Pho at Home!

O, my! My favorite gal blogger in the whole world, who also is the best couponer in So Cal, posted her husband’s recipe for pho. I haven’t tried it, yet, but I thought I would post it here before I forget… check it out!

If you know how to make your own stock/broth– you skim through the first part.

Broth: 12qt Stock pot 4 lbs chicken bones (preferably necks and feet) 3ea small yellow onions (whole) 1 ea garlic head (whole) 1 nub of ginger (whole) about a 4 inch piece 1/2 bun cilantro 4 ea sprigs Thai basil 4 TB fish sauce 1/4 cup sugar 2 TB whole coriander seeds 5 ea cloves Salt to taste

For broth: Preheat your oven to 400F and place your whole un-peeled aromatics (garlic, onions and ginger). Roast for 15 min. Take out the oven and allow to cool at room temperature. Cut garlic in half and squeeze out the garlic onto a plate or dish to hold all of your aromatics for the stock. Peel the onions as well but not the ginger, the skin can stay on. Cut onions and ginger into medium sized pieces. 1/2 in by 1/2 in and reserve all roasted veg for later.

Take bones and place in the pot and run cold water over it till covered. Agitate bones and wash vigorously. Empty water and repeat the washing. Once bones are cleaned of all particles and excess fat, cover with cold water and place on high heat and bring to a boil.

NOTE: only bring to a boil, don’t continuously boil the bones. The point is to boil the bones to take the impurities out so your broth is clear.

Once your water has boiled, pour the bones and water into a colander and drain. If you look at the bottom of the pot you will see particulates and built up fat along the sides. Wash the pot but don’t use soap, just rinse with hot water and wipe clean. In the clean pot place the bones back into it and wash twice again just like you did with the raw bones. Once you done that you should be left with gray clean bones that are ready for broth making!

NOTE: you can use any bones to make this broth (beef, chicken or pork) all you want to make sure you do is use the bones that have good cartilage. IE: necks, feet, or any bone that has a joint. That is where all good flavor comes from.

Grab your clean bones and place everything else from the broth recipe into the stock pot and cover with cold water all the way to the top of the pot giving about an inch of space. Place on medium low heat and simmer for about 4 hours. DO NOT BRING TO HARD BOIL, that will make your stock cloudy. Once stock has simmered for alotted time strain through a fine sieve and place on the stove and check for seasoning. Add salt if needed.

NOTE: you can make broth ahead of time if you like. Quick tip, you can completely cool your broth in the fridge overnight and then pour into ice cube trays to freeze in the freezer for another night. Once completely frozen, you can pop the cubes out and store in a ziplock freezer bag and you have cubes of frozen pho broth when ever you like. The work pays off and it’s healthier than any of that pre-made stock cubes on the market! Now back to dinner…..

Dishing up: 1 lb banh pho tuoi (rice stick noodles) 1 lb any meat you want (pork, chicken, seafood) pre-cooked and sliced thin 1# veggies (pre-cooked as well) Hoisin sauce and sambal to preference Limes Cilantro leaves Thai basil leaves Bean sprouts

For the dish up, have all of your veggies pre-cooked and cooled. Best way is to have a pot of water boiling on the stove and place any veggie in the water for literally 30 sec. Scoop out of the water with a slotted spoon or spider and place on a plate and put in the freezer for 10 min to stop the cooking, just don’t forget them in the freezer!

If you overcook the noodles it will make your pho experience tragic and all that hard work will result in a trip back to your neighborhood friendly Asian market for more noodles and everyone will be waiting for dinner! So the key is fast cook time and fast cool down time. So you still have the water on the stove, from your veggies, boiling. Place the dry noodles in the boiling water for LITERALLY 5sec and strain through a colander quickly and wash continuously with cold water until noodles are cooled. Place in a serving dish with all of your veggies, meat, herbs, and garnishes separate and allow your family to build their own experience. Place all veggies and garnishes in a bowl and pour piping hot broth over the top. finishing with a touch of hoisin and sambal, alot if you prefer. Then Enjoy!

Mixing and matching different veggies and meats in your soup is fun filled and once you get the hang of it, you will be a pho master and you will be the coolest person on your block

The garnishes and noodles can be stored in your fridge in an air tight container for up to 5 days and we have already discussed how to get maximum shelf life out of your broth.

Enjoy!

***Thank you mucho, Jose and Mr. Josie… WINKS!