Pho-king noodle soup and pork chops

Joined
Oct 28, 2002
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Location
Everson WA - Pacific NW USA
First of all. my wife is soup woman. She makes so many great soups, every soup from every region of the world. I'm an OK cook, but don't make soups because hers are so delicious. Monday night we had Veracruz chicken tortilla soup, OUTSTANDING. Last night, AMAZING Italian Chicken Noodle Vegetable soup (no tomato)....she makes Thai, French, Russian, Vietnamese, Spanish, Japanese.........you name it.

So in her honor I made this dinner, basically in my own style, learned over the years, copied from her to the extent possible. It's not pho, so don't sweat that, this is a white boy fusion food twist on a Taiwanese dish. Some of the ingredients maybe you rednecks don't have so improvise if necessary, but I'm telling you nothing here is very exotic. I served bok choy on the side along with the hot pickled stuff.

For four people, one chop each, adjust soup base as necessary.

4+ very fresh ~3/4"+ pork chop with bone
butter
white wine preferable the non-cheap Chinese cooking variety
1 32 oz box of of beef pho soup base
32-64 fl oz of chicken broth
1 large onion quartered
1 carrot
1 medium large dried chile pepper (your choice)
black pepper (optional to taste)
ginger (optional to taste)
star anise (optional to taste)
Chinese five spice (optional to taste)
1/2 bay leaf (optional to taste)
celery greens (optional to taste)

flour
egg
Panko coating
fry oil

Chinese vermicelli type noodles

sriracha, bulldog sauce, Korean/Japanese pickles, greens


First of all start with at least 4 fairly thick pork chops (~3/4"), any less number of chops and the soup base won't be as good. Just cut the round out and set aside, at this stage you are after the bones and the remaining meat. In a good sized heavy base stock pot throw a little butter in and brown the bones very well. Don't burn them but get them dark. Then deglaze the pot with Chinese or Japanese cooking wine (any white wine is OK) then pour in one 32 oz box of of beef pho soup base and 32 oz of regular chicken broth, with a second 32 oz for top up. Add one roughly cut up onion, a couple hunks of carrot, one dried pepper of your choice, and other aromatics of your choice, black pepper, star anise, celery greens, smashed garlic, Chinese five spice, ginger, and 1/2 bay leaf. ALL these solids will be strained out later.

Get the pot to a good boil then back to simmer. You really don't have to cook it long, even less than one hour will work if the pork gets tender. But you can surf the web for a few minutes. When ready to cook the other items, just strain everything out. You may fish out the hunks of pork, chop and add back to your broth or as a garnish when serving, if you like.

Now for the chops. Pound each one fairly flat, less than 1/4". You'll need a meat mallet for that. Don't use a sledge hammer. Then follow the Panko box instructions. So easy a cave man can do it. Dredge chop round in flour, then beaten egg, then seasoned panko and fry in your choice of oil, remove drain and place in warm oven or serve immediately with soup if your noodles are done. For something so simple I just do it in cast iron, not need to fill the deep fryer. The panko gets golden the chops are cooked.

Noodles. Get the very thin dry Chinese wheat noodles. (sometimes they are called egg noodles but they contain no egg but have a yellowish appearance) Fat noodles simply won't do. They cook quickly in boiling water just like any pasta.

Serve up. Put noodles in bowl, ladle soup broth on top, garnish with the pork chunks from the broth, parsley, fresh basil, or even cliantro. Serve with pork chops and greens on the side. Dip cut pieces of chop in siracha or bulldog sauce. Relish with kimchee and/or kimchee pickled cukes. Beer or drink of your choice.
 
Originally Posted By: Aurora09
Did eating that good meal make you want to step out and do a little work on your car? maybe clean or check a few things.


That's pretty close to truth. Volvo is roundly ignored, Toyota needs an oil change and the Ody only gets driven when needed to haul 5+ people or something large.

For those who have PM'd me here's the pho broth: Pho-link
 
Thanks for the pho broth. Live pho but we have a bunch of great Vietnamese places around, so I've never made it.

I usually make my own stock, but recently had to buy some beef broth. So much garbage in so many brands. The ingredients in that pho broth were good, nice to see some healthier premade/processed foods.
 
Originally Posted By: JHZR2
Thanks for the pho broth. Live pho but we have a bunch of great Vietnamese places around, so I've never made it.

I usually make my own stock, but recently had to buy some beef broth. So much garbage in so many brands. The ingredients in that pho broth were good, nice to see some healthier premade/processed foods.


We have a lot of Vietnamese places around as well but some of them lately - well the broth tastes like the nasty towel used to wipe the tables. They think just by putting PHO on the sign people will wander in and return..........GROSS!!!!!!!!!!

Anyway, no way is the package stuff is as good as the real thing but it's edible. Again my creation is not pho.
 
I know its not pho... Just neat that they make such a broth.

Dishtowel broth?? No thanks!
 
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