Vietnamese Noodle Type

Phở

phởpho·/fə̃ː˧˩˧/
Phở

What Is Phở?

Phở (pronounced like "fuh," not "foe") is a Vietnamese noodle soup built on slow-simmered beef bone broth infused with charred ginger, charred onion, star anise, cinnamon, and cloves. Flat rice noodles called bánh phở sit in the bowl with thin slices of beef — raw eye round that cooks in the hot broth as it's poured over, or already-simmered brisket and tendon.

It arrives at the table with a plate of fresh garnishes — Thai basil, cilantro, bean sprouts, lime wedges, sliced jalapeño, and sometimes culantro (long coriander). The diner adds these to taste, then optionally squeezes hoisin and sriracha on the side for dipping the meat.

Hanoi vs Saigon Style — The Original Divide

Phở has two distinct schools that Vietnamese people debate fiercely:

  • Phở Bắc (Hanoi/Northern style) — The original. Broader, flatter rice noodles. Less garnish (just scallions and maybe a touch of cilantro). Cleaner, more restrained broth. No bean sprout plate. This is what phở was when it emerged in early-1900s Hanoi.
  • Phở Nam (Saigon/Southern style) — Sweeter broth, more spices, generous side plate of basil, bean sprouts, lime, and chili. Modern phở migrated south after the 1954 partition. This is what 99% of US phở restaurants serve.

When you order "phở" at an American restaurant, you're almost always getting Saigon style. Hanoi-style phở is rare in the US — found mainly in Westminster CA's Little Saigon and a handful of specialist shops.

Beef Cuts in Phở

Real phở orders are specified by the cut. Memorize these for your next bowl:

  • Phở tái — Rare eye round (raw, cooked by broth)
  • Phở chín — Well-done brisket
  • Phở nạm — Fatty brisket
  • Phở gân — Tendon
  • Phở sách — Tripe
  • Phở viên — Beef meatballs
  • Phở đặc biệt — "Special" — combo of all of the above

Flavor Profile

Flavor Profile

Spicy
Savory
Rich
Cold
Chewy

Phở is deeply savory, lightly aromatic, and beautifully clean. The broth is rich without being heavy — different from ramen, which builds fat-driven richness. Phở builds layered umami from bone marrow, gelatin, and warm spices. There's almost no heat unless you add sriracha or fresh chilies yourself.

How Phở Differs from Japanese Ramen

Both are beef-or-pork-based noodle soups, but they're stylistically opposite:

  • Broth: Phở is clear, almost translucent. Ramen is often opaque (tonkotsu), thick (miso), or murky (shoyu).
  • Noodles: Phở uses flat rice noodles (gluten-free). Ramen uses alkaline wheat noodles (chewy yellow).
  • Garnish: Phở comes with a separate herb plate the diner adds. Ramen is built complete in the bowl.
  • Spice level: Phở base is mild. Ramen base ranges mild to spicy depending on style.
  • Eating time: Phở is sippable, can be eaten slowly. Ramen demands fast slurping before noodles soften.

Where to Buy Phở Ingredients in the US

For instant convenience:

  • Premium kits: Pho Bowl (sold at Whole Foods), Vifon Phở (instant cup)
  • Better: Wel-Pac or Three Ladies dried bánh phở, combined with your own homemade or boxed broth

For from-scratch:

  • Beef bones — ask at a halal or Asian butcher; supermarkets often stock them frozen
  • Three Ladies brand bánh phở rice noodles — gold standard
  • Star anise, cinnamon sticks, cloves, cardamom — Penzeys or Asian grocery
  • Charred ginger and onion — done over a gas flame or under a broiler

See Best Pho Noodles & Kits for our full recommendations.

A Note on Pronunciation

It's pronounced like the English word "fuh" with a slight upward inflection, not "foe." The tone matters in Vietnamese — getting it wrong slightly changes the word. American servers won't correct you, but ordering it right earns instant respect at any Vietnamese restaurant.

Continue Reading