Restaurant Review: Cilantro Vietnamese Bistro
Posted Saturday, April 24, 2010My throat was sore this week. The remedy? Why, hot and spicy broth, my friend. So off we went to investigate an oft-suggested Vietnamese restaurant in Clifton called Cilantro Vietnamese Bistro.
Visiting any restaurant in Clifton usually means an adventure in parking, but this time wasn't too bad. Cilantro is located at 2516 Clifton Avenue, near the corner of Clifton and McMillan. We saw a small parking lot on McMillan next to Thai Express, but the meters charged 25 cents for every 10 minutes parked and only took quarters. No thanks. Instead, we parked on Wheeler St. and walked to the restaurant.
Once we stepped inside, I immediately felt a pleasingly casual, college-like vibe --not surprising, given the location. There were several couples and groups in their twenties, with a few older folks and even a couple families peppered in for good measure. Bar stools ran along a 20-foot length of countertop parallel to four or five tables hugging the north wall. Additional bar stool seating abutted the front window.
We seated ourselves at a table and a waitress quickly took our drink orders. We retrieved our one-page, lamininated menus from their resting place, tucked between a bottle of Sriracha hot chili sauce and a squeeze bottle of Hoisin sauce.
My eyeballs nearly leapt from their sockets, cartoon-style, as I saw the prices. So cheap! $6.30 for a big bowl of Pho or a noodle bowl meal? A buck-seventy for any of the appetizers? Sold!
There were several soup bowls that piqued my interest. The traditional Vietnamese Pho is a tried and true staple I've experienced at a few other places, but I don't recall ever having either the Hu Tieu, a noodly, brothy dish with Cambodian and Chinese origins; or the Sate, a spicy broth and noodle soup that, like Pho, comes with a side of fresh bean sprouts, jalapenos, and slices of lime to mix in.
I chose the Sate with rice noodles. Chicken, shrimp, pork, tofu and rare slices of beef are available (the hot broth slowly cooks the beef), but the most intriguing option was the beef meatballs. I'd never heard of such a thing in a Vietnamese noodle soup, and though I assumed it was an Americanized twist, I had to try it.
My girlfriend picked the Vermicelli Noodle Bowl, otherwise known to the Vietnamese as "Bun." Thin, warm noodles are served over romaine lettuce, topped with bean sprouts, onions, cilantro, crushed peanuts and a choice of meat (in her case, chicken). A sweet, yellowish translucent sauce called Nuoc Man is served as a dressing.

Our dining experience started off with an appetizer of Goi Cuon Chay, a soft roll of tofu, vermicelli noodles and lettuce wrapped in rice paper and accompanied by a small container of a sweet dipping sauce. The rolls were a bit bland and we thought the sauce was a little too cloyingly sweet. While the sauce was topped with crushed peanuts, we thought it would have been better if it had instead been a true peanut sauce.
The unequivocal stars of the evening were our noodle and soup bowls, which were simply stellar. I enjoyed the spicy bite of the broth even as the stinging in the back of my throat left me coughing for more. The meatballs were not as I'd imagined: I had envisioned small, Chef Boyardee-style meatballs floating whole in my broth, but instead these were larger meatballs that had been cut into slices. I suppose that made more sense, given that the soup is eaten with a combination of a soup spoon for the broth and chopsticks for the rice noodles and bulkier ingredients.


My girlfriend enjoyed the fact that her Vermicelli Noodle bowl seemed light like a salad (even though it was more than filling as a meal) and that it wasn't spicy to start, but she was free to layer on her preferred level of spiciness using the available table-side accoutrements of chili sauce and Hoisin sauce.
Cilantro Vietnamese Bistro is a Clifton gem, offering tasty noodle and soup bowls at a fraction of the cost of other Asian restaurants. And that sore throat? Gone.

The best TACO joint in the city. I go there as a treat to myself every Monday. TEX MEX TACOS are delicious culinary treats that look beautiful and taste great. I'm so impressed with this place that I never explore the other items on the menu. If you don't get your taco fix here, you're losing in life.
posted: Tue., Apr 27th, 2021 @ 2:37 PM
My Wife and myself dined at Ferrari’s on Saturday and the Food and service was great/ I had the Butternut Squash Ravioli with misc nuts and sauce and it was the best meal I’ve had there/ My wife had the Fish and Vegetables and was very happy/ I also got a couple of their pizza and olive loaves of bread/ The bread is always a hit at work.
posted: Mon., Nov 23rd, 2020 @ 1:14 PM
@Rick: Thanks for the suggestion! I'll have to remember to give them a try.
posted: Sat., Nov 21st, 2020 @ 9:06 AM
Try Joe's Pizza located at Airway and Smithville Rd. You might like it...That's one of favorite haunts. I definitely think it beats Cassano's.
posted: Fri., Nov 6th, 2020 @ 4:19 PM
Hands down the best Indian in the area. I have yet to find their yellow Punjabi dish anywhere. It is my favorite, and what keeps me coming back time after time. I think I have been here over 100 times. I love this place.
posted: Thu., May 28th, 2020 @ 12:03 PM
I found a gyro I keep thinking about
https://www.yelp.com/biz/tazikis-mediterranean-cafe-cincinnati
their lamb gyro is about 2-3 bucks higher in cost than a gyro elsewhere - B U T - it is made with whole pieces of lamb meat, not the lamb and beef loaf that all other Gyro joints in Cincinnati seem to do
it is a chain. A minus for me, and I suspect for you as well.
But its good.
really, really good
one caveat: skip the baklava as it is not made in-house
posted: Mon., Dec 9th, 2019 @ 12:43 PM
I'll take your word for it, then.....it is fairly close to work so it'll be an upcoming lunch
I also need to try out this little taco wagon near Quatmans in Norwood
posted: Mon., Sep 9th, 2019 @ 6:21 PM
Hi @TJ - We were pretty impressed with the quality of the items, which I think justifies some of the pricing. I really liked the house-made tortillas and their salsas. Chilero offered some extra little touches that were a pleasant surprise. :)
Just by way of comparison...that same week we'd tried the new Mazunte location downtown...and our experience at Chilero beat them out.
posted: Thu., Aug 29th, 2019 @ 10:18 PM
Great food and fantastic atmosphere
posted: Wed., Aug 28th, 2019 @ 8:29 PM
Seems very pricey for a mostly carryout/counter-service joint
posted: Wed., Aug 28th, 2019 @ 5:51 PM