Matt and I have an intimate relationship with Thai food. In
seminary, we ate it as a quick meal between classes. It was waiting for us on a
blanket surrounded by candles, just before Matt proposed. All 300 of our
wedding guests joined us for Thai food at our reception. And we live in the
marvelous Seattle, where you can find Thai food in every neighborhood, fancy or
cheap, traditional or Americanized. Even better, you can find Thai ingredients
with little effort in this city.
My favorite corner Asian market, Lennys, has just about everything
I need to make any basic Asian dish I could desire. And this week, I made the
trip to Lennys in order to venture in the brave new world of homemade Pad Thai.
I feel like there is a lack of quality Pad Thai recipes to be
found on the interwebs, so I decided to post this year (partially so that I can
come back to it)!. For those of you who live far away from Thai ingredients, I
am so sad for you. I believe Tamarind Base can actually be substituted with
Ketchup (an astounding # of Thai restaurants actually do this!) Ancho CHile
pepper also totally optional. And Fish Sauce can be substituted with Soy or
Tamari, but you will definitely miss out. You can also, obviously, make this
dish with only tofu or only chicken, but I love having both.
Chicken & Tofu Phad Thai
Serves 3-4, Takes ~90 minutes, start to finish
Sauce Recipe:
- 3 Tbsp Tamarind Sour Soup
Base (or 1 Tbls Tamarind Paste)
- 2 to 3 Tbsp peanut butter
- 1/2 tsp ground white pepper
- 1/2 tsp ground ancho chile pepper
- 1/4 c chicken broth, low sodium if poss.
- 1/4 c brown Sugar
- 3 Tbsp fish Sauce
- 1 Tbsp Sriracha
- 1/2 lime (juice)
- 1 Tbsp cornstarch
- 1 Tbsp water
Pad Thai Recipe:
- 10 to 12oz 1/4in thick rice noodles (dry)
- .75 lb chicken breast
- 8 oz extra firm tofu, pressed between paper towels
for 15 mins
- 2 eggs, lightly beaten (w/ a pinch of salt)
- 3 Tbls tamari or soy sauce
- 1 tsp corn starch
- 4 cloves fresh garlic, minced
- 1 shallot, minced
- 4 green onions, light green parts, chopped
- peanut oil (or grapeseed oil)
Garnish
- 1 to 2 c bean sprouts (rinsed & drained)
- 1/2 c cilantro, chopped
- 4 green onions, dark green parts, chopped
- 1 lime, cut into wedges lengthwise
- 1/2 c peanuts (salted & roasted), crushed
Instructions:
Slice chicken breast in 1/2 inch slices, and then in half
length-wise again so that you end up with slices that are ~1/2 inch tall and
1/2 wide. In a bowl or plastic bag, combine chicken breast, 1 1/2 Tbsp Tamari
or Soy Sauce, and 1 tsp cornstarch and mix well, then transfer to fridge.
Slice tofu (once pressed) into strips (~1/2 inch wide and 2-3
inches long), pat dry with paper towels, and place into bowl or plastic bag
with 1 1/2 Tbsp tamari/soy sauce, then transfer to fridge.
In a small dish, combine cornstarch and water and make a slurry
- set aside. Combine all remaining sauce ingredients in a medium bowl, and
whisk until sugar dissolves and peanut butter disburses. Set aside.
Heat 4 qts water to boiling, remove from heat and add rice
noodles. Let soak ~10 minutes, until just firmer than al dente, and then drain
and rinse thoroughly with cold water. Return noodles to empty pot and cover
with lid.
While noodles sit, mince or chop all remaining ingredients and
garnish pieces, rinse bean sprouts, etc. Heat wok or large stir-fry pan over
medium heat. When heated, add 1 tsp peanut oil and then add egg mixture. Turn
heat to medium low, and flip after a minute or so. Remove egg to cutting board
to let cool when it is just able to hold its shape. Cut or tear egg into small
pieces.
Return pan to heat and increase to medium-high. Add 1/2 Tbsp
peanut oil, and allow oil to heat. Add tofu pieces in a single layer (may need
to do this in batches). Crisp and brown tofu on all sides. Remove from pan to a
plate or cutting board.
Add 1/2 Tbsp Peanut Oil to pan, and allow to heat over
medium-high heat. Add half of garlic & shallots to pan, and cook for 30
seconds before adding chicken pieces in a single layer to bottom of pan. Cook
chicken, stirring every 1-2 minutes, until no more translucent chicken pieces
can be seen. Add remaining garlic and shallots, and cook, stirring frequently,
another 1-2 minutes. Don't overcook the chicken! This is my #1 complaint of Pad
Thai from almost every restaurant I've ever eaten in!
Add sauce, noodles, and light-green onion pieces to pan, and
then add tofu and egg. Add cornstarch slurry to pan as you mix everything
together. Use two utensils to "toss" the dish in the pan. I recommend
adding noodles in batches, and stop adding noodles when sauce seems mostly
soaked up.
Serve up! Garnish with peanuts, lime wedges, cilantro, green
onion, and bean sprouts.