What the pho? Vietnam streetfood cocktails make a splash
HANOI, VIETNAM — With his daring pho cocktail inspired by Vietnam’s signature beef noodle soup, Hanoi’s leading hipster bartender Pham Tien Tiep is hoping to elevate the drinking scene in a city better known for its raucous outdoor beer dens.
Though he leaves the meat out of his version of the national dish, the aromatics remain key ingredients: cinnamon, star anise, cardamom, and fresh coriander, plus a generous splash of gin and triple sec for good measure.
The cocktail is a departure for denizens of Vietnam’s capital city, where cheap and cheerful open-air bia hoi beer markets reign supreme.
Beer is the beverage of choice for most Vietnamese drinkers, who downed 3.4 billion liters of the cold stuff in 2015 compared to 70 million liters of wine and spirits, according to an EU-Vietnam Business Network report.
“It was a bit hard for me to promote this, to beat the bia hoi or rice wine, but we are making it for a different level, it’s more luxury and more elegant,” Mr. Tiep told AFP at his cocktail bar, Ne, tucked away in Hanoi’s Old Quarter.
He developed the cocktail six years ago while working at the French colonial-era Metropole hotel, inspired by his time working in a pho restaurant as a teenager.
Growing up poor, Tiep said there were days his family could barely afford a bowl of the noodle soup, typically made with beef or chicken, always heavy on herbs and fish sauce, and often slurped streetside.
“My life story belongs to street food because during hard times we didn’t have much money, we just had street food,” said Mr. Tiep, 30, wearing a denim and leather apron.
The award-winning bartender never imagined he would one day be slinging $7 cocktails at his packed bar, a moody, slick spot that wouldn’t be out of place in Brooklyn or Berlin.
Mr. Tiep’s customers have mostly welcomed his novel take on the national dish.
“There are a lot of restaurants bringing street food to fine dining, so bringing street food to classic cocktail is… a way to bring street food to something new,” businessman Kien Phan told AFP, sipping on a custom-made drink.
In a sign of Tiep’s success, copycat pho cocktails have turned up on menus across Vietnam, where the upscale bars have taken off in recent years — especially in the bustling southern commercial hub of Ho Chi Minh City.
The cocktail scene is not the only domain to be invaded by the soup’s flavors: pho pizza, pho burrito and even pho ice cream have popped up on menus and foodie blogs around the world.
For his part, Mr. Tiep promises to keep pushing boundaries in the beverage world: he’s working on a pickle-flavored tipple, and already serves a fish sauce-based drink called “Under the Bridge.”
Another Ne bartender, Nguyen Tuan Anh, hopes the creative cocktails will further boost the popularity of local food: “Through cocktails, we can promote Vietnamese cuisine around the world.” — AFP