blog about Thai food and Thai cooking. Focuses on using local ingredients in Thai food.
Friday, January 8, 2010
Spicy Glass Noodles Salad: Yum Woon Sen
New Year has rolled around and I almost didn't notice it. 2009 was a wonderful year and I'm looking forward to another great year to come. An exciting beginning for us this year, we are expanding our store to double to size. We are adding ice cream up to 12 flavors a day, a tea house and yummy baked goods both from Thailand and around the world.
To celebrate the New Year, I thought I would post this recipe for a favorite dish of mine. This is the only dish that makes me dream about at night. I get so excited to come home if there is some leftover in my fridge. In Chinese tradition, noodles are left the length that they come. The long noodles represent long and prosperous lives. When you eat the noodles, you are supposed to eat the whole length of it without cutting.
The best way to prepare the noodles for this dish is to boil them without soaking. As soon as the noodles are completely soft, drain them and run them under cold water to stop the cooking process. I always like to add ground shrimp to this dish. Shrimp adds so much flavor to the dish. You can use either chicken or pork but I prefer pork.
Here is the recipe for this delicious salad and may you all have a prosperous New Year.
Bean Thread Noodle Salad
Ingredients
2 tbsp vegetable oil
2 cloves garlic, minced
1/8 pound of shrimp, minced (substitute w/ soy bean protein and mushrooms for vegetarian option)
1/8 pound of pork, minced (substitute w/ soy bean protein and mushrooms for vegetarian option)
1 tbsp soy sauce or fish sauce
1/4 cup water
2 cups of bean thread noodles, boiled and drained
Handful coriander, chopped
2 shallots, sliced
Handful green onions
Pinch of salt
Dressing
Pinch of salt
2 tbsp chopped Thai chilies
1/4 tbsp white sugar
1/4 tablespoon palm sugar
4 tbsp lime juice
3 tbsp fish sauce (or soy sauce and fermented soy bean paste for vegetarian option)
Heat oil in a medium sauté pan, add garlic, and fry until fragrant. Add minced pork and shrimp and stir occasionally until cooked, about 2 minutes. Add water and soy sauce to taste. Mix all ingredients and the cooked meat in a mixing bowl. Make dressing by pounding all the ingredients in pestle and mortar or put them in a food chopper/processor. Pour dressing on top of the mixture and mix well. (I prefer to use my hand to mix it) Taste and add more dressing if desired.
Your blog is beautiful, this salad looks so tasty! I've blogrolled you on my blog, take a look if you feel like it:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.thetinpalate.blogspot.com/
Great post!
Tom
Hey Jam,
ReplyDeleteI LOVE yum woon sen, one of my fave Thai dishes as well! I have about half packet of thin rice noodles and was wondering if they will work? Otherwise, can you suggest a good recipe to use them before they go stale? They are the thin Viet type.
Hope all is well!
this might be my favorite of your recipes, thanks for posting!
ReplyDeleteHi Claudia, the thin rice noodles is perfect for Pad Sea Ew. Check out the recipe here http://thaicookingwithjam.blogspot.com/2009/11/pad-sew-ew.html
ReplyDeleteI tried this recipe and it was great!
ReplyDeleteThank you for the recipe.
PS: are the red things in the picture tomatos?
Love your blog. If I could eat thai food everyday, I would.
ReplyDeleteHi ATOLF, the read thing is indeed tomatoes.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this recipe. My wife and I just got back from Thailand. Of all the fantastic food we ate I think spicy glass noodle salad with minced pork was our absolute favourite.
ReplyDelete