When they arrive at the table, the rice paper wraps aren’t pre-made. The ingredients are laid out on separate plates: daikon, carrots, lettuce, cucumbers, and pineapple chucks on one; grilled pork topped with peanuts and onions on the other. The round sheets of rice paper are served dry and stiff, held upright in a plastic tray built for this express purpose and no other. The center of the tray is filled with water — we dip the hard discs in the water, and by time we lay them on our plates, they’ve softened enough that they can roll up pork etc,. like flour tortillas wrap a burrito.
Every time I think I’ve gotten familiar with a Vietnamese dish, I go to PT Eatery, and find a new twist to captivate me all over again. Another visit, the beef of the short rib pho turns out to be served bone-in, two hunks of toothsome meat at the end of slender ribs, ready to be eaten like drumsticks.
Then of course there’s the phở French dip bahn mi, which mashes up the sandwich construction of the Vietnamese sandwich with the aus ju dipped sandwich concept, using aromatic beef phở broth.
It’s been a couple years since the ownership of Convoy Street restaurant Phuong Trang opened PT Eatery on Clairmont Mesa Boulevard, roughly a mile away. I might have wondered whether it was too much of a good thing for one neighborhood, given the restaurants are similar, if not identical. But I gather part of the expansion is that slight shift in branding, with the PT Eatery name being easier to market for newbies to the cuisine.
Which may be taken as a signal to anyone who hasn’t enjoyed a lot of Vietnamese food before, that this place can start you out on the right foot. The rice paper wrappers likely proving the most fun. Especially with kids. Beside pork, options include grilled shrimp, beef, chicken, and if you’re really feeling it, roasted catfish.
If the bone-in shortrib sounds like too much, order phở with rare steak, well done brisket, or chicken. And if you want to experience the more authentic banh mi, aim for grilled pork or chicken, or if you’re feeling vegetarian, tofu.
I’m fond of PT Eatery for covering its bases this way, and for providing a comfortable, beautifully furnished place to take a seat and explore a little of everything. They even put boba in my ice coffee; another first.
When they arrive at the table, the rice paper wraps aren’t pre-made. The ingredients are laid out on separate plates: daikon, carrots, lettuce, cucumbers, and pineapple chucks on one; grilled pork topped with peanuts and onions on the other. The round sheets of rice paper are served dry and stiff, held upright in a plastic tray built for this express purpose and no other. The center of the tray is filled with water — we dip the hard discs in the water, and by time we lay them on our plates, they’ve softened enough that they can roll up pork etc,. like flour tortillas wrap a burrito.
Every time I think I’ve gotten familiar with a Vietnamese dish, I go to PT Eatery, and find a new twist to captivate me all over again. Another visit, the beef of the short rib pho turns out to be served bone-in, two hunks of toothsome meat at the end of slender ribs, ready to be eaten like drumsticks.
Then of course there’s the phở French dip bahn mi, which mashes up the sandwich construction of the Vietnamese sandwich with the aus ju dipped sandwich concept, using aromatic beef phở broth.
It’s been a couple years since the ownership of Convoy Street restaurant Phuong Trang opened PT Eatery on Clairmont Mesa Boulevard, roughly a mile away. I might have wondered whether it was too much of a good thing for one neighborhood, given the restaurants are similar, if not identical. But I gather part of the expansion is that slight shift in branding, with the PT Eatery name being easier to market for newbies to the cuisine.
Which may be taken as a signal to anyone who hasn’t enjoyed a lot of Vietnamese food before, that this place can start you out on the right foot. The rice paper wrappers likely proving the most fun. Especially with kids. Beside pork, options include grilled shrimp, beef, chicken, and if you’re really feeling it, roasted catfish.
If the bone-in shortrib sounds like too much, order phở with rare steak, well done brisket, or chicken. And if you want to experience the more authentic banh mi, aim for grilled pork or chicken, or if you’re feeling vegetarian, tofu.
I’m fond of PT Eatery for covering its bases this way, and for providing a comfortable, beautifully furnished place to take a seat and explore a little of everything. They even put boba in my ice coffee; another first.
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