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Kuay Tiao Pad Thai

ceoMom 583, Melissa

Sauce:
1c. tamarind juice
1c. palm sugar (you can substitute brown sugar if you can't find it)
1c. water
1/2 c. fish sauce
2 tsp. salt

4 tablespoons vegetable oil, plus extra as needed
1 teaspoon chopped garlic
7 whole shrimp, shelled and deveined (or chicken, or ground pork, or beef, or tofu)
1/4 pound medium-size dried rice noodles (soaked 60 minutes in cold water and drained)
Water
5 tablespoons Pad Thai sauce, (above)
2 large eggs
1/2 tsp. ground hot chilis (opt.)
2 tablespoons ground roasted peanuts
1/2 cup sliced garlic chives or green onion
2 cups bean sprouts, rinsed, plus more for garnish
1 wedge lime

Heat the oil in a wok. Add the garlic and stir-fry until golden brown. Add the meat/ shrimp and keep stirring until the shrimp changes color. Remove the shrimp to prevent overcooking and set aside.

Add the noodles. They will stick together so stir fast and try to separate them. Add a little water, stirring a few times. Then add the Pad Thai sauce, and keep stirring until everything is thoroughly mixed. The noodles should appear soft and moist. Return the cooked shrimp to the wok.

Push the contents of the wok up around the sides to make room to fry the eggs. If the pan is very dry, add 1 more tablespoon of oil. Add the eggs and spread the noodles over the eggs to cover. When the eggs are cooked, stir the noodles until everything is well mixed-this should result in cooked bits of eggs, both whites and yolk, throughout the noodle mixture.

Add peanuts, garlic chives and bean sprouts. Mix well. Remove to a platter. Serve with raw bean spouts and a few drops of lime juice.

This is the best I could do, estimation-wise. Hope this helps!

2 comments
ceoMom 101, Jennifer

ceoMom 101, Jennifer

Wow! This sounds challenging, but I'm up for it. Where can I find tamarind juice and fish sauce in the store? I don't think I've seen those before. Everything else I'm good on.

ceoMom 583, Melissa

ceoMom 583, Melissa

I go to a local oriental market a few times a year to stock up. I make the tamarind juice (tamarind is a bean/pod thing. Just mash it up a bit, put it on a small strainer and pour the 1c. water over top of it. Or let it steep like tea, and scoop out the bits.) Fish sauce is thin and brown (sort of like soy sauce, but lighter.) it's not fishy though - not sure why it's called fish sauce. Anyway, I have been able to find this in the ethnic section of our grocery store. You could use soy sauce if you want to - it won't "tarnish" anything :) It's not so bad as long as you've got these "weird" ingredients on hand!

Happy wok-ing! ;o)

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