Once in a lifetime experience. As in, I went there once and never want to go back if I can help it for the food is NOT VIETNAMESE FOOD. It’s not “bad” but as a Viet born and raised, I’m actually offended that they’d advertise it as Viet food.
You can’t just slap in some items that is very remotely related to the original ingredients that make the dish, heat it up and call it Vietnamese food!!! Who would ever put lettuce, peanuts, fried shallot, roast beef and oregano in Phở??? The broth itself is warm but confusing and no taste of phở: no bone broth, no spices (ginger, onion, star anise, coriander seeds and roots, dried sá sùng). Why is it slightly sour?
All the other food looks like supermarket adaptation of food as well: very local Japanese style palatable-ish easy meal that has nothing to do with the original cuisine.
They have imported Vietnamese beer though. So if you’re looking for an after-work bar that serves hot food to enjoy with a beer, sure it’s ok.
The owner and the server were easy going and nice but I’m not recommending it to anyone for the food. Please don’t advertise it as Viet food if the only thing you have there is some Viet looking decorations and some random Vietnamese words on the wall.
It’s a small shop to cater to local people, so the price is slightly higher than even shops in central areas to make up for...
Read moreLovely Vietnamese restaurant hidden away from the crowded station area. Just 6-minute walk away and bammm! All the flavor you're looking for from Vietnamese dishes. We had beef Pho and pork Chao (Vietnamese porridge) for lunch. Meats are juicy. Soup is packed with flavors. Definitely would come back again for more variety of Vietnamese...
Read moreNice small casual vietnamese restaurant serving mainly pho, banmi and vietnamese style okayu. Friendly staff, unique shop design. The pho contains lots of fresh herbs, very refreshing! Drinks are included. Only negative point, chicken meat was too dry (cooked) for my liking. Will definitely drop by again...
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