Monday, June 13, 2011

Pad Thai

Hello,

Alvin - This one is for you. The one who asks for 2 * Pad Thai @ Eagle Thai!! Pad Thai is what made me fall in love with Thai food. Especially the one at Eagle Thai - Pad Thai in Tomato sauce - 5 * (at times over the scale). Since then Pad Thai has been my dip stick to measure my likingness to any new Thai restaurant I try. If the Pad Thai is good then the other dishes can't be that bad. The version below may not be the typical recipe for Pad Thai. It's a mix and match of many recipes I have seen. Some claim that Pad Thai is actually not a Thai dish - but guess what - who cares!!

What goes in:

For the sauce:
1) Tamarind puree
2) Fish sauce (can substitute with soy and salt)
3) Peanut butter (smooth)
4) Tomato sauce (ketchup)
5) Palm sugar (ordinary sugar would do as well)








Other stuff
1) Flat rice noodles - thin variety
2) Egg
3) Dried prawn (shrimp)
4) Pickled turnips (this is the signature ingredient)
5) Prawn - preferably raw (can substitute with chicken, tofu or any other veggie)
6) Chives (substitute with spring onions)
7) Bean sprouts
8) Ground peanuts (roasted)



The procedure:

1) Mix the ingredients of the sauce together and make a paste. The quantity of each of this ingredient would make or break the taste of Pad Thai. Happy experimenting.
2) Boil the rice noodles. Make sure it is not too soft that it breaks apart or gets mushy mushy.
3) Heat a large wok and add a few tablespoons of oil.
4) Break in an egg and scramble fry it.
5) Add the dried prawns and turnips and saute for a few minutes.
6) Add the mixed sauce and saute for a minute or 2.
7) Add the prawns and cook them until they just turn red.
8) Add the noodles and add some more fish sauce. Remember to sprinkle some water if the noodles gets too sticky.
9) Mix well for a few minutes.
10) Add the chives.
11) Add bean sprouts and garnish with roasted peanuts.

Some serve with a wedge of lemon - personally I never preferred that.


Happy Cooking!!

C


Singapore Chilli Crab

Hello,

Am back again after a short break. This is one of those dishes that I cooked without tasting ever. I still haven't brought myself to buy a dish that costs $85. Yes, that is what it costs at Sambal for their signature dish. It was on my "To Cook" for a while and it happened over the long weekend. Thanks to the Queen.


What goes in:



  • Crab
  • Onion, Ginger, Garlic paste
  • Chilli powder (can replace this with Thai red chilli added to the paste above)
  • Tomato paste
  • Sambal paste
  • Palm sugar (or normal sugar would do as well)
  • Vinegar
  • Soy sauce
  • Tomato Sauce
Crab Cleaning
The very first time we attempted to cook crab was in Phoenix and it was a major disaster. So did a little more research this time.
1) If the crabs are still alive you should give a tap on its head just near the eyes to "knock them off". The one we had was already dead. 
2) Take a nice big knife and split the crab right in the middle.
3) Once split, you can easily open up the top shell and clean all the slimy stuff out. You can run it under cold water. There will also be some gray fibery substance on the top - get that out as well.
4) Chop up the claws or sections as some people call it.

Now to the curry

  1. Heat up a wide sauce pan and pour a few tablespoons of oil.
  2. Saute the onion-ginger-garlic paste until the oil separates a bit.
  3. Add the tomato paste and the sambal paste and saute it for a few minutes.
  4. Add vinegar, tomato sauce, soy sauce and palm sugar and saute until the sugar is dissolved completely.
  5. Toss in the crab and saute for about 10 minutes. The crab shells will turn red by then.
The result:

One needs to have a taste for seafood and the fishy smell else don't bother to try this. :-)

Happy Cooking

C