Showing posts with label Thai food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thai food. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Kid-Tested Easy Peanut Noodles

Don't let the picture of basic brown noodles throw you off - this is one of my kids' favorite (and after-school-friends' most-requested) recipes; it's quick, easy, filling and doesn't have to have "weird ingredients and leafy vegetables" in it.
(Note: I have added some suggestions for vegetables at the end, because just as often we DO make it that way.)

Not that that my kids don't like veggies. They'll actually eat just about anything, and often fill this dish with all sorts of color and crunch - but some days, we all want to stir something quick and easy together. (Still a lot better than Cup-A-Noodles too!)

Just be aware that my girls like stuff medium-spicy, adjust spices as you prefer.

Easy Thai-Inspired Peanut Noodles

PEANUT SAUCE:
1/2 cup vegetable or veggie-chicken-style broth
1 1/2 tablespoons finely grated fresh ginger root (substituting dry ground ginger will NOT work well here)
3 tablespoons soy sauce
3 tablespoons peanut butter (creamy, chunky, plain, natural style, whatever; I tend to like Peanut Butter & Co.'s regular peanut butter here, it seems to blend smoother than many)
1 1/2 tablespoons brown rice syrup, honey, maple syrup or agave nectar (or corn syrup works in a pinch)
1 - 2 teaspoons hot chile sauce or paste (like Schiracha - from an Asian market or well-stocked supermarket) or 1/4 teaspoon cayenne or hot pepper flakes
3 cloves garlic, pressed thru garlic press
1/2 tsp. fresh lime juice or red wine vinegar

8 ounces noodles of your choice: Udon noodles, Buckwheat Soba noodles, thin vermicelli noodles or rice sticks (like for Pad Thai), or in a pinch, plain ol' unseasoned Ramen noodles or whole wheat spaghetti!!

*ADD INS (as few or as many as you like - your preference):
-- Lightly stir-fried veggies - carrots, cabbage, peapods, peppers, whatever
-- chopped fresh spinach or kale
-- fresh bean sprouts
-- toasted sesame or sunflower seeds
-- cubes of cooked butternut or other winter squash
-- raisins (yes, raisins)
-- frozen peas, slightly thawed
-- favorite seitan or gluten product, cubed and browned a bit
-- chick peas/garbanzos
-- cubes of browned tempeh
-- crispy cubes of tofu
(see picture - we get these ready-made at the Asian Market. Flash-fried an even brown using a whole lot less oil than when I try it. Yum!)

TOPPINGS/GARNISHES (as preferred):
-- 1/4 cup chopped green onions
-- 1/4 cup chopped peanuts or cashews
-- 1/4 cup chopped fresh cilantro
-- 1/2 cup chopped mint

DIRECTIONS:
First, cook the noodles according to package directions for whatever type of noodles you have.
Drain and set aside, covered, to keep warm.

Meanwhile, (or while noodles are cooking if you can do two things at once) make sauce:

SAUCE: Combine broth, ginger, soy sauce, peanut butter, syrup, chili paste, lime juice and garlic in a small saucepan.

Cook over medium heat, stirring until peanut butter melts and is heated through.

Stir hot sauce into well drained noodles.

At this point, add whatever optional "Add-In" ingredients sound good, depending on who is making the dish. Stir "Add-ins" into hot sauce and noodles just to heat through

Garnish with toppings.
It's these garnishes that REALLY make this dish special!

It's that easy!!

I love this recipe because it's so versatile - you can make it many different ways, depending on what ingredients you have on hand and it's all good.
My older Sprouts make this with no written recipe, each adding variations that suit them, my youngest gets in these moods where she begs for it almost every day after school. And hey, it can be a "snack" OR a whole meal, your call.

Sometimes we do the stuff just "plain" and other times, we (well, mostly I) add LOTS of lightly sauteed veggies according to what's in the fridge that day - red pepper strips, carrots, green beans, bean sprouts, red onion and/or brocolli. When the girls cook, it's usually pea pods, carrots and fried tofu cubes. The nice thing is that pretty much anything goes and the dish can be individualized to make almost anyone happy!

Friday, June 08, 2007

"Fresh Spring Roll Salad"

OK, so I got the bright idea to make fresh spring rolls (or salad rolls or fresh rolls or Vietnamese spring rolls or whatever they're called in your neightborhood) and I bought all the ingredients and rolled a bunch of the lovely things...

And though they don't LOOK all that great, (I'm still learning to get those rolls all perfect and wrapped nicely) - well, they tasted AWESOME!

But for some reason I'd WAY over estimated how much "stuff" I needed so I had a ton of leftover filling ingredients but no rice paper wrappers.

So what else is a good vegan to do but make SALAD!?!

My kids loved it so much they told me to write down exactly what was in it so we could have it all the time... WOW! Wish I could get that sort of response when I made kale or lima beans. Anyway, despite the rather boring picture, it WAS super-tasty, as well as cool, crunchy and refreshing - I'll definitely make it again.


"Spring Roll Salad"

1 head romaine lettuce
3 'stems' of fresh mint (10 - 12 leaves) 3 'stems' of fresh Thai basil (10 - 12 leaves)
1 cup bean sprouts
1 carrot, shredded large (I used a potato peeler)
1 daikon radish, shredded large (again I used a potato peeler to make large thin shreds)
thin strips of baked or BBQ'd tofu
snap peas

Chop romaine coarsely, put in salad bowl. Remove mint and basil leaves from stem. Chop coarsely. Add to lettuce.

Add rest of ingredients and toss well.

Top with as much dressing as you like and enjoy...

Dressing
1/4 cup Sweet-Hot Chilli Sauce (see picture - this stuff is AWESOME, despite having pictures of roast chicken all over it, it's perfectly vegan.)
2 Tbsp. rice wine vinegar
1 Tbsp. soy sauce
1/4 cup peanut oil
1/2 tsp. toasted sesame oil

pinch of sugar or salt to taste if you prefer

Whisk ingredients together, serve over the above, or other asian-type salads.

Saturday, March 03, 2007

Thai Sweet-and-Hot Cole Slaw

Time to use up the cabbage!

(I swear, not everything I make is fried!) OK, so today I had several heads of cabbage from the winter farmer's market, as well as some cilantro I'd been meaning to use, so I made this wonderful spicy "sort-of-Thai" coleslaw! It keeps well for several days, which is great, since only one of my Sprouts is helping me get through it... usually I make it in the summer but two heads of cabbage took up too much 'fridge room so I had to do SOMETHING!

I love the bright colors as you assemble this salad, the purple cabbage and orange carrots especially, are such a pretty contrast!

Thai Style Cole-Slaw

3 Tbsp. soy sauce

1/3 cup fresh-squeezed lime juice (from 3 to 4 limes - oh please use fresh! I have issues with that bottled stuff!)

1/3 cup sugar

2 Tbsp. sesame oil

2 garlic cloves, minced

1 2-inch piece fresh ginger, grated (less if you're not crazy about ginger)

1 or 2 jalapeno chiles, minced or to taste

1 small green cabbage, cored and very thinly sliced or coarsley shredded (or use 1/2 red and 1/2 green)

2 medium carrots, peeled and grated

1 small red onion, very thinly sliced or 4 green onions (scallions) sliced thin as far up into the green part as possible

1 cup fresh cilantro leaves, chopped

Dressing: Pour the soy sauce, sesame oil and lime juice into a small bowl, add the sugar and stir until it is dissolved. Add the garlic, ginger and jalapenos. Cover and refrigerate until ready to use.


1/2 hour or so before serving, put the cabbage, carrots and red onion into a large bowl and mix together. Pour the dressing over, toss again, cover and refrigerate.

To serve, toss the cabbage mixture in the dressing and put on serving platter. Add half the cilantro, toss with tongs and scatter the remaining cilantro on top.

I could eat this stuff for days on end but it never lasts that long! It gets a little "wilted" and juicy the second or third day but it is still really good! It's GREAT in a taco shell with crispy tempeh too!

Sunday, February 25, 2007

Thai Night Out!

Went to Thai with my oldest Sprout, and my girlfriend* Sherrill, tonight. It was fabulous, of course. Woo! No cooking for me!

(*OK, and lest we're confused, that's 'girlfriend' used in the old-fashioned sense, as in: "long-time, platonic, good friend who is a female or girl" not meaning "someone I'm in a romantic relationship with". Sheesh people, can a person not have friends of the same gender without e-mails trying to correct my use of a word describing a relationship. As if it's anyone's business what sort of friends, of what gender, I have anyway.)

Uh, yeah, OK, end of rant...sorry, didn't see that one coming!

Anyway, moving on.

Thai food.

Our little redneck town has been blessed with three wonderfully veg-friendly Thai restaurants, the jewel of which is Ayothaya, a sparkling example of how wonderfully fresh and original Thai food can be - The restaurant is lovely, the staff courteous and fast (they know our names and favorite dishes and greet us like family when we come in the door! This probably speaks more to the amount of times we stop in here rather than their memory skills - heh...) and the food is amazingly delicious, beautiful, and (important for me) affordable.

Now, they do serve regular "omni" dishes, but most everything is "vegan-izable". They don't use fish or shrimp products in their sauces, and they're very contientous and respectful of our family's vegetarian preferences.

(The name "Ayothaya", by the way, comes from the ancient capitol city of Siam, part of what is now Bangkok, Thailand.) If I sound like a restaurant reviewer, it's true - I can't stop raving about this place.

Tonight we had fresh spring rolls with a plum/peanut sauce, Pad Thai, Sen Mei, Panang Curry, some vegetabl-y-basil thing and Pineapple Fried Rice. All of it, amazing and plenty to take home for later.

I got a couple pictures, even though people looked at me oddly. Yay for Thai food.