Salt and Pepper Shrimp

The dish I am about to share with you is one of my personal favorites.  I love it cooked using squid or shrimp (I will provide a separate article with it cooked using squid with more pictures of all the steps).  Though I will say the meal looks more exotic with the rings and tentacles of small squid than the familiar grub-like form of cleaned shrimp tails.  Salt and Pepper Shrimp is a Cantonese dish (Cantonese food tries to highlight the actual flavor of the food rather than sauces).  It is often ordered in a restaurant by a group of people in addition to a few other meals and shared.  My own love for this comes from eating very savory pieces of shrimp between mouthfuls of hot, steamed, white rice.  That extra savory vs bland rice trade-off is hard to explain to most people.  To me it can be compared to eating the crust in a chicken pot pie.  You love the chicken and gravy – but that bland tasting crust with the gravy on it is irresistible.  When I pick up a shrimp with a piece of green onion and maybe a section of hot chili pepper with chopsticks, my first instinct after I start chewing it is to take a clump of steamed rice from my rice bowl and follow that shrimp with it.  This is even a tradition with Japanese cuisine.  They enjoy food that plays well with plain rice.  That means sometimes overly salty or savory food is presented that will be eaten with or alongside rice.

Salt and Pepper Shrimp needs to be cooked in a wok over extremely high heat.  This is another one of those dishes you can’t cook on Momma’s stove.  Oh you can do it I am sure, but the outside will be somewhat soggy unless you further toast it which, to my thinking, will dry it out too much. As I have said before in my Tools of an Asian Cook article, the low cost of these high heat burners (under $100) makes one worth investing in.

Shrimp1

Above, starting from the left we have minced garlic with sliced red and green Thai chilis (fresh from my garden I might add), about 1 lb of cleaned, shelled and deveined shrimp, my dredge (whose ingredients I will share with you at the bottom of this article) and sliced green onions/scallions.  A quick word on the dredge, by the way.  My recipe uses monosodium glutamate (MSG) which is called “gourmet powder” in Chinese circles.  It markedly affects the flavor of the food, making it more pronounced.  While the authentic recipe does call for it, I do realize that some people may have a reaction or aversion to it.  If you decide to make it like I do and include the MSG, please make sure your guests know there will be MSG in the dish.  This will save some possible embarrassment later.

Now I want to cover some differences in how the shrimp get fried when making this the Chinese way as opposed to American frying.  First of all – we use no egg.  There will be no egg or buttermilk (it won’t need it).  And the shrimp has to be rinsed and then pat dry with paper towels so that it is tacky and not wet.  Note that in China this dish is often cooked with the shells left on.  The high heat of the oil breaks down the cuticle of the shell and makes it easier to chew and digest.  But in this article we will make ours sans shells. (though I encourage you to try it the other way if you get adventurous).

Shrimp2

Once the shrimp are tacky/sticky to the fingers, it is time to dredge them.  I like to do this a few at a time so that they all get well covered.  You will notice in my picture that I have left the tail shells on.  This gives people that can’t or won’t use chopsticks the ability to eat the shrimp as a finger food.  In addition it looks nicer but you can make yours any way you want in your kitchen.

Shrimp3

After you’ve dredged them all, gently shake off any excess dredge (you want them to just have a dusting on them and not look like those baby powdered Donettes we all ate as kids).  Now for frying we want to do them in batches.  Do not try and fry them all at once.  I will use a 14″ Mandarin wok which is smaller and will use less oil than my Cantonese wok.

Shrimp4

This particular wok is one I no longer have.  If you look at my Tools of an Asian Cook article, you will see my new wok which is constructed entirely of metal.  But for what I am demonstrating here right now, that is irrelevant.  The first thing we want to do here is light the wok burner and turn the heat all the way up.  We will need it at full power for this.  After it sits on that heat for about 20 seconds, put about 1.5-2″ of peanut oil in it and wait about 30-40 seconds.  You want the oil very hot.  When you see it start to smoke, you can test the heat with one shrimp.  Be very careful here as with the high temperatures you will be cooking with, the oil can catch fire.  Have something nearby to cover the wok to choke off the fire if that happens.  Do NOT put ANY water into the hot wok with oil!

Shrimp16

As you can see, mine is now hot enough.  So I add enough shrimp so that all the pieces are in the hot oil.  Do not add more than that.  If it takes 5-6 batches, the effort will be well worth it.

Shrimp5

The oil above is VERY hot.  These shrimp will be done in under 45 seconds.  When they start to turn a golden color, it is time to take them out.  Do not let them get brown,

Shrimp6

A nice light golden color is what we are looking for.  As you take each batch out, drain them on paper towels and put the next batch in.  Repeat until all your shrimp are cooked this way.

When the shrimp are all done, pour out most of the oil (all but about 1 tablespoon) into a container for use later (I often use a clean coffee can here) and lower the heat to about 50%.  Then dump all the aromatics in the wok and stir fry them until the garlic starts to get crispy.  Then remove all of that and drain on paper towels.  I like to then toss the aromatics in with the Shrimp as seen below.

Shrimp8

At this point the shrimp are ready for serving.  I like to give each diner a bowl of freshly steamed white rice to accompany this meal.

Shrimp9

Shrimp15

This is such an inviting dish and once you know what this tastes like – your mouth will water looking at the above image just like mine does.  The smells are outrageous as well.

Shrimp10

Now leave me to my repast, if you please…

Recipe is below:

Salt and Pepper Shrimp Recipe (serves 2-4 depending on if it is a side or a main dish).

  • Steamed Japanese or Jasmine rice – enough for everyone to have at least one bowl full.
  • 1 lb of peeled, deveined medium sized shrimp.
  • 6 cloves of garlic minced.
  • 3 scallions cut into 1/4″ slices.
  • Sliced chili peppers to taste.  Note you can use any chili peppers for this.  I prefer my Thai chilis.
  • About 2-2.5 cups peanut oil.

Ingredients for the Dredge

  • 1/2 cup corn starch
  • 1/2 cup rice flour
  • 1-1.5 Tbs finely ground sea salt
  • 2 Tbs fresh ground white Chinese peppercorns
  • 1 Tbs fresh ground black peppercorns
  • About 12 fresh ground Sichuan Peppercorns
  • 1 tsp Monosodium Glutamate (optional but needed if you want optimal flavor.  I do understand some people cannot abide it which is why it is optional).

Preparation:

  • Put rice on to steam in whatever you plan to cook it in.  A rice cooker is preferred.
  • Put all the peppercorns (white, black and Sichuan) into a spice grinder or a mortar and pestle.
  • Grind them all to a fine powder.
  • Mix all ingredients for the dredge completely.
  • Clean and devein shrimp (if necessary).  Note that I prefer to buy the shrimp with shells on and freeze the shells after I remove them for making shrimp stock after I get about 2 lbs worth saved up.
  • Rinse and pat all shrimp dry with paper towels.  We want the shrimp dry enough so that the surface is tacky.
  • Dredge the shrimp in the spiced flour mix.
  • Ignite your wok burner and turn up to full power.
  • Preheat a 14″ wok for 30 seconds before adding the peanut oil.
  • Heat the oil up another 30-40 seconds until it starts to smoke.
  • Fry the shrimp in batches – at this high heat it should take less than 45 seconds to fully cook each batch.  They should be golden (not brown) on the surface.
  • Remove each batch and drain on paper towels.
  • When all shrimp are done, pour out all but about 1 Tbs of oil into a container to save for later.
  • Cut the heat on the burner by 50%.
  • Fry all aromatics until the garlic is golden and crispy.  For best results I have found that cooking the garlic first works best.  Then cook the remaining ingredients for maybe 10 seconds in whatever oil is left over from cooking the garlic.
  • Drain the aromatics on paper towels.
  • Toss the shrimp with the aromatics and serve immediately.
  • To serve this as it is done traditionally, you will want to present the shrimp on a large plate with a substrate of large fresh lettuce leaves (lettuce absorbs oil) and serve with spicy-hot chili paste in oil.
  • Provide steamed white rice to all diners to accompany the shrimp.

Thank you for your patronage!

Suburbanwok

Crabmeat Risotto with Seared Sea Scallops

This is my first non-Asian recipe on this blog.  As promised, not all of my recipes will be Asian in origin though I confess most will be.  Today we’ll be talking about Risotto.  Specifically a crabmeat risotto.  Now you can make a risotto with nearly any ingredients.  Even sweet risotti are quite common and some that are even on the fence (such as butternut squash risotto).  So you can get really creative here if you like.  It is this great versatility that makes Risotto one of the most eclectic of all Italian cuisine items.

Now below is a wonderful fall dish I like to make for my family and it is as good as a standalone entree as it is a side.  But if you make this as a side, you will want to serve it as the first course.  Like any good risotto, it needs to be served as soon as it’s ready.

I may as well confess here that the crabmeat I am using below is not fresh.  Nor is it canned though.  I bought a cluster of snow crab legs from my local grocer to use in this recipe and steamed them for about 12 minutes here.  These were previously frozen however.

Risotto4

It takes some skill to remove the meat from snow crab legs without slicing them open.  The trick is to break each segment apart at the edges, right next to the joints carefully.  If you do this perfectly, the meat will come right out when you pull the segments apart.  But as that won’t happen every time – I will then snap a segment with meat still inside right at the center – bending back and forth so that the meat inside is not also broken.  Then pull the halves apart and there is your meat.  This gives you lumps of crabmeat and also lots of very small pieces.  And whatever you do, don’t forget the palm full of meat that all the legs are connected to.  You will want to carefully break that apart, as by itself, that section will have more meat in it than any single leg will.  Try to keep as many bigger pieces together as you can.  There will be enough muscle fibers to flavor the rice itself.

Risotto5

After you get all that delectable meat out, set it aside.  Notice I tried to keep whole segment pieces together.  If you want you can slice these across the grain to get some smaller lumps but I have found that they will come apart somewhat when stirred into the rice that way.  If this is your intent, then by all means, cut the segments.  There is no right or wrong way to prepare this.

Risorro3

Above I have 1 1/2 cups of Vialone Nano rice grown in Italy.  I like this particular rice here because it is a shorter grain than most risotto rices (cooks faster) and does not have a starchy flavor like Arborio or Carnaroli.  It does not have much of a forward presence by itself.  Most seafood risotti can use Carnaroli because fish and clams tend to be very robustly flavored ingredients.  But since this is crab that will be paired with scallops, the flavors will be delicate requiring an equally delicately flavored rice.

As I put forth in my previous article It’s all about about the rice, there are many stark differences between cultivars of Japonica rice. With some, this difference can be profound.  Nothing illustrates this more than a simple comparison between cooking a popular Japonica rice like Koshihikari and cooking a risotto rice.  Generally speaking, a Japanese short grain rice does well with a 1.5 to 1 water to rice ratio when cooked.  And this works very well making soft to al dente grains that stick together increasing the ease of manipulating clumps of grains with chop sticks.  By contrast, the 1.5 cups of Vialone Nano above will soak up 5-6+ cups of liquid compared to the 2.25 cups that Japanese short grain would finish with.  Though I will admit that some of that extra liquid will account for the creamy sauce that is part of the final product.

Risotto6

My first step here is to get the stock ready.  We can’t start the rice without it.  Above, I have thawed and boiled some shrimp stock I made previously with frozen shells I keep when I cook shrimp of any kind.  Never throw away those shrimp shells, lobster tail shells or even crab leg shells when you extract the meat from them.  The above stock was made and stored by cooking 2 lbs of shrimp shells with 3 bay leaves and a mire poix (onions, celery and carrots) with 2.5 quarts of water for about an hour.  I kept this stock frozen in the ice box in quart sized Ziploc bags until I was ready to use it.

After defrosting and heating the broth, I tossed in the crab leg shells and an old frozen lobster tail shell I had in my freezer.  We want to simmer that for about 20 minutes.  You will have to strain that because lots of itty bitty shell fragments are ever present from breaking up the crab legs and even from the palm pieces after the meat is extracted.   The result is a silky rich broth (see above) that you will need to salt to taste.  Add a little bit of salt at a time and taste as you can always add more but the only way to correct over-salting is to dilute the stock (something truly abhorrent!)

Risotto7

After the stock is ready to go, it is time to start our risotto.  Before I start, I take a half a stick of unsalted butter and quarter it lengthwise.  Then I slice those pieces widthwise so that I have about sixteen 1/2″ butter cubes.  Put those in the freezer (they will only be in there for about 20 minutes or so).  You want to keep them cold.  Ok, so above we have our tostatura phase.  That is we toast the rice grains with our aromatics.  I have added some chopped shallots.  You do not want the grains to turn brown – just toast in the olive oil on medium heat a couple minutes past the onions turning translucent.

Risotto14

Once toasted, add 1/2 -3/4 cup of dry white wine (to taste).  I don’t like as much of a sour taste so I use 1/2 cup.  The wine I am using here is a chardonnay that I heated to just above body temperature (about 100 degrees).  Never add cold wine to hot toasting rice kernels.  If you do, the sharp contrast in temperature will crack your rice kernels.  The hallmark of a good risotto is separate grains in a creamy sauce that are a little firm to the bite.  No one wants little itty bitty broken pieces of mushy rice.  Broken rice kernels will cook faster than whole ones, giving you oatmeal textured rice with the grains that break.  Yuk!  Notice behind the risotto pot there is a smaller pot on the back burner?  That is the stock I made on low heat.

One more word on the wine.  Unless you cook with wine every day, don’t buy a big bottle of wine to use for cooking.  Wine does not keep for long once you uncork it and wine for cooking is no different.  And I won’t use salted cooking wine – that swill is truly disgusting.  That being said – I like to buy those little 4 packs of wine.  That way you only have one little bottle of wine open at a time and you are more likely to use it up.  Otherwise you only waste 1/4 to 1/2 cup of wine (as opposed to the better part of a 750ml bottle).  Now if you’re going to drink the rest of the wine you don’t use for the recipe, by all means get the gallon and a half jug then!

Risotto13

Which brings me to our next step.  Once the wine has been absorbed by the rice, start ladling in hot stock from your other pan about 1/2 cup at a time.  Gently stir after each addition of stock.  I stress GENTLY.  The grains can still break at this point because they are still mostly hard and dry and we want to avoid any activity that might break them.  Don’t handle too rough!

Add more stock once the previous addition has been absorbed.  How will you know when to add more, you ask?  My method taught to me by a patient Italian cook is to drag your cooking spoon across the bottom of the pan.  If liquid fills in behind the trail you make quickly, it’s too soon.  If instead, you can make tracks that slowly fill in behind your spoon, it’s time to add more stock.

Also, and this is very important – once you’ve started your risotto in the pot, you cannot walk away.  For any reason.  You must be there by the stove to stir very frequently to avoid the grains sticking together in a sloppy mess, or worse yet, burning.

Risotto8

Here I have some fresh sea scallops purchased at a farmers market that I have lightly salted and peppered on both sides.  You can do this while watching your risotto.

Risotto9

Above I have melted some butter in a hot non stick pan.  You want it hot (I had this on high for a full minute) so you get a light crust on the outside of the scallops when you sear them.  90 seconds on a side will be enough – you do NOT want to cook the scallops all the way through or they will chew like rubber.  You may need a little less time on the second side as the scallops will be warmer.  They have to be at least a little underdone in the very center to be tender.  Remove these from the heat and set aside when done.  I like to start these about 15 minutes into the cooking of the risotto (The risotto is normally done 20-22 minutes after starting for me).

Risotto10

I have added some fresh peas about 10 minutes into cooking which is why you now see those above in the completed dish.  After the mantecatura phase (where you add the cold butter cubes and mix vigorously for a minute or so) I add the crab meat and gently fold that in.  At this point it is ready to plate.  I like to heat my plates or shallow bowls in the oven at 350 degrees F for about 5 minutes (you don’t want them so hot they can burn your diners’ fingers).  Start this before your risotto is finished.

Risotto11

And here is a pretty plated first course to a meal!  Because I have the scallops on top, I did not ladle the risotto into the bowl at the table (my normal method for serving).  You want your diners to begin eating immediately – risotto does not get any better as it sits.

Without further ado, the recipe my friends!

Crabmeat Risotto Recipe (serves 4-6)

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 cups high quality risotto rice (Vialone Nano or Carnaroli
  • 6-8 cups shrimp stock used to boil crab legs, strained
  • Meat from one cluster of snow or tanner crab legs
  • 3/4 cup fresh peas
  • 1 large shallot chopped
  • 1/2 cup dry white wine (please don’t use a sweet wine!) heated to 100-110 degrees F.
  • 2 Tbs olive oil
  • 4 tablespoons of cold, unsalted butter cut into 1/2″ cubes plus 1 Tbs butter separated.
  • 8-12 fresh sea scallops cleaned
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/2 tsp finely ground fresh black pepper

Preparation:

  • Cut up your butter and put into the freezer.
  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
  • Heat the olive oil in a 2-4 quart saucepan.
  • Add shallots and sweat for a few seconds.
  • Add the rice.  Stir gently to coat every grain with oil.
  • When the shallot pieces start to turn translucent, add the warm wine.
  • Stir well but gently.
  • When all the wine is absorbed, ladle in 1/2 cup of stock and stir.
  • When you can trace a line across the bottom of the pan without it filling up immediately behind the spoon with liquid, add another ladle of stock.
  • Keep adding stock as it gets absorbed.  After about 10 minutes I will take out a single grain of rice and taste it.  It will probably still be crunchy in the center.  This is ok.  We aren’t done yet but you will probably end up eating 4-5 grains this way to test for doneness.
  • At about 10 minutes after you started, heat a skillet on high heat for a minute. I would taste another grain at this point.  It should be less crunchy.
  • While the pan is heating, add the peas to the risotto and stir well.
  • Gently salt and pepper your scallops on both sides.
  • Add the 1 Tbs butter you separated from the rest above to the hot pan.
  • When the butter is good and hot, add the scallops and gently press them into the hot pan. Let them sear for 90 seconds.
  • Keep stirring and checking on your risotto and add stock as necessary.
  • Turn the scallops after 90 seconds and let them sear on the other side for 70-90 more seconds.
  • Remove the scallops from the heat and set them aside.
  • When 15 minutes have elapsed since you started the risotto, put all the bowls you intend to serve risotto in, into the oven.  Let them heat for about 5 minutes.
  • When you can bite a rice grain and it is no longer crunchy – and they have stopped absorbing stock, take out the butter cubes from the freezer.
  • Take the risotto off the heat.
  • Separate the butter cubes from one another and add to the risotto.
  • Stir the butter in vigorously (no real danger here of breaking the grains – your risotto is cooked.  You are just making it creamy now).
  • When the butter has completely melted into the risotto and been stirred in, gently fold your crabmeat into the rice so that it is well distributed throughout.
  • Taste your risotto.  This is your last chance to add seasoning before you serve it so don’t let that opportunity pass you by.  If it needs a little salt, add that now.  I like to under-salt mine a little.  If your guests need more they can always add a pinch at the table.
  • Remove the bowls from the oven and begin plating.
  • Ladle risotto into each bowl and top with two sea scallops each.
  • Serve

This can be an entree or as an appetizer for a small entree (even as an appetizer, this will be quite filling).

Thank you!

Suburbanwok

Drunken Noodle

Drunken noodle is a dish popular in Thailand and there are a few stories floating around about how it got its name.  One is that a man came home knee-walking drunk every night to his wife and she would always have a meal ready for him when he arrived (she must not have had a rolling pin).  In any event, he complained to her that her dishes were boring and needed more excitement (again, where in blazes is that rolling pin??).  So the next night, she cooked him a fine meal complete with savory spices, sauces herbs and meats that made him swoon with gratitude.  He ran through the streets drunk, singing her praises after eating it.  Another story says the meal was created because it’s good for a hangover.  This one sounds more plausible for me for two reasons.  One – the dish includes a healthy portion of scrambled eggs (great for a hangover) and two – the Thai name for this dish is khee mao which translated literally means shit drunk as in the description of the diner.

For us here in the states, most of us get introduced to this dish when we see it on the menu in a local Thai restaurant and ask the wait staff to tell us more about it.  It is a dish of no small fame back in Siam and Thai waiters will not stop short of issuing their exuberant praises for it, making the average American diner jump at the chance to try some.  It is worth mentioning that celebrity chef Giada De Laurentiis listed Drunken Noodles as her favorite meal on The Best Thing I Ever Ate television show in the “With Chopsticks” episode in season 4 on Food Network.

Drunken Noodle is a stir fried noodle dish influenced by Chinese people living in Thailand (as evidenced by the use of Chow Fun style noodles in the dish).  Below are the two kinds of noodles used in Drunken Noodle.  On the right are 1/2″ wide rice noodles made in Thailand and Vietnam.  On the left (and on the plate so you can see them more clearly) are the Chow Fun noodles which I mix in.

Chowfun_noodle

My own journey of discovery with this dish starts with my wife always asking for it when we’d go to a local Thai hangout.  It is her favorite dish and she is not unique among my friends in that regard.  My younger brother Rick also claims this dish as his favorite and started experimenting with trying to produce the sauce that makes this dish so special.  After weeks of exasperation and trial and error he came up with a recipe he said was spot-on.  And when I made the dish for the SECOND time, I had to agree.

Don’t ask about the first time.  I’d like to forget that ever happened.

Anyway, Drunken Noodle can be made indoors on a stove but you will not get that same flavor you do when eating it in a Thai restaurant.  You need extreme heat and wok hei or breath of the dragon.  That hint of flame broiled flavor you get when the food gets seared on the outer surface by temperatures in excess of 600 degrees F.  I will show you how I make it here and include the recipe at the bottom.  I never share recipes on my Facebook page but here in my blog I will share them all with my readers.

Before cooking any Asian dish in a wok at very high heat you want everything prepped and by your side.  You don’t even want to be preheating the wok at this point.  Because if you walk away from your food in the wok to get the dish of minced garlic you left by the sink you WILL burn your dish.  If you have the heat level where it should be, this is a certainty (600+ degrees F in the pan).

Drunken_stage

So here I have my ingredients laid out clockwise (spiraling in) starting with the oil:
Peanut oil, beaten eggs, Scallions, minced garlic, chinese white pepper, mixed blanched rice stick noodles (square and long), thinly sliced chicken tenderloins, Drunken Noodle sauce (recipe developed by the labor of my younger brother Rick), baby bok choi, Thai basil, and Chinese chives.

SauceIngredients

For the sauce, the ingredients are: (from left to right) mirin (rice vinegar), sweet soy sauce, black soy sauce, normal soy sauce, very high quality fish sauce (blue label bottle in back), oyster sauce, golden mountain sauce, corn starch and brown sugar down in front.  I didn’t show water as you can come by that rather easily.  I’ll have the proportions below in the recipe.  You should be able to find most of these products at any large Asian grocer.

The first thing I do is fire up the burner.  Now while you don’t have to have a strong burner to make this dish, I highly recommend it.  There are plenty of 150,000+ BTU burners available online for less than $100 – some that go up to 220,000 BTUs.  I can provide links in comments if anyone desires.

Burner1

After the burner is lit and turned up all the way, I like to put the wok on and let that sit for about 15-20 seconds.  Let it get very hot.  Then I add the cold oil which heats up fast.  Wait until you start seeing a little smoke around the edges.

Chinese_chives

I start with the Chinese chives.  An aromatic vegetable that tends to stink of sulphur when you first chop it up but then mellows so a savory shallot-like garlicky spice as soon as it hits the hot oil.  At this stage it starts to smell wonderful.  But you haven’t seen anything yet!

Egg_wok

I like to scramble the eggs next.  These will get mixed in with the other ingredients well but I actually like them with some brown around the edges.  The sauce will soften them up later so they aren’t dry and that browning improves the flavor!

Chicken_wok

After the eggs are no longer runny add the chicken (or whatever meat you intend to use).  Stir quickly because it will burn if you let it sit.  See the eggs getting a little brown there?  We want that!

Cooking_wok

My chicken is almost done.  It’s at this stage that I add my minced garlic and a minced fresh Thai chili pepper and stir those in.  Now the aromas are really getting alluring.  Your guests don’t get to have this olfactory vantage point – this is one of your rewards for being the chef.

Bokchoy_wok

I’ve added the Thai (or Holy) basil along with my chopped baby bok choy and scallions.  You want to stir that and sweat these leaves until they shrink up and get a coating of oil.

Noodlewok

Our main ingredient gets added here.  Stir this around and then let it sit until the noodles start to sear on the bottom for about 30 seconds – you want it to sear.  Then pour on enough of the sauce to just coat everything.  Too much and the dish will get soupy.  Too little and the noodles will clump together.  I suggest adding a little at a time and stirring until you get all the noodles a nice cafe brown color.  Once the sauce is well stirred in, we are almost done.  This is when I like to tilt the wok into the flames of the fire with my spatula holding the food in the wok.  You don’t have to tilt the wok very far but you want the flames to lick some of the food.  Do this 3-4 times, putting the wok back on the fire level and stirring between to get that wok hei on a good amount of the noodles.

Plated_drunken

Here is the dish plated.   My wife absolutely loves this dish and I love the complements after dinner.  While not my favorite, it does rank very high among my most wished for Thai meals.  This recipe and methodology will produce Drunken noodle nearly exactly like what you would get in a Thai restaurant (they might use different veggies).   Below is the recipe I have shared for the first time with the public (with strong influence from my brother):

Drunken Noodle (Serves 4-6)

Ingredients:

  • 1 lb of Chicken tenderloins sliced thinly
  • 1 Fourteen ounce package 1/4 to 1/2″ wide rice noodles
  • 1/3 of an 8 oz package of Chow fun noodle squares
  • 1 1/2 cup Holy or Thai basil
  • 2 cups chopped Bok Choy
  • 3 Eggs beaten
  • 1/2 cup Scallions cut diagonally into 1″ sections
  • 1/4 cup chopped Chinese chives and their flower buds (1/2″ pieces)
  • 3 Tbs minced fresh garlic
  • 1 Thai red chili pepper minced (optional)
  • 4 Tbs peanut oil
  • 1/2 tsp Chinese white pepper

Sauce Ingredients:

  • 3/4 cup oyster sauce
  • 4 Tbs soy sauce
  • 3 Tbs fish sauce
  • 2 Tbs brown sugar
  • 1/4 cup rice vinegar
  • 1 Tbs sweet soy sauce
  • 1 Tbs black soy
  • 1/4 cup water
  • 2 Tbs Golden Mountain sauce
  • 3 Tbs corn starch

Preparation:

  • Mix all sauce ingredients in a bowl and blend well to dissolve the sugar. Set aside.
  • Bring a pot of water (about 4-6 quarts) to a boil.  Put all rice noodles in the water and cook for 90 seconds. Remove from heat and drain.  Rinse well with cold water and set aside.
  • Gather all ingredients and bring to the burner and wok.
  • Heat the oil in the wok for about 20 seconds.  Add the Chinese chives and stir for about 10 seconds.
  • Add the beaten eggs and scramble gently until eggs are no longer runny (about 10-15 seconds).
  • Add the chicken and stir fry until the meat is opaque and no pink is seen.
  • Add the garlic and hot pepper (if using). and stir in.
  • Add the remaining greens (scallions, Bok Choy and Basil) and stir until they sweat and shrink down in volume. You may need to add a little more oil depending on how quickly the vegetables are cooking down.  If so you may add another Tbs of peanut oil   If you do, move the food way from the center of the wok and drop the oil there.  You want it hot immediately.
  • Add the previously blanched noodles and stir in well.  Let the food sear for about 30 seconds.
  • Stir the sauce well and begin adding a little at a time and keep stirring.  Do this until all the noodles are light brown in color but do not add more than that.  You do not want loose sauce pooling in the wok.
  • You may need help with this next step.  Tilt the wok edge into the fire, letting the flames lick up into the food for about 10 full seconds.  You may need someone to hold the food in with one or more spatulas.  Then put the wok back on the flame and stir well.  Repeat the tilting and burning 3 more times and then take the wok off the heat.

Serve immediately with nam pla prik  or dried hot pepper powder.  Enjoy!

I hope you relish this dish as much my family and I do.

Enjoy!

Suburbanwok