- Allow the broth to simmer at least 5-6 hours (to your taste) uncovered.
- Remove the spice pack, onions, ginger, and bay leaves and discard.
- Remove the oxtails and set them aside.
- When cool enough to handle, remove the meat and trim of any remaining fat.
- Set the meat aside and return the bones to the broth.
- Allow the broth to simmer another hour or two until you achieve the desired taste then remove the bones.
- You may adjust the salt, but you don't want it too salty.
- Soak the rice noodles in COLD water 15-20 minutes, while starting a large pot of water boiling.
- While the noodles are soaking, place the cilantro, basil leaves, mint leaves, sliced onions, sliced scallions, and bean sprouts on a serving platter.
- After the noodles have soaked, place them in the boiling water and allow to cook until tender, but don't let them get mushy.
- It should only take a couple minutes.
- Rinse the noodles in cold water if not serving immediately.
- When ready to eat (you can do this earlier, like when you're boiling the water for the noodles) return the broth to a rolling boil.
- Place the noodles in a serving bowl and arrange the sliced meat (leftover oxtail meat if desired) over them.
- Ladle the boiling broth over the noodles and beef, making sure to cover the meat.
- Serve and allow each person to place the desired amount of garnish from the platter, hoisin sauce, and sriracha in their own bowl to taste.
HANOI BEEF AND RICE NOODLE SOUP (PHO BO)
Make and share this Hanoi Beef and Rice Noodle Soup (Pho Bo) recipe from Food.com.
Provided by dicentra
Categories Vegetable
Time 1h15m
Yield 6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 21
Steps:
- To prepare broth, heat a large stockpot over medium-high heat. Add oxtail, ginger, and shallots; sauté 8 minutes or until ginger and shallots are slightly charred.
- Add water and next 8 ingredients (through cinnamon stick); bring to a boil. Reduce heat, and simmer 4 hours. Strain broth through a sieve into a large bowl; discard solids.
- Return broth to pan, and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to medium, and cook until reduced to 10 cups (about 30 minutes).
- Skim fat from surface; discard fat. Keep warm.
- To prepare remaining ingredients, add sliced onion to broth. Place noodles in a large bowl, and cover with boiling water.
- Let stand 20 minutes. Drain. Place 1/3 cup bean sprouts in each of 6 soup bowls.
- Top each serving with 1 1/3 cup noodles and 2 ounces eye-of-round.
- Carefully ladle 1 2/3 cups boiling broth over each serving (boiling broth will cook the meat). Serve with cilantro, basil, chiles, limes, and hoisin, if desired.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 431.9, Fat 8.9, SaturatedFat 3.4, Cholesterol 34.9, Sodium 855.6, Carbohydrate 71.2, Fiber 4.1, Sugar 11.4, Protein 17.1
HANOI BEEF NOODLE SOUP
Steps:
- Make broth:
- Roast onions and ginger directly on rack of a gas burner over high heat, turning with tongs, until blistered and blackened, 10 to 15 minutes. (Alternatively, broil onions and ginger on foil-lined rack of a broiler pan about 5 inches from heat, turning occasionally, until charred, 20 to 25 minutes for onions; 25 to 30 minutes for ginger.) Transfer to a bowl and cool. When cool enough to handle, rinse and rub under cold running water to remove any blackened pieces (some areas will remain browned).
- While onions and ginger roast, cover shanks with 2 quarts cold water in a 6- to 8-quart pot. Bring to a boil, then drain in a large colander (discard cooking water) and rinse well with cold water. Clean pot.
- Wrap star anise, cinnamon stick, cloves, and peppercorns in cheesecloth and tie into a bundle with kitchen string to make a spice bag, then add to cleaned pot along with 4 quarts water, shanks, onions, and ginger. Simmer, uncovered, skimming froth occasionally, 2 hours. Add remaining quart water and return to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer, skimming froth occasionally, until shanks are very tender, about 1 hour more.
- Prepare sirloin and noodles for soup while broth simmers:
- Freeze steak until firm but not frozen solid, 30 to 45 minutes, then slice across the grain with a sharp thin knife into less than 1/8-inch-thick slices.
- Soak rice noodles in cold water to cover until softened, about 30 minutes, then drain in cleaned large colander. Cook noodles in a 6-quart pot of boiling water, uncovered, stirring, 1 minute, then drain.
- Finish soup:
- Transfer shanks with tongs to a cutting board. Clean pot. When shanks are cool enough to handle, remove meat from bones and cut into small pieces, discarding bones, fat, and sinew. Set aside 2 cups beef (reserve remainder for another use).
- Pour broth through a fine-mesh sieve into a large heatproof bowl, discarding solids. Measure broth: If there is more than 3 quarts (12 cups), boil in cleaned pot until reduced; if there is less, add water. Let stand until fat rises to top, 1 to 2 minutes, then skim off fat if desired.
- Combine broth and beef (2 cups) in cleaned 6- to 8-quart pot and bring to a boil, then add fish sauce and salt and return to a boil just before serving.
- Divide noodles among 6 large deep bowls. Top noodles with uncooked sliced steak and ladle boiling-hot broth (with pieces of beef shanks) over steak and noodles. (Hot broth will cook steak.)
- Serve soup with accompaniments.
HANOI SPECIAL RICE NOODLE SOUP
Bún thang is one of the most complex expressions of Vietnamese culinary prowess. Requiring many ingredients and much time, this popular Hanoi soup is traditionally reserved for special events and holidays such as Tet. The golden broth contains chicken, pork, and dried squid or shrimp. The toppings may include those items, too, in addition to egg shreds, gio lua (sausage), and salted duck egg yolk. At the table, shrimp sauce gives the broth extra depth, and if it is affordable, male belostomatid beetle extract (ca cuong) is added from the tip of a toothpick, imparting a mesmerizing fragrance. Aficionados of the soup can be particular. In a 1996 essay, food writer Bang Son asserts that its refinement is not for merely appeasing hunger, insisting that it be served in fine china on a joyous occasion to cherished loved ones. While my mom isn't that fanatical, she is a stickler for certain traditional notions, such as serving bún thang piping hot. In my kitchen, I omit the beetle juice because the chemical version sold in the United States overwhelms the delicate flavors of the soup. Also, though bún thang is often savored in smallish bowls as part of a multicourse meal, I prefer to serve it in big ones.
Yield serves 6
Number Of Ingredients 17
Steps:
- Put the chicken pieces, salt, and the 4 quarts water into a stockpot (about 12-quart capacity) and bring to a boil over high heat. Lower the heat to a gentle simmer and then use a ladle or large, shallow spoon to skim off any scum that rises to the top. Add the onion and continue to simmer for 10 minutes.
- Remove the breast from the pot and set aside in a bowl of cold water for 5 minutes to prevent it from drying out. Add the pork bones, squid, and fish sauce to the pot. Raise the heat to high to return to a boil and then lower the heat to simmer gently. Again, skim off any scum. Simmer, uncovered, for 2 hours.
- When the breast has finished soaking, drain the water and set the breast aside. Allow it to cool completely, then shred the meat with your fingers into fine pieces about 1/8 inch wide, pulling it along its natural grain and discarding the bones and skin. Put the chicken shreds in a small container, cover, and refrigerate.
- To rehydrate the dried shrimp, put them in a small saucepan with the 1 1/2 cups water, bring to a simmer over medium heat, and cook for 10 minutes, or until slightly soft. Drain the shrimp into a sieve placed over a bowl. Add the cooking liquid to the simmering broth. Let the shrimp cool completely, then put it into a food processor or electric mini-chopper and process to grind to a fine texture. Transfer to a small container, cover, and refrigerate.
- When the broth is ready, use tongs to transfer the pork bones to a large bowl filled with cold water. Let them soak for 5 minutes to prevent them from drying out and turning dark. Drain the pork bones, let cool until they can be handled, and then remove the meat, discarding the bones and any odd bits. Use your fingers to break the meat into pea-sized pieces or tear it into fine shreds. Put in a small container, cover, and refrigerate.
- Position a fine-mesh sieve (or a coarse-mesh sieve lined with cheesecloth) over a pot and gently ladle the broth into the sieve. Discard the solids, including the chicken parts. (Th is seems wasteful, but these parts are spent.) Use a ladle to skim as much fat from the top of the broth as you like. (To make this task easier, you can cool the broth, refrigerate overnight, lift off the solidified fat, and then reheat before continuing.) There should be about 3 quarts (12 cups) broth.
- Bring the broth to a simmer over medium heat while you are assembling the bowls. At the same time, bring a large pot of water to a rolling boil, for reheating the noodles. Make sure the chicken, shrimp, pork, egg, and sausage are at room temperature; ready the Vietnamese coriander and pepper for assembling the bowls; and put the shrimp sauce, preserved radish, and chiles on the table.
- Place a portion of the noodles on a large vertical-handle strainer (or mesh sieve) and dunk the noodles in the boiling water. After 5 to 10 seconds, pull the strainer from the water, letting the water drain back into the pot. Empty the noodles into a bowl and repeat with the remaining portions, while proceeding to assemble each bowl as the noodles are reheating and draining. Visually divide up each bowl into quadrants. Cover 1 quadrant with chicken, the next quadrant with egg, and the third one with sausage. If you have less shrimp and pork than the other ingredients, fill the remaining quadrant with half of each; if you have lots of pork, cover the quadrant with it, and put the shrimp in the center. Put some Vietnamese coriander in the middle, and then sprinkle with pepper.
- Raise the heat on the broth and bring to a rolling boil. Do a final taste test, adding more salt, if necessary. Ladle about 2 cups broth into each bowl, distributing the hot liquid evenly to warm all the ingredients. Serve immediately with the fine shrimp sauce, preserved radish, and chiles. Diners should stir in about 1/4 teaspoon shrimp sauce to finish their bowls. The radish and chiles add crunch and heat.
Tips:
- Choose the right noodles: Use flat rice noodles for an authentic Hanoi beef noodle soup. You can find them in most Asian grocery stores or online.
- Marinate the beef: Marinating the beef in a mixture of soy sauce, fish sauce, garlic, and ginger will help to tenderize it and give it more flavor.
- Use a flavorful broth: The broth is the key to a great beef noodle soup. Use a combination of beef broth, chicken broth, and water, and add aromatics like ginger, garlic, and lemongrass.
- Don't overcook the beef: Beef should be cooked just until it is tender, otherwise it will become tough. Cook it for too long and it will be tough.
- Assemble the soup: To assemble the soup, first place the noodles in a bowl. Then, add the beef, broth, vegetables, and herbs. Serve immediately.
Conclusion:
Hanoi beef noodle soup is a delicious and flavorful Vietnamese dish that is perfect for a quick and easy meal. It is made with flat rice noodles, beef, and a flavorful broth. The soup is often garnished with vegetables and herbs, such as bean sprouts, cilantro, and mint. If you are looking for a new and exciting soup recipe, Hanoi beef noodle soup is a great option. It is sure to please everyone at your table.
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