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Vietnamese

Viet House Rolls – Westmead NSW Restaurant Review

There are a few places in Westmead to get a banh mi these days, and this recently opened place at the bottom of the UWS building is my least favourite one.

I had the crispy pork roll ($12.50 with a can of drink) on my one and only visit to Viet House Rolls, and it was not worth it. First, credit where credit is due: the bread was nice and crusty on the outside, whilst remaining soft on the inside, allowing me to avoid oral mucosal injury. Outside of this, injurious factors included a truly depressing few strands of carrot, pork crackling that came out of a plastic take-away container (if I wanted this I would’ve gone to the grocery store?), and just like. Normal mayo, without a hint of Vietnameseness.

What added insult to injury is that they won’t sell you this roll without a can of soft drink, making it the most expensive roll in the area, and not even good.

There’s a reason that palliative care, the trauma surgeons, my former consultant, and basically any other banh mi aficionado in and around the Westmead area goes to Thuy Hot Bread across from the train station, an absolute local institution that’s been around since at least when I was primary school.

(Full disclosure, I was once salty that I tried to get banh mi from here with a friend after work, within their posted opening hours online, only to find them closed. I am no longer salty about this, extrapolating what I know about the quality and price from this roll, and considering what we ate instead that night.)

Viet House Rolls
T11/160 Hawkesbury Rd, Westmead NSW 2145

Categories
Vietnamese

Eat Fuh – Marrickville NSW Restaurant Review

We found, with significant and surprising difficulty, a pho establishment in Marrickville that serves pho dac biet with all the neccessary trimmings of tripe and tendon.

My friend PMR and I each had the combination beef fuh ($21), which unlike many nearby competitors added tripe and a healthy serving of tendon to each bowl, along with rare beef, brisket, and beef balls. In tribute to the behaviour recently witnessed by my partner’s father, I ordered mine with slightly cooked sprouts so as to not dilute the thermal mass of the hot bowl.

The price of this bowl was generally higher than others in the earea, though it was generous in its size and quantity of beefy proteins. The herbs, lemon, and bean sprouts were served on top of the noodles rather than in a separate side dish, taking away a degree of autonomy from the diner, though they did not go so far as to squeeze the lemon. Though my dining friend paid a particular compliment to the flavour of the soup, I had difficulty appreciating the same depth that he could.

Surely Eat Fuh’s neighbours can add some more fringe bits to their pho?

Eat Fuh Marrickville
274 Illawarra Rd, Marrickville NSW 2204

Categories
Vietnamese

Tam Tam – Parramatta NSW Restaurant Review

The seafood spring rolls ($12) were good, with a dense and umami filling covered in a light and oily external shell. Just as they should be.

The special beef noodle soup/pho ($18) had a bit of everything wtihin the usual suspects, and was pretty good. I didn’t love the beef balls, but it’s rare to find a place that does every component well.

I have absolutely no problems with the food here. I think it’s a good pho for Parramatta, especially since my previous favourite Lee Chef has been closed for years now with no signs of anything good popping up in its place.

I have no problems with the service either – we rocked up quite late after work, essentially 15 minutes before their listed closing time, and they served us with speed and friendliness.

What I did think was unfortunate was the restaurant’s location and parking situation. My first visit to Tam Tam was actually the second time I tried to go. Its location in the centre of Parramatta means that there is no free street parking nearby, meaning that any meal here necessitates a snake-like crawl through the nearby Eat St parking lot and a minimum extra $3 charge. And I know that a lack of free parking disincentivises private car usage and incentivises public transport, resulting in what is probably a net environmental and economical good for society. It’s just annoying when you work in the next suburb and have to pay $3 to park to eat a $18 bowl of pho.

Tam Tam
41 Phillip St, Parramatta NSW 2150
0466 222 699

Categories
Vietnamese

Love Mi – Burwood NSW Restaurant Review

I saw and smelled one of my juniors eating the most seductive banh mi ever on a recent night shift, and couldn’t make my way home without getting one myself.

I stopped at Burwood banh mi spot Love Mi, a place I had seen before on social media but never eaten at, parked precipitously on the street (arriving at 8:45AM, the parking becomes ticketed after 9AM Monday to Saturday), and waited 8 minutes for two rolls, returning to my car at 8:56AM, 4 minutes before a potential parking ranger could fined me.

I had a banh mi thit ($8.80), a classic cold sliced pork roll, and a nem nuong banh mi ($11.80).

The banh mi thit ($8.80) did not meet my expectations for taste, moistness, and price. Though extremely well packaged wrapped in paper and enclosed in a cardboard box, it felt dry on the inside, with an inadequate volume of salad, nor amount of Vietnamese mayo or pate to create that wonderful moist and fatty texture. It’s not the worst pork roll I’ve ever had (hello Northmead NSW), but doesn’t rank anywhere near the best.

The nem nuon banh mi ($11.80) was a stronger showing, owing to the significantly jucier and more flavourful warm nem nuong, which meant that the smaller amount of salad filling at Love Mi was less damaging.

Overall I’ve definitely had better for cheaper (including at the corner of Burwood Road and Park Ave for $2.40 in the late 90s). My partner and I finished both of Love Mi’s rolls, but they didn’t quite hit the spot. I wonder if they spent less effort on packaging they could spend more on the food itself. I don’t have any plans to return.

Love Mi Burwood
Shop 2/2a Elsie St, Burwood NSW 2134
0466 183 338

Categories
Vietnamese

Mê Bánh Mì – Ashfield NSW Restaurant Review

These were the first banhs mi I had in the local area after moving to the Inner West. They were good, but I don’t know that I would say that they are as affordable as the headline on the website suggests.

The crispy pork roll ($11) was good, but $11. It had a good density of fillings when felt in the hand.

The BBQ pork roll ($10) had a unique and pleasant flavour that I’m having difficulty recalling whilst writing this. Worth a try, I think, but at $10-11 a roll I’m going to walking up the street to one of the multitude of other banh mi shops next time.

Me Banh Mi Ashfield
Shop 2/250 Liverpool Rd, Ashfield NSW 2131