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Best In the West Sum-up

February 2nd, 2010 by kateD

For someone who didn’t grow up with Vietnamese food, discovering a cuisine so flavorful and fresh, so exotic yet so accessible, (not to mention so cheap!) is a gift. When you first stumble upon pho, you can be seduced by it’s savory broth, delicious noodles and tasty garnishes, such you are rarely tempted to branch out and order something different, other than maybe a salad roll on the side. Who could blame you? Pho is delicious and as the title of this blog states, ‘broth don’t lie’—a well-made broth is probably the most reliable indicator of the overall quality of a Vietnamese restaurant. But there are 100+ items on every Vietnamese menu in Toronto for a reason—Vietnamese cuisine has much more to offer than just pho.

Bun combo

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Fried Chicken and Lemongrass Vermicelli @ Pho Linh

October 29th, 2009 by kateD

Review Series: Best Vermicelli On The West Side

The corner of College and Dufferin is an unlikely location for a miniature Viet-town, yet a number of Vietnamese businesses and shops cluster together here in an otherwise distinctly Portuguese neighbourhood. No fewer than 3 Vietnamese restaurants co-exist on a single block.  Faced with such an array of options, how is one to decide? On road-trips my dad always picked a roadside diner based on the number of transport trucks parked out front (truckers being the experts on roadside cuisine), so following the same theory, I decide to try the resto with the largest number of Vietnamese customers inside. And the winner is: Pho Linh.

Simple but modern exterior of Pho Linh on College.

Simple but modern exterior of Pho Linh on College.

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Hanoi Vermicelli @ Canh Buom

October 23rd, 2009 by kateD

Review Series: Best Vermicelli On The West Side

After 4 weeks of tasting bun in Toronto’s west-end Vietnamese restaurants, I thought I had hit my stride. Though quality, freshness and style varied to some degree in each place I visited, the formula was basically the same. I knew what to expect. Then I wandered into Canh Buom and got thrown a curve ball.

Outside Canh Buom on College.

Outside Canh Buom on College.

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Grilled Beef Spring Roll Vermicelli @ Kimbo

October 15th, 2009 by kateD

Review Series: Best Vermicelli On The West Side

If an award for strangest restaurant décor existed, Kimbo would be firmly in the running. This location clearly didn’t begin its commercial life as a Vietnamese restaurant. The massive dining room is decked out in a faux-Tudor style, with heavy wooden beams framing textured plaster walls, red carpeting, and huge wrought iron chandeliers that look like something Errol Flynn might have swung from while executing a swashbuckling escape. Overall the effect is of a mock-baronial castle, where cabbage rolls would look more at home on the table than salad rolls. Nonetheless, the menu is distinctly Vietnamese, specializing in bo 7 mon, or beef in 7 courses.

Crazy decor at Kimbo

Crazy decor at Kimbo

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Ordering Vermicelli and Rice Combos – Part 1

October 8th, 2009 by Casey

Quietly sitting in the shadow of pho are vermicelli and rice. Like pho, vermicelli bowls and rice dishes can be customized into numerous different combinations. But unlike pho, they don’t garner the glory they deserve. In this article, I’m referring to the dry vermicelli combinations, and not the vermicelli soups, and rice as the steamed white rice served on plates.

Part One: Vermicelli Combos

A basic bowl of vermicelli comes with the noodle, lettuce, cucumber, tomatoes, pickled daikon and carrots, and a bowl of light fish sauce, nuoc cham. Combination choices include different types of meats, and spring rolls. Read more.

Grilled Shrimp Vermicelli @ Pho My Duyen

October 7th, 2009 by kateD

Review Series: Best Vermicelli On The West Side

The strip of Bloor west between Ossington and Lansdowne is undeniably gritty; it is also a surprising and refreshing foodie destination. In a few short blocks you will find a huge variety of cheap and delicious foods from a United Nations of small, unpretentious (read slightly dingy) storefront restaurants: South Indian, Ethiopian, Greek, Persian, Mexican, Caribbean, Portuguese, and Vietnamese. But Pho My Duyen is no shabby storefront.  Given the neighborhood, the décor is almost shockingly posh. What HGTV would refer to as ‘high-end finishes’ abound. Yet any concern that style reigns over substance here is dispelled with the first jasmine scented sip of premium tea. Throughout the meal, care and consideration reveals itself in myriad little ways: a paper umbrella in a drink, a spoon with a hooked end so it won’t fall into your soup when you rest it against the side of the bowl.

Surprisingly swanky interior at Pho My Duyen.

Surprisingly swanky interior at Pho My Duyen

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