My daughter is always asking for ramen or chicken noodle soup especially during these cold Minnesota winter months. She’s my kindred soup spirit as both of us could eat soup for every meal. It’s so flavorful, full of nutrition, warm and comforting. I’ve indulged her …
It has been far too long since I’ve posted a recipe. I’ve been indulging in all things summer from spending time with family to relaxing and learning new skills in the form of a consulting business. While the hubby is the main product (consultant), I’m …
I rarely post noodle style meals. I’m just not a huge noodle eater and tend to lean towards rice in most cases. These skinny ramen noodles that I recently discovered, however, have me indulging in EVERYTHING noodle. These are a millet and rice based ramen that is absolutely perfect for this lemongrass pork noodle bowl.
Before you lecture me about how terrible traditional ramen is for you (it is)… these are not your college cuisine style instant ramen made with wheat and preservatives. These ramen noodles are made from organic rice and millet… and that’s it! Two ingredients. Too delicious to pass up. Millet and rice are naturally gluten-free grains that taste amazing together. This natural grain pairing has a slight nutty flavor and these noodles don’t turn out mushy after cooking (unless you let them sit too long, of course, like any other noodle). They also have a fast cooking time so if you were to make the lemongrass pork meatballs in advance, this whole meal can come together in 15 minutes!
The main punch of flavor in this lemongrass pork noodle bowl is bursting with citrus notes from the infusion of lemongrass paste in the meatballs as well as a hit of lime in the sauce. Rounding out the Asian goodness is a bit of heat from chilies, ginger and garlic paired with the tangy saltiness of a traditional fish sauce. The lemongrass pork meatballs can easily be made in advance and either refrigerated or frozen. Just reheat them and toss them in the noodle bowl with the quick cooking rice ramen and you have a nearly instant dinner for those busy weeknights!
I’m on a Thai food and Asian cuisine kick. It’s truly some of my favorite flavor combinations. When it’s about to freeze outside (we had our first frost last night!), I love to use tender garden herbs en masse in tasty meals like tomato basil …
I told myself I wouldn’t be emotional on my son’s last day of preschool. But here I sit with a small well of tears threatening to spill out of the corner of my eye. He was sent home with a binder of all of his …
Perfect Pad Thai. I know, the title is a bit presumptuous especially for a Scandinavian-German girl never trained in Thai cooking. Nor do I have a Thai grandmother. That said, I just have this thing for a truly authentic pad Thai. Every Thai restaurant I ever go to is measured on the taste of their pad Thai. I can’t ever get enough!! If I had to live on one cuisine for the rest of my life, it would be Thai food, hands down.
This Friday, it’s the hubs and my anniversary and every year we go out for Thai food to celebrate. Eleven years, and I’m still in love with that crazy man! We always save Thai food for date nights because my son is allergic to peanuts and tree nuts so taking him along to a Thai restaurant could be a dangerous situation.
After attempting to re-create a perfect pad Thai about a gazillion times over the course of about 4 years, I learned a lot and finally hit on the combination that I believe to be perfection.
A few of my learnings:
Do NOT skimp on the oil. This is necessary to prevent the noodles from sticking. I’ve tried using less multiple times because it seems like a lot of oil. It ended up in a shredded sticky rice noodle mess EVERY time. Plus, if you’re using coconut oil, it’s actually a healthy fat so oil on up!
Authentic ingredients make ALL the difference. I think the biggest secret is the preserved radish which I recently discovered and can be found in Asian supermarkets. It’ll still be good without that ingredient but if you can get it, it certainly makes it that much better. I also use a tamarind concentrate and coconut palm sugar rather than white sugar as this too, is key to its authenticity.
The only part of this recipe that alters from true authenticity is the peanuts. I’m proud to say that my son can eat this pad Thai with abandon as the nutty taste comes from sunbutter (sunflower seed butter) rather than crushed peanuts but feel free to use crushed peanuts for true authenticity if you desire as I’ve noted both in the recipe. I hope you enjoy this perfect pad Thai as much as I do!!!
1 pound chicken breast or thighs cut into bite size cubes (or use tofu or other protein combo of your choice)
2 eggs
1 tablespoon sunbutter (or ¼ cup roasted unsalted peanuts, crushed)
1 cup (or more) bean sprouts
4 green onions, chopped (white and green parts separated)
1 teaspoon crushed Thai chili peppers (or adjust to your desired spice level)
2 tablespoons fresh cilantro plus more for garnish
lime or lemon wedges to squeeze on top when serving
Instructions
Soak rice noodles in lukewarm water for at least 1 hour. Chop garlic, green onion, cilantro, chicken or other protein while you wait.
Prepare the sauce by combining tamarind, water, vinegar, fish sauce, palm sugar, lime juice and radish in a small dish. Set aside.
Heat oil in a wok or large sauté pan.
When oil is hot, add garlic and stir fry one minute. Add white part of onion and the chicken (or other protein). Stir fry until chicken is no longer pink on the outside.
Break eggs into wok and let them fry without breaking them up 1-2 minutes.
Drain noodles and add to wok, giving them a quick fold to break up the eggs.
Add tamarind sauce mixture and the sunbutter (or ⅔ of the peanuts if using) and stir fry 2-3 minutes.
Add bean sprouts, cilantro, crushed peppers and the onion greens. Stir to combine.
Remove from heat and transfer to serving dish.
Top with additional cilantro, crushed peppers, remaining peanuts (if using), onion greens and a squeeze of lime or lemon.
T.G.I.F!!!! This weekend has much to look forward too… more grape picking, more grape juice making (maybe some wine making), some fall cleanup and after the work is done, a trek to the pumpkin patch and a bonfire at my brother’s acreage. My family is always such …
Funny story… this actually started as an attempt to make a vegetarian sushi roll but instead of nori, I was going to use nice big leaves of romaine lettuce. Mostly because I just don’t like the flavor of seaweed. Everything started out really well. I …