Where to Eat Vietnamese in London, ON: Fresh Rolls, Pho & Noodles Rule
BY BRYAN LAVERY
The genius
of Vietnamese cooking lies in the adaptation of foreign influences to develop a
distinctly unique and subtle cuisine with contrasting flavours and textures.
Sour flavours are balanced by salty ones, and sweet notes are tempered by heat
from chilies and ground pepper. There is a dependence on rice; noodles figure
prominently and a wealth of fresh herbs, fruit and vegetables. As in China and
East Asia, the Vietnamese serve their rice in bowls with chopsticks. Meat is an
accompaniment rather than a central offering.
The
Vietnamese custom of wrapping fresh rolls and spring rolls in lettuce leaves
and fresh herbs are a remnant of the original cultures that existed before
centuries of Chinese influence. The Chinese contributed many culinary
techniques including their art of stir-frying using the wok; the French left
their traditions and penchant for aromatic filtered coffee with condensed milk
and crème caramel; scented ingredients like lemongrass were embraced from the
Thai culinary repertoire; and the spicing techniques and aromatic infusions of
curry-inspired recipes are suggestive of India. That is the short-list.
Pho, a
popular street food in Vietnam, is a deeply-flavoured broth with long rice
noodles, fresh herbs and thin slices of meat most often accompanied with a side
of bean sprouts, peppers and lime wedges. Pho has become the mainstay of
many Vietnamese restaurants. In London, students have given Ben Thanh and Pho
Haven cult-status due to pho’s hearty, meal-in-a-bowl, comfort food
popularity and its relative affordability. Thuan Thanh serves probably the best pad Thai and most authentic pho in the city. I will be writing about them shortly. Here are a few Vietnamese restaurants
in London, ON that dyed-in-the-wool foodies brag about.
The Vietnam Restaurant
The Vietnam Restaurant
My
introduction to pho and subsequent comparisons are based on the delicious
concoctions that have a fragrant undertone, accompanied by thin slices of rare
beef, which they have been serving at The Vietnam since my first visit
twenty years ago. The Vietnam is located across from the former Kellogg’s factory that is being repurposed into a new multi-use attraction to be known as 100 Kellogg. Long Duc
Ngo has been the welcoming hands-on proprietor of this long established
Vietnamese restaurant since 1994. The kitchen offers a selection of
accessibly-priced noodle, rice and soup dishes. The substantive menu includes
superb spring rolls, pho, sizzling hot pots, and many seafood and chicken
dishes. Favourites include Pho Dac Biet, the signature combination
beef, rice noodle broth with rare and brisket beef, beef balls and tripe with
fresh herbs. The cold rice paper roll known as goi cuon is a
perennial favourite. It is comprised of noodles, shrimp, pork, lettuce, mint
and Thai basil, making this savoury easy to dip in a thick sauce of peanuts and
soya.
1074 Dundas
St, London
www.vietnamrestaurant.com
www.vietnamrestaurant.com
Tuesday–Thursday
11am–9pm
Friday 11am–9pm
Saturday 12pm–10pm
Sunday (Closed Temp)
Friday 11am–9pm
Saturday 12pm–10pm
Sunday (Closed Temp)
Thuân
Kiêu
Established
in 1996, Thuâ.n Ki`êu is family-owned and operated and has
developed an ardent and devoted fan base over the years for Chen’s (or Chu’s —
he goes by both) hands-on approach, his ability to remember his regulars by
name and his traditional Vietnamese cuisine.
For years
the restaurant was located in cramped premises at Huron and Sandford Streets.
The new incarnation has a slick urban sensibility with a variety of seating
options. The ambitious menu offers a range of traditional/non-traditional
Vietnamese dishes that reads like an encyclopedia. Some dishes reach out to
other parts of South Asia. Due to its updated high-concept business model, it
has lost some of its intimacy but that is not necessarily a bad thing. The
service is very attentive but when it gets crowded, and it does, things at TK’s
can go a bit haywire.
The
appetizer to order is the Bo La Lop; the parcels of grilled
lemongrass-infused beef wrapped in grape leaf are exceptional. At Thuân Ki`êu,
they are zealously creating quality food using traditional cooking methods and
techniques to impart the essence of Vietnamese cuisine.
1275
Highbury Ave N., London
www.thuankieu.ca
Monday–Saturday 11am–9:30pm
Sunday 11 am–8:30pm
www.thuankieu.ca
Monday–Saturday 11am–9:30pm
Sunday 11 am–8:30pm
Quynh
Nhi
For well
over a decade the family-run Quynh Nhi (named after siblings Quynh and Nhi) has
garnered a loyal patronage and prospered because of its responsive service,
consistency and traditional Vietnamese cuisine. The updated forty-seat
restaurant is situated off the beaten path, next door to an auto repair garage
at the corner of Wharncliffe and Riverside. Quynh Nhi built its formidable
reputation on its spring rolls. The signature Crispy Spring Roll is offered
with chicken, pork, or in a vegetarian version served with fresh mint, lettuce
and a chili-lime fish sauce. The restaurant is also known for its five
different types of spicy pad Thai on offer.
55
Wharncliffe Road N., London
www.quynhnhi.ca
Monday–Saturday 11am–9pm
www.quynhnhi.ca
Monday–Saturday 11am–9pm
Tamarine by Quynh Nhi
Tamarine
by Quynh Nhi
Tamarine by
Quynh Nhi is the sibling restaurant and the evolution of the venerated Quynh
Nhi. This is the new wave of modern southern Vietnamese cuisine that has undergone a coherent
development, it has a technical almost architectural articulation, and the
chefs are concerned with creativity and innovation. Menu offerings are intended
to be mixed and paired in ways that harmonize and contrast flavours. Both the
shredded mango and shrimp salad with chili lime fish sauce, mint, crushed
peanut and pickled carrots, and the green papaya salad with fiery beef jerky,
basil and sweet tamarind sauce are otherworldly. Tamarine is known for its
crispy Torpedo Rolls made with shrimp, and crispy Imperial Rolls with shrimp,
pork, wood ear (a type of fungi) and glass noodles, which are also served with
fresh mint, lettuce and a chili-lime fish sauce. The kitchen combines fresh
ingredients with traditional seasonings to construct offerings designed to
encourage communal dining.
118 Dundas
St, London
www.tamarine.ca.
Tuesday– Saturday 5 pm–9pm
www.tamarine.ca.
Tuesday– Saturday 5 pm–9pm
Friday Lunch 11 am–2:30pm
Chi Hi Vietnamese
Chef Trinh's modest Vietnamese Restaurant features traditional fare including banh mi (black bean, tofu or beef subs) pho, fresh rolls, spring rolls, vegetarian Singapore noodles, beef noodle brisket soup, and black bean tofu vermicelli. There is also jade cake, banana cake and a large plant-based selection. 791 Dundas Street (beside Aeolian Hall at Rectory) 519 601 8448
Ben Thanh Viet Thai Restaurant
This popular Viet-Thai restaurant boasts meal-in-a-bowl specialties and vegetarian options at accessible prices. Cooks prepare your meal a la minute with authentic quality ingredients. The casual dining rooms are airy and relaxing. For over two decades Ben Thanh has provided London with accessible Viet-Thai food. London has three locations.
517 York Street
655 Fanshawe Park West
1070 Wellington Road South
www.benthanhlondon.com
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