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Pho Hoa – Albuquerque, New Mexico

Pho Hoa Vietnamese Restaurant on Fourth Street

Pho Hoa Vietnamese Restaurant on Fourth Street

Though it ended in 1975, the Vietnam war was still very fresh in the minds of Americans when I enlisted in the Air Force two years later.  Many of my senior colleagues had served in Vietnam and regaled me with tales of their adventures.  It wasn’t man’s inhumanity to man they took away from the experience, but the goodness of people brought together by exigent circumstances.  It is very telling of the high character of my colleagues that despite the ravages of war, they had fallen in love with Vietnam: its people, culture and its food.  Several of my friends sponsored Vietnamese families fleeing the beleaguered nation.

One of my friends told me the beauty of Vietnam was best seen in the bright colors of its flowers, the innocence of its children and the femininity of women attired in ao dai, the form-fitting silk tunic worn over pantaloons.  Two of the elements which best exemplify the beauty of Vietnam in my friend’s estimation were fully on display during my inaugural visit to the Pho Hoa Vietnamese Restaurant on Fourth Street.

Monica and Lisa, the delightful servers at Pho Hoa

Monica and Lisa wearing ao dai

Attired  in colorful ao dai which contours elegantly to their lithe bodies, Monica and Lisa, the delightful servers at Pho Hoa, seem to flow gracefully through the restaurant as they take and fill lunch orders.  As my friend had described, the ao dail does accentuate the femininity and attractiveness of women who wear them.  Physical pulchritude will only go so far, however.  Monica and Lisa are also so friendly and attentive, they could well become as popular a draw to Pho Hoa as its cuisine.

The other element on display at Pho Hoa which embodies Vietnamese beauty is flowers.  The word “Hoa” translates to English as flower.  The top shelf on a room divider is replete with flowers, as bright and beautiful as nature can create.  The restaurant itself is also bright and colorful with wasabi green and cranberry walls, hardwood floors and Vietnamese decorations festooning a very attractive restaurant.

Spring Rolls with Peanut Sauce

Spring Rolls with Peanut Sauce

The menu is fairly typical of Vietnamese restaurants throughout the Duke City.  There are nearly 80 items on the menu, not including beverages.  Vegetarian items are plentiful.  With so many items from which to select, you’re well advised to ask Lisa and Monica what they recommend.  Lisa guided me toward Pho Hoa’s spring rolls, a fresh rice paper roll filled with vermicelli noodles, mint, lettuce, shrimp and pork.  Those ingredients are visible through the translucent rice paper.  The spring rolls are served with a peanut sauce topped with crushed peanuts.  It’s not as cloying as some peanut sauces tend to be and serves as an excellent dip for very good spring rolls.

Morgain Davison, a long-time friend of this blog and mom-to-be, asked me to eat some pho for her since pho can’t be found where she now lives.  Morgain, this Pho Tai (rare steak noodle soup) is for you; only sharing a swimming pool-sized bowl of this luxurious, aromatic elixir with you could possibly have made it better. One of the secrets of using rare beef in pho is to make sure the heat of the broth doesn’t fully cook the rare beef.  It ensures the beefiness of the flavor.   Throw in some wonderful fresh veggies with tangles of perfectly prepared noodles and you’ve got a nutritious and delicious soup as good as any you’ll find in Albuquerque.

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Rare Beef Noodle Soup (#14)

SECOND VISIT – 3 MAY 2013:  Whenever I want validation of my opinion on the authenticity and deliciousness of a new Vietnamese restaurant, I turn to my friend Hu Vuu who was born in Vietnam and whose mother owns and operates a fantastic Vietnamese restaurant in San Francisco.  Hu has forgotten more about Vietnamese food than I’ll probably ever know.  He accompanied me on my second visit along with our friends and colleagues Fancy Mortensen, Harold Lopez and Karen Ascoli, all three of whom have become very savvy on Vietnamese food courtesy of our friend Hu. 

While my friends luxuriated on the comforting qualities of pho, my choice was spicy chicken lemongrass, one of the first of so many Vietnamese dishes to ensnare my affections.  It’s a beautifully presented dish served on a triangular plate.  Served on a large lettuce leaf is some of the highest quality, mostly white meat chicken you’ll find at any Asian restaurant.  It’s tender and wholly devoid of any sinew or gristle.  Lemongrass, the wondrous aromatically enticing herb, enlivens this dish as does chili, crushed peanuts, onions and julienne carrots and daikon.  This may be the best rendition of chicken lemongrass in Albuquerque.

Spicy Chicken Lemongrass

Spicy Chicken Lemongrass

The menu includes five banh mi, the wonderful Vietnamese sandwich which is finally starting to catch on in Albuquerque.  Three meats–grilled pork, grilled beef, grilled chicken–are available as well as a vegetarian fried tofu sandwich and a fried egg sandwich.  All sandwiches are served with pickled daikon, radish, carrots, cilantro, jalapeño and cucumber.  The Banh Mi Trung Chien (fried egg sandwich) is the Vietnamese answer to the Egg McMuffin, only much better and certainly not just for breakfast.  The canvas for this sandwich is an excellent nine-inch baguette with a characteristically crusty exterior.  Eggs and pickled vegetables are much better than they sound, a true combination of contrasting flavors which go well together.

Pho Hoa is not just the only Vietnamese restaurant in Los Ranchos de Albuquerque, it’s the only Vietnamese restaurant within miles of the heart of the North Valley.  Launched in April, 2013, it has introduced many elements of the beauty of Vietnam to its guests.

Pho Hoa
6601 4th St NW Suite H
Los Ranchos de Albuquerque, New Mexico
(505) 369-1547
Web Site
LATEST VISIT: 3 May 2013
1st VISIT:  19 April 2013
# OF VISITS: 2
RATING: 21
COST: $$
BEST BET: Rare Beef Noodle Soup, Avocado Shake, Spring Rolls, Banh Mi, Spicy Chicken Lemongrass

Pho Hoa Vietnamese Restaurant on Urbanspoon

Sai Gon Sandwich – Albuquerque, New Mexico

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Saigon Sandwich, home to some of the best banh mi in Albuquerque

If ever there was a culinary Kobayashi Maru (for the non-Trekkies among you, that’s a no-win scenario), it might well be naming the best sandwich (or best food of any kind) in the world. Imagine the challenge. There are potentially hundreds of thousands of delicious candidates, many worthy of acclaim as the very best in their block, city, state or province…but the world’s an awfully big place. A lifetime might not be enough to sample but a few thousand sandwiches. Any sandwich you select would undoubtedly be disputed vehemently.

Surely, you say, no authoritative source exists which would possibly have the temerity, much less breadth of knowledge, to name just one sandwich as the very best in the planet. Such hubris would invite derision and debate. Perhaps then it’s appropriate that the most recent source to declare one sandwich as definitively the best in the world comes from the island nation in which was born the man (the Earl of Sandwich) for whom the ubiquitous sandwich is named. That source is The Guardian, one of the most respected periodicals in the United Kingdom (even though it doesn’t feature “Page 3″ girls).

Place your order at the counter and your meal will be ready in minutes

Place your order at the counter and your meal will be ready in minutes

According to The Guardian, the “world’s best sandwich isn’t found in Rome, Copenhagen or even New York City, but on the streets of Vietnam.” The Guardian’s choice as best sandwich in the world is the banh mi, otherwise known as the Vietnamese sandwich. It’s almost ironic that perhaps no sandwich anywhere has such a humble origin and that unlike skyscraper-high Dagwood sandwiches, the banh mi tends to be modest in girth and sparse in its ingredients. Where the banh mi isn’t sparse is in its utter deliciousness.

Quite simply, a banh mi packs a lot of flavor into a relatively small (by American standards) package. Unlike its American counterpart, the banh mi focuses not on the profligate piling on cold-cuts and condiments, but on a balance of ingredients and flavors including pickled vegetables (daikon, shredded carrots), jalapeños, cilantro and thinner meats than adorn American sandwiches. The canvas for the ingredients is a long, thin baguette with its own balance of textures–a pillowy inside and crusty outside.

Vietnamese spring rolls with shrimp and pork

Vietnamese spring rolls with shrimp and pork; served with a peanut-chili sauce

It’s well known that pho is the most popular breakfast food in Vietnam, but according to my friend Huu Vu who grew up there, not all Vietnamese families could afford pho. With great fondness, he recalls having banh mi for breakfast on many mornings. Banh mi remains among his very favorite meals, but they’re not just for breakfast any more.  Nor are they exclusively popular among Vietnamese expats.  The New York Times indicates “the Vietnamese banh mi sandwich has taken New York by storm, elevating the once humble pork and pickled vegetable sandwich to heights of gastronomic chic.”  Gambit, a New Orleans news magazine, calls the banh mi “New Orleans’ po-boy for the 21st century.”

It’s taken a bit longer for the banh mi to become mainstream in Albuquerque.  While several Vietnamese restaurants throughout the Duke City have offered banh mi for years, the sandwich has yet to achieve the acclaim due “the best sandwich in the world.”  Albuquerque The Magazine did list the banh mi at Banh Mi Coda as  “one of the city’s “12 yummiest sandwiches” in its annual Food & Wine issue for 2012.  My friend Ryan “Break The Chain” Scott would argue that Albuquerque’s banh mi comes from May Hong.  The point is, the banh mi is starting to break through.

Banh Mi Cha Lua - Jambon, Pork Roll, Pate

Banh Mi Cha Lua – Jambon, Pork Roll, Pate

In early 2013, the Duke City saw the launch of the city’s second banh mi shop when Sai Gon Sandwich opened in Franklin Plaza, a timeworn shopping center on the northeast corner of Juan Tabo and Central.  The menu at the combination bakery, deli and tofu house befits the diminutive three-table restaurant, but as with other diminutive diners, Sai Gon Sandwich embodies an aphorism used by Food Network glitterati Guy Fieri: “little place, big flavors.”  Besides, the restaurant does a brisk take-out business and delivers throughout the neighborhood.

Those big flavors can be found in ten different banh mi (including a vegetarian option) and oversized spring rolls.  In a willpower-defeating refrigerator, you’ll find various Vietnamese desserts and snack foods (including tapioca puddings, sesame balls, rice puddings, rice cakes), Vietnamese coffees and so much more.  All of the restaurant’s deli meats are homemade and can be purchased by the pound so you can make your own banh mi at home.  Tofu and organic soy milk are also homemade.  It goes without saying that the bread is fresh baked and homemade, too.

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Banh Mi Heo Nuong – Grilled Pork

At two per order, the spring rolls are impressive not only for their girth, but for their flavor.  Each spring roll comes with lettuce, cucumbers, mint and vermicelli noodles wrapped inside a translucent rice paper served with a peanut-chili sauce.  The shrimp and pork spring roll is a must have.  The thinly sliced pork is visible through the top layer of the rice paper, but the shrimp are embedded deeply among the condiments.  The combination is terrific.  So is the peanut sauce  though the chili could be just a bit more piquant.

Each banh mi comes with pickled carrots and daikon, cucumbers, sliced jalapeños, cilantro and Vietnamese mayo on some of the best freshly baked baguettes in town.  Each sandwich is just over nine-inches in length, but as the photos accompanying this essay show, they hardly resemble the overstuffed American sub sandwich.  In Vietnamese, “banh mi” translates both as “bread” and the sandwich using that bread.  It’s a great bread with a crusty, but not crumbly exterior and a soft, but not doughy interior.  The balance of ingredients with bread which make for a great banh mi is as spot-on as a tightrope walker.

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Banh Mi Dac Biet – Jambon, Headcheese, Pork Roll, Pate

During our inaugural visit, my Kim and I ordered three hand-crafted banh mi, consuming half of each one at the restaurant and taking the remaining halves home for later.  Each banh mi is absolutely delicious, replete with a wondrous interplay of pickled vegetables, cured meats, condiments and aromatic herbs. Jalapeños are sparsely used, another example of how the sandwich emphasizes balance over heat.  Expertise in the fine art of charcuterie is evident in each savory and sumptuous meat. 

I don’t personally have the audacious nature to declare the banh mi as the Duke City’s best sandwich, but it’s certainly among a select few in that elite ballpark. Sai Gon Sandwich is a paragon of perfection when it comes to a sandwich that’s slowly, but inevitably taking America by storm.

Sai Gon Sandwich
162 Juan Tabo, N.E.
Albuquerque, New Mexico
(505) 275-4922
LATEST VISIT: 16 March 2013
# OF VISITS: 1
RATING: *
COST: $ – $$
BEST BET: Spring Rolls, Banh Mi

Sai Gon Sandwich on Urbanspoon

2000 Vietnam Restaurant – Albuquerque, New Mexico

2000 Vietnamese Restaurant on San Mateo

2000 Vietnam Restaurant on San Mateo

JERRY: By the way Newman, I’m just curious. When you booked the hotel, did you book it for the millennium New Year?

NEWMAN: (smug) As a matter of fact, I did.

JERRY: Oh, that’s interesting, because as everyone knows, since there was no year zero, the millennium doesn’t begin until the year two-thousand and one.  Which would make your party one year late, and thus, quite lame.

It’s likely only Jerry Seinfeld and a few chronologically savvy people even know that “2000” and “the Millennium” are not synonymous. When it first launched and for years thereafter, a popular Duke City Vietnamese restaurant was actually named 2000 Millennium Restaurant, a semantically incorrect term. Today, the name on the marquee reflects the year in which the restaurant was launched (which also happens to be the reason behind its quaint name).

Aside from its quirky, uniquely Albuquerque name and an intriguing menu (which includes a few items heretofore not found in the Duke City), what draws the most attention to the 2000 Vietnam Restaurant is the Saigon Express Emissions Testing facility in a garage attached to the restaurant. Its presence has undoubtedly engendered trite scatological references to emissions and Vietnamese food. Diners who have moved on beyond sophomoric humor have discovered that “Y2K” and succeeding years have been very good years for Duke City diners who love Vietnamese cuisine.

Garlic chicken wings

Garlic chicken wings

Situated on the southwest corner of Zuni and San Mateo, 2000 became so popular that in 2010, a sibling restaurant named 2000 II (or is that 2000, too?) opened on Juan Tabo just north of Central.  As with all of the city’s Vietnamese restaurants, 2000 draws from a wide demographic cross-section that includes servicemen from nearby Kirtland Air Force Base and medical personnel from the Lovelace Medical Center among others.  The restaurant is usually more than half full even during off-hours and near capacity at lunch.

The menu is a veritable compendium of Vietnamese food favorites, but the overwhelming favorite appears to be the rice noodle or egg noodle soup with duck leg.  At least one swimming pool-sized bowl of this elixir seems destined for each table.  Diners wash it down with any number of beverages including the largest selection of Vietnamese style shakes in Albuquerque, sixteen in all.  The shakes are available with or without boba, the gooey, gelatinous globules that seem to inherit the flavor of the shake.

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Banh Mi

Aside from perusing the multi-page menu which offers more than 150 items, you’ll want to check out the daily specials scrawled on a slate board by the restaurant’s entrance.  That’s where we found the garlic chicken wings,  four lightly-breaded pterodactyl-sized wings with plenty of meat on their bones and lots of garlicky flavor.  The wings are served with a sweet and sour (mostly sweet) sauce that is wholly unnecessary.  Try it, but you’ll quickly discard it because these wings stand on their own.

The menu also offers several banh mi, the Vietnamese sandwich analogous to America’s submarine sandwich or hoagie.  Unlike its American counterpart, however, the banh mi focuses not on piling on cold-cuts, but on a balance of ingredients including pickled vegetables (daikon, shredded carrots),  jalapeños, cilantro and thinner meats than adorn American sandwiches.  The canvas for the ingredients is a long, thin baguette with its own balance of textures–a pillowy inside and crusty outside.  Alas, if the baguette is toasted for too long, an unwelcome flavor component–char–becomes part of the equation.  Such was the case during our most recent visit.

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spicy Beef Noodle Soup

Perhaps the only soup or pho which can steer me away from the egg noodle soup with a duck leg is the spicy beef noodle soup, which is brimming with flavor.  Spicy is perhaps a misnomer if your definition for spicy includes piquancy.  Instead, this is a soup that inherits a mildly piquant flavor profile from the sundry spices used to season it.  The soup is redolent with the distinctive flavors of those spices as they meld with beef and noodles.  This is a soup which will tantalize your taste buds and possibly make you swoon in appreciation.

Perhaps no culinary culture in the world can grill pork as well as the Vietnamese.  The pork is thinly sliced into small strips and is ever so slightly caramelized, but what is most discernible about this porcine perfection are the sweet-smoky aroma inherited from a marinade of sweet, tangy and savory ingredients.  The marinade imbues the pork with exotic qualities.  Grilled pork is served on everything from banh mi to vermicelli dishes to a  thin noodles with cheesecloth-like pattern.  In combination with these “patter” noodles, the grilled pork just sings.

Grilled pork with thin noodle mesh and fish sauce

Grilled pork with thin noodle mesh and fish sauce

The fragrant aromas from 2000′s kitchen will waft toward you like a sweet, savory, seductive siren. Those aromas are a precursor to exotic deliciousness belying the restaurant’s proximity to an emissions testing station.

2000 Vietnam Restaurant
601 San Mateo Blvd SE
Albuquerque, New Mexico
(505) 232-0900
Web Site
LATEST VISIT: 2 March 2013
# OF VISITS: 4
RATING: 22
COST: $$
BEST BET: Grilled Pork with Thin Mesh Noodles, Spicy Beef Noodle Soup, Garlic Chicken Wings, Durian Shake, Watermelon Shake

2000 Vietnam Restaurant on Urbanspoon