Can I Eat Raw Beef Pho

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On Thursday nights we eat raw meat at home.  "Hmm," you might be thinking.  It might sound exotic, or a bit scary, but it's really no big thing.  Steak tartar, carpaccio, a lot of ceviche in the summer.  A pretty (ok, very) rare steak.  "Oh right…" Maybe it's not something you would usually eat, but not so strange.  As it turns out, the kids are like little wild animals around this stuff.  If you don't move quick, you won't get any.  I think there is something to be said for that.

I never realized that Vietnamese beef pho was in this category, but it was a happy discovery.

It happened one rainy night when our babysitter arrived with a warm take-out noodle soup.  Our family had already had dinner, but it looked so appealing and cozy.  I was curious how it was, but after asking, and her thinking for a moment, she declared that it actually wasn't very good.  And then she dumped the second half.

We decided we could do better.  Everything is better from home anyway.  I know all the ingredients and where they come from.  And there are no mystery additives. Plus, it has the secret sauce: love.

Made with love

Meanwhile, I was flipping through a stack of old print copies of Cooks Illustrated when I came across a recipe for Vietnamese Beef Pho, and we agreed that we'd make it soon to see if we could outperform her take-out. Then, I read this in the sidebar, "traditionally, the steak for pho is sliced very thin and placed raw in the serving bowl. (It cooks, but ideally remains slightly rare, in the hot broth.)"  This was right up my alley.  I had a new recipe for 'raw meat night.'  (This recipe is adapted from that one, printed in January/February 2014.)

It was such a success! Deep rich beef broth, sweetened with extra onions and warm spices made the kind of cozy soup we'd all been craving. The perfect antidote to the colder and shorter days.  We made it again a week or two later and I'm sure this winter we'll see it a few more times.

Notes and overcoming apprehension

Note that I use homemade beef broth, which already had a rich meaty flavor, and I highly recommend taking the time to make this in advance.  I use this recipe (scroll down to beef broth). If you are buying store-bought broth, you could add a pound of ground beef to step 1 to add some meaty flavor.

Eating some amount of raw protein in the diet is a timeless and healthful practice.  For the raw beef, I use pastured beef from local farmers that I know. It often comes to me frozen and I defrost it the day that I will use it.  In Nourishing Traditions, Sally Fallon Morell recommends freezing meat for 14 days before eating raw to avoid the possible problem of parasites.  She notes that according to the USDA, this will kill off all parasites.  Regardless, use common sense, keep your work surfaces clean, and use the best quality meat you can access or afford.

I know, I know – those are alfalfa sprouts and not bean sprouts in the photo.  I couldn't find the latter at the store on this particular day, but since actually getting a photo of the meal is my most difficult task, we are stuck with what I had! Trust me, no one complained.

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Source: https://offallygoodcooking.com/vietnamese-pho-raw-beef-noodle-soup/

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