[Thai Food] Deep Fried Tofu Cake (Tao Hu Thod Mun Jay)
[Thai Food] Deep Fried Tofu Cake (Tao Hu Thod Mun Jay)
This menu is an appetizer but can be main dish as well. This dish has spicy flavor with Thai taste from red curry paste(J). Eat together with Ar - jard sauce for more delicious and mellow flavor.
Universal Thai Basil Sauce Recipe!
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I discovered a great way to use up basil that's about to go bad. This recipe is a fantastically versatile Thai basil sauce (which can be made with Italian basil or holy basil) that you can put over any kind of protein, or use as a stir fry sauce. You can make the sauce whenever you need to use up the basil, then keep it in the fridge and there's a quick meal ready to go!
The flavour of this sauce will be reminiscent of a Thai basil stir fry that you might have had from your local Thai restaurant. Goes great with fish, chicken, tofu...really anything, so feel free to use it as a base and add to it whatever you have!
WRITTEN RECIPE:
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About Pai:
Pailin “Pai” Chongchitnant is the author of the Hot Thai Kitchen cookbook, co-host of a Canadian TV series One World Kitchen on Gusto TV, and creator and host of the YouTube channel Pailin's Kitchen.
Pai was born and raised in southern Thailand where she spent much of her playtime in the kitchen. She traveled to Canada to study Nutritional Sciences at the University of British Columbia, and was later trained as a chef at Le Cordon Bleu culinary school in San Francisco.
After working in both Western and Thai professional kitchens, she decided that her passion really lies in educating and empowering others to cook at home via YouTube videos, her cookbook, and cooking classes. She currently lives in Vancouver, and goes to Thailand every year to visit her family. Visit her at
???? Dad's CRISPY Hong Kong Style Noodles (港式煎麵)!
Watch Daddy Lau teach us how to make his amazing Hong Kong Style Pan Fried Noodles, an easy, healthier twist on the restaurant version! I can personally vouch that my dad's recipe is absolutely DELICIOUS.
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???? DAD'S SPECIAL INGREDIENTS ????
If you don't live near an Asian market, you buy these online / on Amazon:
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⏲ CHAPTERS ⏲
00:00 - Intro
00:39 - Where are HK style noodles really from?
01:26 - Steam the noodles
02:13 - What type of egg noodles to buy?
03:10 - Cut & marinate chicken
04:38 - Cut vegetables
06:06 - Boil, drain, loosen noodles
06:51 - Heat wok & add oil
07:08 - Pan fry noodles on each side
08:48 - Flip noodles
09:47 - Cook meats, aromatics
10:42 - Cook vegetables
11:28 - Mix everything & create sauce
13:10 - Plate noodles
13:45 - Meal Time!
14:14 - What are the best types of noodles to use?
14:43 - Can you freeze fresh noodles and use them later?
15:27 - How do you get the most crispy noodles?
15:45 - Can you do this with less oil?
15:57 - How do you prevent the noodles from sticking?
16:13 - What kind of oil is best?
16:34 - A quick primer on oil & smoke points
17:41 - Can you use seafood?
18:02 - Is there a brown version of this sauce?
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Intro Flute Music - Performed by Daddy Lau
Copyright Chillhop Music -
Copyright Chillhop Music -
Overhead Camera Rig built by P.Oak -
Directed & Produced by Randy Lau
Edited by Randy Lau & Willard Chan
Chinese Subtitles by Gan Ying Zhi & Arlene Drew
Sambal Tumis (Fried Chilli Paste) | For Nasi Lemak, Sambal Stingray, Sambal Kang Kong and more!
There are few things more central to a Singaporean table than sambal. Sambal is a loose term used to refer to a chilli-based condiment in countries such as Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia. In a spice-obsessed country such as Singapore, each hawker dish is paired with its sambal. Each sambal has its own unique blend of ingredients, but most have garlic, shallots and chillies as its backbone. For acidity, some employ the use of calamansi juice, others the sharp tang of vinegar.
Sambal tumis is a chilli paste that is fried in oil, and is an entirely different animal to the chilli condiments that are eaten raw. It is a thick jammy paste, its colour a deep red to reddish brown. Its bold, rich roasted flavour comes from the slow-caramelization of chilli and onions. It is to Singaporeans what nam prik pao (chilli jam) is to Thais, and its uses in the Singaporean household are manifold.
Fold through some deep-fried ikan bilis and it becomes a fitting accompaniment for nasi lemak. Hard boil some eggs, deep-fry them then roll them in the sambal. But my favourite way to eat sambal tumis is undoubtedly with seafood.
Growing up, my mother’s hack for putting food on the table quickly was this. She would smear a piece of fish with sambal tumis, roasted it in banana leaves. It is her riff on the iconic hawker dish sambal stingray. There isn’t any stingray where i live, but a flatfish such as flounder works beautifully as a substitute. And once you have sambal tumis in your fridge, it is a snap to make.
Sear the fish in an oiled pan until almost cooked. Smear the sambal on both sides before wrapping in banana leaves. Place the banana leaf package on the pan over low heat until the fish is cooked. Flip at least once so that both sides cook evenly. Unwrap the package at the table, scatter on thinly sliced red onions and squeeze lime juice over. If you want to make this truly sublime, serve with a dip made with with cincalok, lime juice and sliced red chillies. Pure heaven!
Sambal tumis:
Makes 2 medium sized jars
30g dried chillies
15g belacan
400g peeled red onions
50g cut fresh chillies
25g peeled garlic
40g white part of lemongrass, sliced
40g raw cashews or candlenuts
200g oil – if you skimp on the oil, you will get a dry and paste-like sambal
2 tbsp seedless tamarind pulp 50g gula melaka (or coconut sugar)
Salt to taste
Cut dried chillies in half and shake in a colander to remove seeds. Transfer to a boil and cover with boiling water. Allow to soak until completely soft. Meanwhile, crumble the belacan into a dry pan, and toast gently till aromatic. Blend belacan, shallots, chillies, garlic, lemongrass, candlenuts and dried chillies (squeeze to remove excess water) until a smooth paste forms.
Heat oil in a wok, pot or saucepan. Add the rempah and fry gently on low heat, stirring to fully combine. Continue cooking gently, stirring occasionally, until the paste starts to ooze oil. Add the tamarind pulp and cook further, for about 30 minutes, until the paste darkens considerably. Add gula melaka and continue cooking until the sugar completely melts. If, by this point, the paste has darkened in colour but has not split yet, add another generous ladle of oil and continue cooking on low heat. Season with salt (and more tamarind or sugar if necessary) to taste and transfer to a bowl or jars to store.
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The Best Homemade Mee Goreng Mamak! | Fried Noodles - Vegan Malaysian Food
Mee Goreng Mamak has a complex flavour and texture, but few people know why! The secret is actually the mix of peanuts and lentils in the sauce. It gives the whole dish a creamy, nutty flavour that coats every single strand of noodle. So let's explore this method in this video ✨ Scroll down for ingredients ????
Cucur Sayur (Vegetable Fritters) Recipe -
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Cucur Sayur (Vegetable Fritters) Recipe -
Mee Goreng Mamak (Mamak Style Fried Noodles)
Serves 4
40g or 1/4 cup raw peanuts
45g or 1/4 cups yellow split peas/lentils (dahl)
1/2 sheet seaweed, optional (for the fishy flavour)
2 tbsp chilli paste or cili boh
4 cloves garlic, sliced
2 red onions, sliced
1 tbsp Malaysian meat curry powder
2 tbsp tomato sauce (ketchup)
2 tbsp sweet soy sauce
1 tbsp soy sauce
1 vegetable stock cube, optional
1 - 1 1/2 cups water (according to how dry or wet you like the noodles to be)
Salt to taste
450g yellow noodles
2 vegetable fritters, roughly chopped
1 tomato, quartered
1 large potato, boiled and cubed
4 squares vegetarian seafood tofu, sliced
4 tofu puffs, cut into chunks
1 bunch mustard greens (sawi)
1 cup bean sprouts (taugeh)
Method:
- Fry raw peanuts and lentils until browned then blend to a powder along with seaweed (if using).
- Fry onions and garlic until caramelised, then add the peanut powder, chili paste, and curry powder. Add some water and cook until the oil starts to separate.
- Add the stems of the mustard greens and fry. Then add tofu, vegetarian seafood tofu, vegetable fritters, tomatoes and lastly the greens
- Toss the noodles in and mix to coat in the sauce. Add soy sauces and beans sprout. Stir together, turn off the heat and serve immediately with sliced chilies, lime and fried shallots.
Make Fried Mochi French Toast With Lucas Sin
Chef Lucas Sin of Junzi Kitchen shows us how to make fried mochi french toast.
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