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cooking.nytimes.com
During the Vietnam War, the Vietcong's unsporting habit of cutting the roads that connected Saigon with the countryside meant that only a pathetic trickle of first-class produce reached the capital, and that, in turn, meant that the sophisticated Vietnamese dishes that you eat today, there or elsewhere in the world, were out of reach Somehow, though, there was always plenty of pho, the restorative, anise-scented beef or chicken noodle soup, delivered to your door for breakfast by frail-looking vendors, and that was ample compensation.
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Get Pork Shoulder Rajas with Quick Kimchi in Lettuce Leaves with Kojuchang Sauce Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
Throughout Southeast Asia, little skewers of marinated meat, grilled over coals, are sold as street snacks Sweetly fragrant with coconut milk and spices, they are perfect for barbecue parties served with steamed rice, or on their own with drinks, whether grilled indoors or out You may use pork loin or tenderloin, but marbled sirloin or shoulder is more succulent.