Saturday, January 7, 2017

Eating Food for Homework: The Best Assignment I've Ever Recieved Part I

          Every new unit, my Social Studies teacher asks his students to do something called Activity Points, where you have to go out and do various activities of your choice that are related to the topic we are studying. This unit happens to be about geography and foreign culture, and one of the options for an activity is going to a restaurant from a different country. I of course loved this option and more than half of my points are going to be from going out and eating good food. My first stop was my favorite pho restaurant on Argyle, Pho 777(better than Pho 888, don't mix them up). We know the people there("Chicken pho for you, and oh-you don't eat meat.") and absolutely love the food. You are supposed to turn in a review of the restaurant, so I will write it here- what better excuse than this to post on a blog you haven't written on in almost two years?
          Obviously, I ordered chicken pho as usual. Pho is basically noodle soup but better- in addition, it has about twenty different cow parts you can order in your soup, along with chicken, pork, seafood and vegetable soups. Noodles, then, are presumably a prominent food in that area and something that is eaten a lot. I recommend pho with a combination of Sriracha sauce and the chili sauce put out on your table- that is how I have always eaten it. When the pho comes out it is steaming hot, which is really the best time to eat it, except there is about a gallon of it in that bowl. Before the pho is served you are given a plate of condiments including lime, Thai basil, sprouts and jalapeño peppers. I am not entirely sure why Thai and American basil are different; this is probably something about the land there and what is available. There isn't really anything in the pho other than broth, noodles, meat and unidentified leafy greens. It is fabulous that way, which is what makes it different from my mother's more American noodle soup, with potatoes, carrots, celery and fat noodles. This is possibly important to the culture of Vietnam and the U.S. because I know that in the U.S. noodle soup has always been a common comfort food. Judging by how popular pho seems to be and how there are Vietnamese restaurants entirely given to pho, one would think that this particular dish was of some value to their culture.
             The atmosphere of Pho 777 is very casual and probably family-owned- my own family is constantly trying to figure out who is part of the family, which couple owns this place, and how everyone is related. In addition, there always seems to be family or very good friends having dinner in a table by the kitchen, and half of the time someone working there will bring out a dish with candles in it and sing something in Vietnamese. My family and I all think it is hilarious that most of the time the music they are playing is older music by Americans dubbed in Vietnamese(for example, Kenny Rogers and rock-n-roll hits). The two people always serving can be slightly grumpy but we know the older woman there well and she is very sweet(this is the same woman from the picture included).
              Summing it all up, Pho 777 is the best place for pho on Argyle, and while it is not the most well-known pho restaurant in the city, the bowl of soup it has to offer is delightfully warming and filling on a cold January night. And while you are on Argyle, make sure to stop at the Tai Nam Vietnamese market for some unique Asian goods and the Chiu Quon Bakery for Chinese pastries and a lot of different kinds of buns.

Kate

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