On a trip to Thailand last fall, my wife and I did a one-day cooking class in Chiang Mai. That day I made the perfect batch of pad thai. (For the uninitiated, Pad Thai is “noodles Thai-style.” It’s one of the more popular dishes at your local Thai restaurant. If you don’t believe me, go check. I’ll wait.)
Anyway, I preceded at home to make 35 batches of pad thai that bore little resemblance to food. That’s not true. Only the first five dishes were fundamentally inedible, the next thirty were tasty enough– they just didn’t taste like pad Thai. A poor cook might blame the difference on the variation in ingredients between Thailand and home. However, I have a sneaking suspicion the cooking school staff was slipping good cooking into my dish while I wasn’t looking. They’d say, “Godzilla” and point, and I’d turn (because one can’t take a chance that close to the Pacific), and when I turned back around the contents of my wok would look and/or smell better.
If making mac-n-cheese from a box, microwaving a HotPocket, or grilling a burger aren’t counted as cooking, then you might say that my experience with cooking was nothing. However through an extensive process of error and error, I arrived at delectable pad thai.
Below is what you’ll need.
First, for the anal retentive types who’ve noticed that I took this picture on top of the washing machine, that was solely for lighting purposes. This process in no way involves use of the washing machine. It’s not one of those clever recipes like cooking fish in the dishwasher. I’m serious, under no circumstances are you to attempt to use your washer in the making of pad thai.
In list form, what you’ll need is:
– 2 Tablespoons of oil (anything but olive)
– 4-ish cloves of garlic (more if you have a vampire-infestation problem)
– shrimp (several to many)
– chicken (one to two tenders’s worth; like the size of tender they give you at Applebees or Chilis– NOT McDonalds, i.e. a swanky tender)
(substitute tofu if you’re one of those quasi-vegetarians who count chicken as animal but don’t count shrimp/fish.)
– egg (1)
– 2 Tablespoons fish sauce
– 1-1/2 teaspoons sugar
– rice noodles (about 2 ramen packets worth, not that you should buy it that way)
– crushed peanuts (3 heaping Tablespoons)
– spouts (1 cup-ish. Normally this is soy or mung bean sprouts, but I’ve substituted Alfalfa sprouts because they work fine and last longer in the fridge.)
– spring onions or chives or something green and oniony (1-cup-ish)
– 1/2 a lime
Step 1: Heat your oil in a wok. Get it hot enough so that when you throw the garlic in, it’ll sizzle. This will make you feel more chef-like.
Step 2: Add the animal stuff. Put the chicken in first, it takes longer than the prawns. If you’re using tofu, put it in after the shrimp (tofu won’t cause you severe debilitating diarrhea if it’s under-cooked. [I don’t think, but I have no idea what I’m talking about. Although I do suspect one shouldn’t refer to diarrhea at any point in a food blog post.])
Step 3: Add the egg, fish sauce, and sugar. Scramble the egg up good, and mix everything together.
Step 4: Add the noodles. This is the trickiest part of all. First, they make a lot of different types of rice noodles in different dimensions and colors, and they all cook differently. I prefer thin noodles. I must admit the noodles are the weak part of my game. In the batch I’m showing, the noodles are overcooked, but I have done them just right. (You’ll have to take my word.) It’s preferable to have them slightly under-cooked when they’re mixed with the prawn scramble (There’s usually enough moisture that they’ll continue cooking.)
At the cooking school, we put pushed the prawn scramble up to the top of the wok and tilted the wok over and put dry noodles and a cup of water in the bottom of the wok. We then cooked the noodles, and then mixed them with the prawn scramble. If you’re an octopus or a ninja, that method works great. I, however, pour boiling water over bowled noodles when I’m putting the chicken in the wok, then I tong them into the wok and mix them right together with the prawn scramble.
Step 5: Add the vegetable stuff. First, throw in the crushed peanuts. Then stir in the sprouts and the spring onion. (These are all done last, because you want them to provide a bit of crunch. i.e. You don’t want them thoroughly cooked.)
The penultimate step is to squeeze on the lime. This can be done into the wok after it’s removed from the heat or directly on top of one’s bowl.
Step 6: Eat. I’ve included the following picture as proof that this was, in fact, edible.









lol…you are correct.i don’t have to check with the thai restaurant. it’s the only thing i order..my favorite, but vegetarian with raddishes,squash, zucchini, carrots,tofu…now i know where to find a good recipe.
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Thanks. Substituting for fish sauce is the tough part for vegetarians. I’ve done a vegetarian version for my wife using soy sauce, but it’s not quite the same. I put in a couple small (hot) thai chilis to make up for the flavor loss. It was tasty though.
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it really sounds delicious .
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Looks yummy.
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Thanks.
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Not using the washing machne? Where’s your sense of adventure? Americans are innovative people. Thai people are tradition bound, always insisting that food taste good, and have no soap, lint, or Clorox mixed in. Party poopers who don’t know how to REALLY live. But, they make peanut sauce…one of the few things I’ll eat on anything, so all is forgiven.
Later…
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That’s where I would mess up the dishwasher steamed fish, I’m pretty sure you’re supposed to leave the soap out.
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Love your humor, I love to cook but never tried Pad Thai, perhaps i will, the step by step is great.
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Thanks. If at first you don’t succeed, give it another 30 tries. No, seriously, it should work well for you.
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You definitely need the nam pla. And if you are talking about food in
Asia, well diarrhea is never that far away. I just spent six months in India, diarrhea capital of the world. First time I went there I ate something that, shall we say, hypercharged everything for a week
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I have a cast iron stomach. I’ve traveled fairly widely and rarely have anything more than mildly upset stomach, even eating street food. I had a brief glitch in Cambodia this last time, but kept me in the hotel for the day or anything like that. In other words, nothing worse than I would get from eating at any Taco Bell location in the US.
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One of my friends who lives in Egypt advised me to buy whatever the locals take- our sissy western stuff is no match for the bugs you can pick up in India or Egypt. I’ve travelled in Africa a lot but never picked up anything but caught hepatitis in Australia from contaminated food when I was 6.
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Yeah. I haven’t been to India yet, but may be going within the next couple years for an extended visit. We’ll see how that tests my system.
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Thanks for the directions. I tried to make this dish for my birthday dinner when I was living in Malta and all the noodles disintegrated so the entire thing looked pre-chewed. I had Pad Thai last night in a restaurant in Lagos and it was good but not as spicy as it should have been.
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The noodles are definitely the challenge, or I should say controlling the amount of moisture. If you cook it all in the wok you need to have just enough moisture to cook the noodles without saturating the rest of the mixture. I don’t think boiling off a lot of extra water works well with this dish.
Spice is tricky too. I’ve tried adding thai chilis. One definitely has to boost the sweetener and lime content to balance it, otherwise the spice so dominates that one gets something that is both spicy but has blandness particularly on the front end of the bite, if that makes any sense.
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Like the godzilla reference ! Personally I use the ‘look the goodyear blimp!’ though I could see why that might not work in Thailand ! Keep trying and just train in the kitchen ( or on top of the washer ) grasshopper !
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Thanks
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