Categorized | Pho, Vietnam

Searching for the best phố in Melbourne

Posted on 08 May 2007 by Ed

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pho

It’s not something people talk about a lot but whenever I bring up phố there is enormous interest about where to eat it. People are always interested in the best places to eat in Victoria Street Richmond. When they hear I have a list of the best local phố restaurants from a phố expert in Sydney their notebooks and PDAs come out as they copy out the list.

I discovered the “I Love Phố” exhibition that was held in Liverpool in NSW through Noodlepie, a blog with a distinctly Vietnamese slant. Cuong Phu Le, curator of “I Love Phố” was hoping to take his exhibition that covered poetry, art, installations, recipes and the food itself national and international (If Matt Preston is reading you should bring it down for the food festival). A 64 page booklet was produced which really is an amazing homage to the noodle soup.
The only thing missing is a podcast (I may just put one together) on how to pronounce phố.
About a year ago I was about to fly out to Hanoi and I was filled-in on the minute detail of hoe to pronounce what I was told is “feu”. My language was hi-jacked by f**dies who thought they knew how to pronounce it but didn’t.
I successfully ordered my first phố in Vietnam, in a small hotel in the old town, only acheived by simply ticking a box on a slip. I sat with my back to the window and didn’t see the kitchen hand negotiate the early morning traffic of thousands of mopeds and bicycles with a tray of the soup. I was eating street food and a love affaird with it started. I dumped my guidebook realising that the best food was on the street.All I had to do was follow the crowds of locals and the best food in Hanoi would be mine. Of course, it wasn’t that simple. Try ordering “pho” or “feu” and you aren’t going to come away with much as I discovered phố isn’t pronounced that way.

Anyway, it is a little easier to order the soup in Melbourne and for the record these are the places I was recomended. Is there any restaurant missing from the list?

Pho Dzung Tan Dinh
208 Victoria St
Richmond 3121 VIC
Phone: (03) 9427 0292
Pho Dzung City Noodle Shop
234 Russell Street
Melbourne VIC 3000
Phone (03) 9663 8885
Pho Bang Restaurant
71 Alfrieda St
St Albans VIC 3021
Phone (03) 9356 0930
Pho Bo Ga Mekong Vietnam
241 Swanston Street
Melbourne VIC 3000
Phone (03) 9663 3288
The Pho Chu
69 Main Rd West
St Albans VIC 3021
Phone (03) 9356 0188

The Pho Chu
92 Hopkins St Footscray 3011
(03) 9687 8265

Popularity: 21% [?]

22 Comments For This Post

  1. Ellie Says:

    Mekongs does taste good, but after finding a piece of clingwrap in my bowl a few years ago, I haven’t been back.

  2. Andrew Says:

    Arhhh…to find a good Pho that suits a Melbournians tastebuds would be great…I find most of them are too heavy handed on the MSG/Salt, but I am not sure how traditional this MSG/Salt load is compared to native Vietnam (Ed, can you comment?). Personally, I prefer a quality stock (obviously) without too much MSG, which is hard to find.

    I agree that Mekong in CBD has a good Pho with a decent stock that isn’t too salty. There are a couple of new-starts in Footscray that look promising too (one with queues out the door!). It would be great to hear of some others.

  3. cin Says:

    i wuold skip the pho dzung on Russell St but recommend Chu The on Victoria St.

    so, how is pho pronounced?

  4. tom Says:

    “i wuold skip the pho dzung on Russell St but recommend Chu The on Victoria St.”

    i second that.

  5. Ed Says:

    Ellie - that sounds awful. I gather that’s theone Bill; clinton visited when in town.

    Andrew, I don’t think i tasted any MSG recently but maybe my palate is hardened to it. Somehow in the hills is SaPa it seemed fresher than anywhere else.

    Cin I found a poem in the book:

    Do not say Foe
    Do not Say foo
    And especially don’t
    Say the word which describes “number two”.

    Start with a fff
    To be followed by an urgh.
    Once it becomes un-phố -gettable
    you’ll get with the slur.

    tom, cheers for seconding that.

  6. Phil Says:

    Mekong is the yardstick by which I judge phố in my Indochinese neck of the woods. Mekong on Swanston St is a hell of a lot lighter on the MSG and “mixed animal pipe” than in Cambodia, and the raw ingredients are better than your average phố carts in Ho Chi Minh City.

    Hung Vuong, just around the corner from Footscray station also deserves a guernsey.

  7. Garry Says:

    G’day Ed. Great to see your discussion on Pho … probably my favourite breakfast. Without intending to start a flame war, if memory serves me correct (in the best of Chairman Kaga’s ouevre) Pho is a direct derivative of “Feu” from pot au feu - the classic french soup base. The Vietnamese dish’s name evolved during the French colonisation and is the indigenous interpretation of the French dialect … furrrrr with an upward inflection at the end. As for Melbourne’s best … get out of the CBD and try Springvale or St Albans where the Pho is the real deal …. and at bargain prices.

  8. noodle Says:

    I reckon Springvale is the Melbourne pho eating frontier. The other day I was out there, and counted over six pho shops with in eye shot. There are a few chain outlets like Pho Hung (preston) and Hung Vuong (Richmond). I visited Pho Hoang Noodle House on Buckingham Ave and found the quality to be easily comparable to any of the shops in town or on victoria street. I’m planning my next trip as we speak.

  9. johanna Says:

    I’m a Chu The girl too….

  10. noodle Says:

    After a trip north west today, I’ve got to say that St Albans is another frontier for exploration, and closer. There seem to be a lot of shops that advertise Bun Bo Hue, great soup. Had a get bowl of Hu Tieu, will be back.

  11. Morganos Says:

    Chu The is the tastiest Pho I’ve had…

  12. Joos Says:

    Who said skip the Russel st Pho Dzung!! especially those who cannot handle too much salt!! I find Mekong to be far to salty, in fact I find alot of other places far too salty and I’m a smoker!!! I’ve been going to The russel St Pho dzung for a long time and deem it to be the freshest and equally tasteiest with the lowest salt out of all of the choices! Lookers for low salt, go the Russel!

  13. lucky duck Says:

    msg is your friend. if it dries your mouth out thne there is too much salt/msg.
    mmmm cling wrap. fight through it dont let the cling wrap stop you!

  14. Pho Lover Says:

    MSG is not your friend if you react badly to it! I don’t react myself, but my boyfriend does!! He’s my personal MSG-o-meter.
    My personal fave is Chu The Pho on Victoria Street. It’s the first Pho shop you come to heading east from Church street, lovely family running it too, especially the little old grandma. I visit there weekly and it just gets better and better. This week I’m checking out westside though- excited!

  15. purplegoddess Says:

    Springvale has excellent pho. Some of the restaurants on Springvale Road are great, altho if you tuck around the back, into the side streets (Windsor Ave??) there are tiny little pho houses that are truly heavenly. I’ve eaten in so many of them, I can begin to tell the subtle difference between them.

    Proud Peacock in Kingsway, Glen Waverley does a good pho (altho better goi cuon) if you can’t get all the way to Springvale.

  16. Luke Says:

    Chu The on Victoria street Richmond has excellent pho!

  17. Sooz Says:

    The Pho from Viet Star on Glenferrie Rd in Hawthorn is to die for! I have moved away from the area but still go back there for my pho!

    BTW - What are peoples’ favourite ingredients?

    My fav is DEF brisket! YUM!

  18. Ed Says:

    Luke, I’ll check out Chu The. recently I’ve been to the new Love Pho on Swan St. Not bad. Sooz, I’ll put that into my list which I must get back onto.

  19. lena Says:

    phohung vuong makes the best pho!!!! Its on balmoral avenue springvale. Taste like the real deal. Quality stock indeed.

  20. Dr Sprout and the Noodle Master Says:

    Dr Sprout and the Noodle Master have joined the hunt for the best pho.
    Both of us have been regulars at the Russell Street bowl flingers joint;
    sipping weak tea, stirring the lemon and chilli and slurping the noodle.
    Therefore, in a break with tradition it was off the Mekong in Swanston
    Street.
    So how was it for us?
    The stock is sharper in Russell Street – Swanston Street Mekong was
    sweeter and more flavoursome (perhaps more msg).
    Ritually I have the chicken and rare beef combination.
    Mekong has more beef but less chicken.
    Overall the Mekong pho is sweeter and less liquid – more noodle and
    meat, good strong chilli.
    This is not necessarily better – sharper thinner maybe better. We will
    have to go back to Russell Street

  21. Ed Says:

    Thanks Dr Sprout and the Noodle Master, I need to try both - perhaps tonight as I’m in town for comedy (the festival not in food).

  22. gabby Says:

    hung vuong in footscray is the best ^^

1 Trackbacks For This Post

  1. gastronomy domine « Mrs Slocombe regrets Says:

    […] with the entire Preston demographic from Vietnamese to bogan to punky to us, and we did indeed have Pho: Kate’s had all sorts of gooly bits (lung?liver?) in it, which she gamely ate except for the […]

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