Slurping sounds

Noodle houses deliver pleasure in a bowl
By BRIAN DUFF  |  March 26, 2008
food_noodles_032808inside

Pom’s | 571 Congress St, Portland | 207.772.7999 | 11 Am-9:30 Pm

Huong Vietnamese Restaurant | 349 Cumberland Ave, Portland | 207.773.4882 | Mon-Sat 10 Am-8 Pm
The downtown Arts District has recently become a hot spot for Asian noodle soup. It offers a chance to try both a classic pho at Huong’s Vietnamese, and a transcendent contemporary take at Pom’s.

Huong’s has the feel of a scrappy immigrant venture of the best sort. The Huong family, at least the women, gather at the central table eating their lunch and talking excitedly if not quite arguing. A preteen works the phone and translates into Vietnamese for the adults. A five-year-old watches true-life ghost stories on the television while a high-schooler takes your order. When some boys from school stop in to flirt she tells them sharply to sit at tables so they look like real customers. Teen lust: probably multiculturalism’s most potent fuel.

There is no better centerpiece for a table than the crowded tray of sauces you find at Huong’s — browns and reds of various sizes, each with the residue of improvisational eating. But the pho, which arrives in a big bowl about a minute after you order, does not need much tinkering. A squeeze of lime and touch of chili perfected the thin beef broth, which was just a bit sour and tangy. The soup tasted of ginger and onion, cooked to lose their sharpness, and of the ample scallion floating on top. Three kinds of beef lurked below with the thin rice noodles: grayish slices of flank, thicker fattier pieces of beef, and slices of squishy beef meatballs. Mixing in bits of basil and bean sprouts, fiddling with the sauces, digging out pieces of meat, and slurping the noodles, lunch at Huong’s becomes completely absorbing, even meditative.

At Pom’s new location on Congress Street, you do not improvise but rather plan ahead. The soup menu guides you through five steps, choosing a broth, a noodle, a meat, a heat, and if you want peanuts. The new space looks elegant in all-white — if a bit austere. The bustle warms the place up a bit, with Pom herself working the room hurriedly while running the kitchen and setting up some sort of photoshoot.

Despite all the soup choices it seems very hard to go wrong. I have come to think of Pom’s as the best Thai around, but with these noodle soups in huge bowls she has outdone herself. The vegetable broth was thin, light, and clean and tasted of celery. Very thin noodles were toothsome but not chewy, and provided a neutral platform for the other ingredients, including big tender slices of beef. The tom yum broth offered a sweet sourness and a bit of chili. We tried it as recommended with the ground chicken, which allowed you to get a bit of tender meat into each spoonful.

Best of all was the dark, complex, and delicious five-spice broth. It had a tang and the not-quite-sweet flavors of cinnamon and anise. We tried it with a crispy duck, since five-spice and duck go well together. There was more sliced duck in the huge $8 bowl than you might get from a $25 entrée at a French restaurant, and the skin was crispy even after 10 minutes of soaking. A chewier wide noodle went perfectly with this bolder broth. At least until summer, the five-spice soup with duck is the best lunch in Portland.

Brian Duff can be reached at bduff@une.edu.

  Topics: Restaurant Reviews , Culture and Lifestyle, Food and Cooking, Foods,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY BRIAN DUFF
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   BLUE ROOSTER GOES HIGH-END INFORMAL  |  May 16, 2013
    If you want to know what making a food truck into an actual restaurant will be like, check out the new Blue Rooster Food Company
  •   AT BUCK’S, NAKED IS THE WAY TO BE  |  May 09, 2013
    At Buck's Naked BBQ the meat is cooked plain — without being infused or coated with in any particular sauce. This is meat we can relate to.
  •   BOHEMIA FOR BUSINESS FOLK  |  April 17, 2013
    Nietzsche thought that "however vigorously a man may seem to leap over from one thing into its opposite, closer observation will nonetheless discover the dovetailing where the new building grows out of the old." So it is at the North Point, a new Old Port restaurant and drinking spot run by a transplanted New York restaurateur and his brother.
  •   KUSHIYA BENKAY FINDS LOVELY HARMONY  |  April 10, 2013
    What is most pleasing about Kushiya Benkay, a sort of skewer-pub from the folks at Benkay Sushi, is the way it brings together several impulses without going too crazy about any particular one.
  •   SACO STAR: LUIS’S PHENOMENAL AREPAS  |  March 20, 2013
    You might want to hug Luis, or at least flirt with the guy, because he is creating first-rate arepas in his charming little shop.

 See all articles by: BRIAN DUFF