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How To make Thai Fried Noodles (2)
Asian rice noodles -- cut about 1/8 inch wide, -OR- 1 lb Flat rice noodles
-- (fresh or dried) 3/4 c Fish sauce; -OR-
6 tb -Soy sauce
4 ts Rice wine vinegar
-OR- distilled white vinegar 2 tb Sugar
4 ts High-quality paprika; -OR-
1/4 c -Catsup or Tomato paste
1/2 c Vegetable oil
-OR more if needed 8 oz Boneless pork
-OR- boned & skinned chicken - cut into very small pieces 2 tb Minced or pressed garlic
2 ts Ground dried red hot chili,
-OR- 1 tb Minced fresh hot chile
4 Eggs; lightly beaten
8 oz Medium-sized shrimp
shelled and deveined, :
tails left intact 10 oz Fresh bean sprouts
3 Green onions; thinly sliced
1/2 c Chopped dry-roasted peanuts
(unsalted) 1/4 c Chopped fresh cilantro
:
FOR GARNISH-------------------------------- Finely minced dried shrimp Fresh cilantro sprigs Lemon or lime wedges In a bowl, cover the noodles in lukewarm water and let stand to soften, about 15 minutes for fresh noodles or about 30 minutes for dry noodles. Drain and cut into 6-inch lengths, if desired. Set aside. In a small bowl, combine the fish sauce, vinegar, sugar, and paprika, catsup, or tomato paste. Set aside. Heat a wok or saute pan over high heat. Add the oil and swirl to coat the pan. Add the pork or chicken, garlic, and chili and stir-fry for 1 minute. Stir in the drained noodles and the reserved fish sauce mixture and stir-fry about 30 seconds. Push the noodles to one side, pour in about a tablespoon more oil, if necessary, and add the eggs; cook just until slightly set, then break them up. Add the shrimp and stir-fry just until they turn pink. Add most of the bean sprouts, the green onion, and 1/4 cup of the peanuts and stir-fry until the sprouts and onions are crisp-tender, 1 to 2 minutes. Remove from the heat and transfer to a serving plate.
Sprinkle with the chopped cilantro, remaining 1/4 cup peanuts, and dried shrimp. Garnish with the remaining bean sprouts, cilantro sprigs, and lemon or lime wedges, and serve immediately. Diners squeeze lemon or lime juice to taste. Serves 8 as a pasta course, or 4 as a main course From: stigle@cs.unca.edu (Sue Stigleman)
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How To make Thai Restaurant Style Pad See Ew or Stir Fry Flat rice Noodle
Hi Everyone,
Welcome to the Ankasia's Kitchen Channel.
This Video is about How to Make the BEST Thai Restaurant Style Pad See Ew that will give you a detail recipe which would taste exactly like in a RESTAURANT!!
Recipe:
Ingredients:
- 3 Tbsp Vege Oil
- 2 Cloves Garlic(Finely Chopped)
- 150 Gr Meat( I used beef in this video)
- 2 Eggs
- 2 Stems Chinese Broccoli
Sauce:
- 2 Tbsp Dark Soy Sauce
- 2 Tbsp Oyster Sauce
- 2 Tsp Soy Sauce
- 2 Tsp White Vinegar
- 2 Tsp Sugar
- 2 Tbsp Water
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Mee Krob Recipe - Sweet and Sour Crispy Noodles! หมี่กรอบ
“Mee Krob” or “Mee Grob” are crispy rice noodles coated in an incredible sweet and sour sauce. It is often served in squares as a snack, much like savoury Rice Krispie Treats! Super addictive with the perfect balance of sweet, tart, and umami, they are popular treats amongst visitors to Thailand.
In this recipe I share with you 3 very important keys to perfectly crispy, puffed noodles that STAY crispy for weeks! It's not a hard recipe, but it does require precision in order for the noodles to have the right balance of flavours and, most importantly, be crispy!
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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
The Cheapest Noodle Dish Ever (Chicken Chow Mein) | But Cheaper
Noodles should be cheap, they're even cheaper when you make them at home.
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Full Recipe:
Ingredients Needed:
Sauce:
- 1.5 tablespoons (22g) rice vinegar
- 2.5 tablespoons (38g) soy sauce
- 2 tablespoons (40g) hoisin sauce or oyster sauce
- 1 teaspoon (5g) toasted sesame oil
- 2 teaspoons (5g) corn starch
Noodles:
- 12 oz (340g) boneless skinless chicken thighs
- 3 tablespoons (42g) vegetable oil
- 2 green onions, cut into segments
- 1 carrot julienne
- 2 ribs celery
- 3.5 cups (315g) thinly sliced napa cabbage
- 7 cloves garlic, finely chopped
- 1 cup (85g) bean sprouts
- 14 oz (400g)chow mein/stir fry noodles
- 2 tablespoons (30g) water
- additional green onion for garnish *optional*
- chili oil *optional*
EASY & QUICK PAN-FRIED NOODLES RECIPE #recipe #chinesefood #noodles #ramen #cooking #shorts
Pad Thai | Simple no-wok recipe, cooks in 3 minutes
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***RECIPE, MAKES TWO BIG PORTIONS***
For the sauce:
1 tablespoon fish sauce (can use soy sauce instead)
2-3 tablespoons sugar
1/2-2 teaspoons tamarind concentrate (I used 2 and loved it, but Lauren thought it was way too acidic)
2 tablespoons ketchup
1 teaspoon soy sauce (very optional)
***It's possible to replace both the fish sauce and tamarind with 3-4 tablespoons of Worcestershire sauce. Not the same, but pretty good.
Everything else:
1 bunch green onions
1 thumb of ginger
3-4 garlic cloves
1 red chili (very optional)
4-8 oz (60-120g) mung bean sprouts (I like a lot of them)
4 oz (60g) Pad Thai noodles (narrow, flat rice noodles)
1 boneless, skinless chicken breast (shrimp or tofu work great too)
2 eggs
a big handful of roasted peanuts (50g?)
picked cilantro leaves and lime wedges for garnish
salt
oil
Mix up the sauce and let the sugar dissolve while you do everything else. Put a big pinch of salt in the eggs and beat them thoroughly — let them sit and loosen while you do the rest. Coarsely chop the peanuts.
Thinly slice the green onions, keeping the greens and whites separate. Peel and coarsely chop the garlic and ginger, and put them in the same bowl as your onion greens. Thinly slice the chili and put it in with the onions and ginger/garlic. Pick the cilantro leaves and cut the lime wedges.
Cut the chicken into three sections and then into very thin slices against the grain. Separate into two piles. Get the bean sprouts open and ready, get your salt and a glass of water handy.
Fill a nonstick pan with water (not the water you have in the glass) and bring it to a boil. Put in a pinch of salt and the noodles. Cook, stirring constantly, for half as long as the package suggests (I did 2-3 minutes). Dump them in a strainer and pour cold water over them to stop the cooking and keep them from sticking to each other. Leave them in the strainer for now.
Wipe out the pan and return it to the high heat, and put in a thin film of oil. Season the first pile of chicken with salt. When the oil just starts to smoke, put in the chicken and quickly get it spread out to a thin layer. Let it brown without moving it for a minute.
When the chicken pieces are opaque 2/3rds of the way up, put in half of your onion/ginger/garlic/chili mixture and stir it aggressively. Push it over to one side of the pan (it's ok that the chicken and veg aren't fully cooked yet), then pour half of the eggs into the other side and get them spread out to a thin layer. Let the egg partially solidify before breaking it up into sheets with your spoon.
When egg seems almost cooked, dump in half the noodles, a third of the sauce (you can always add more sauce if you think it needs it), half the bean sprouts, a few chopped peanuts, and stir to combine. Finally, use a splash of water from the glass to help you get everything stirred up, deglaze the pan, and get the level of saucy texture you want.
Put it on a plate, garnish with the cilantro, onion greens, lime wedges and more peanuts. Wipe out the pan and cook the second portion. (It's possible to cook both at once if you have a wok or a really big nonstick pan with a really powerful burner, but I think this comes out better if you do one at a time so it can get the necessary intense heat.)