A Change of Guard

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Thursday 11 October 2012

Cheap Eats: The Soup Spoon guides diners through Cambodian cuisine

The gatiev is good to the last drop at The Soup Spoon in Victor. Diners build their own soup profile by adding a variety of condiments, herbs, vegetables and spices as they wish. / KAREN MILTNER/Staff photographer
Written by Karen Miltner
10 October 2012 
Democrat and Chronicle Staff writer

The Soup Spoon

Address: 10 E. Main St., Suite 106 (Lower level of The Place In Victor Village, Victor.)
Phone: (585) 869-5080.
Web: thesoupspoonroom.com.
Hours: 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday, 8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday, 8:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday.
Accessibilty: Wheelchair-accessible.
Good to know: Sandwiches $7 and less; Cambodian soups $8.50 and less; other appetizers are in $3.50 range.
Ethnic restaurants sometimes let diners who are new to the cuisine figure it out with little or no guidance. The DIY tour through the world of Southeast Asia has its appeal, but if you want a little more hand-holding, then consider The Soup Spoon, a casual Cambodian eatery and coffeehouse that opened about six months ago in downtown Victor.
The Soup Spoon takes a genuinely customer-friendly approach. With counter and table signage and a patient, thorough owner who checks in every step of the way, it is the easiest, least intimidating introduction to gatiev (beef noodle soup that you may already know as pho through Vietnamese restaurants), num pang (submarine style sandwiches with roasted meats, pickled carrots, chili sauce and cilantro similar to Vietnamese banh mi) and mee kola (a rice noodle salad with egg, pickled veggies and peanuts) that you might get in these parts.

Owner Chhaya En is thrilled to walk beginners through the interactive Cambodian eating style, where adding your own condiments, herbs, vegetables and spices is an integral part of the experience. He is just as enthusiastic if you don’t need his tutelage, and might ask where you first had Southeast Asian food. And he really doesn’t mind if you call The Soup Spoon’s brothy mainstay pho (the word rhymes with duh but some people pronounce it as foe) or gatiev (which has a silent v). He just wants you to enjoy it.

It’s hardly a hardship. The broth, simmered for hours with bones from a local beef farm, shimmers a light gold hue, but tastes browned, round and sweet. An underwater mound of white rice noodles supports the protein trio I selected (it’s on the menu as the combo pho for $8.50), modest portions of shrimp, brisket and a few tender, homogenized meatballs (though I would call them meat stumps). The large white bowl arrives with pinches of mung bean sprouts, cilantro, lemon wedge and scallions. The table is set with chili sauce, fried and dried garlic, black pepper and sugar (even savory deserves a little sweet). Your soup’s fine tuning is up to you. Don’t be shy.
The restaurant also has French onion soup and good old American chili (both $4.50) — not because customers are clamoring for them, but because they are En’s other favorite recipes to eat from a spoon. A garden salad and cupcakes are the only other concessions to Western cooking. The rest of the menu is spring rolls (supple rice wrappers filled with salad vegetables and sometimes shrimp), baked egg rolls with pork, skewered marinated steak appetizers and those sandwiches mentioned above.
The Soup Spoon has the vibe of a contemporary coffeehouse (leather chairs, high-top tables, fireplace) with the clean, serene halo of a meditation room, thanks to Cambodian photos, artwork and map). Like nirvana, it’s in an unlikely location that is hard to find (the lower level of an office complex), but not impossible.

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