There’s no reason you can’t make it yourself. It’s a snap to make. Comes together in no time. Perfect for weeknight dinners. This is street style cooking. High heat. Everything ready to go. Just bang it out. Like you were working a stall in Bangkok. Simplified ingredients. Same technique. Full disclosure. This post is a re-tread. I have been playing with this recipe since I originally published it. This is the new and improved version. Expect it to change again in a couple years.
I’ve been making this easy pad thai forever
There was a time before Internet. Hard to believe. But true. The dark ages. Back then, you had to figure things out the hard way. PBS. Cookbooks. Word of mouth. Wasn’t so easy. I learned how to cook this dish in the only cooking class I ever took. Taught by a Thai woman who I would credit for this recipe. Except I have no idea what her name was. The recipe has drifted a fair bit over the years. But I still have my original notes. So I know it’s really her recipe. With some of my technique on top. Some tweaks. Easy pad thai glebekitchen style.
This is weeknight cooking
I make a more complicated version. Dried shrimp. Palm sugar syrup. Salted radish. Blazing high heat. More in line with traditional recipes. I make all sorts of Thai noodle dishes. I’m a rice noodle addict. My name is Romain and I have a problem. But I keep coming back to this one. When I want something fast. It’s fast, happy food for me. This is pad thai for when you don’t feel like going the distance. No dried shrimp, no salted radish, no palm sugar and no marinated tofu. Simple. But so tasty.
Don’t fear the fish sauce
A word on fish sauce. There is no substitute. Seriously. If you eat at Thai or Vietnamese restaurants, you eat fish sauce. You may not know it. But you do. Soy sauce is not a substitute. Soy sauce will destroy this dish. Kill it. Like “This is about the worst thing I have ever put in my mouth” bad. Just. Don’t. Do. It. Luckily, you can find fish sauce at a big grocery store. It’s not exotic any more. Probably worth hitting a decent Asian grocer though. For a better fish sauce brand. Pay the extra three dollars. There’s a lot of variability. Google “fish sauce review”. You’ll see. If you like Thai or Vietnamese it’s worth getting good fish sauce. It’s the backbone of these cuisines. I have three different types on the go right now. Fish sauce doesn’t go in the fridge. So it’s not so bad. My soy sauce collection on the other hand…
The sauce is the thing
It’s a simple thing. Mix a few ingredients together. Done. But the sauce is what makes this dish what it is. Tamarind paste is the key. It has this complex, slightly sour taste. Not like anything else. Worth it for this dish alone. But so good in so many recipes. Tamarind and Indian. Tamarind and Thai. Latin. Cocktails. Just get some. You won’t be sorry. You can play with this recipe. Probably should play with this recipe. Modify it to your taste. Add tofu or scramble an egg. Leave out the chicken. Whatever you want. Just don’t mess with the sauce.
Don’t boil your noodles for pad thai
I cannot stress this enough. Soak your rice noodles in hot water. This is critical. Critical. Did I mention this was important? Keep boiling water away from rice noodles any time you are stir frying them. Boiling water makes mushy noodles. Unless you nail the timing. And mushy noodles makes terrible pad thai. Simple as that. Soak your noodles in hot water for 30-45 minutes. Just do it. You will be bitterly disappointed if you don’t. You want them pliable. A bit toothy. Think 85 percent of the way there. They will finish cooking in the wok. One thing to note. All rice noodles are not created equal. I can’t say I understand. But I do know all brands do not soften at the same rate. So you are going to need to figure this out for yourself. Annoying. I know. Sorry. I can’t help you here. Serve with lime wedges, chopped peanuts, cilantro and vinegar soaked chilies on the side. Maybe some extra bean sprouts. Let everyone customize to taste.
Don’t try to make more than two servings at a time
Stir frying doesn’t scale. Never does. And that’s especially true here. Unless you have a jet engine for a burner. And a wok the size of a car. Then maybe it might work. If you live. You need to maintain some sort of balance. Heat. The ability to move things around in the wok. And volume. Up the volume and the others go down. And that’s going to disappoint. For sure. Truth be told this recipe works even better if you cut it in half. Cook one portion at a time. That’s real street cooking.
Easy pad thai any time you want it
This is easy pad thai. For Tuesday night. For any night. Easy. Any day. Every day. Next time you feel like picking up the phone to order in make this instead. You won’t be sorry.