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Back to Good Food

Good Food

Recipe: Thai Fried Chicken and Squid Rice Noodles

Tomorrow on Good Food, Deep End Diner Eddie Lin takes us to Night + Market on the Sunset Strip for Thai Street Food.  Check out Chef Kris Yenbamroong tending…

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By Gillian Ferguson • Sep 30, 2011 • 2 min read

Tomorrow on Good Food, Deep End Diner Eddie Lin takes us to Night + Market on the Sunset Strip for Thai Street Food. Check out Chef Kris Yenbamroong tending the coals above. Below is a recipe from David Thompson’s beautiful book Thai Street Food.

Keep reading for the full recipe…

David Thompson’s Fried Chicken and Squid Rice Noodles

Serves 2

Ingredients

3 oz chicken breast fillet, with or without skin as preferred

a drizzle of light soy sauce, plus 2 tablespoons extra

1 garlic clove, peeled

pinch of salt

3 tablespoons vegetable oil

3 oz cured squid (plaa meuk chae) or fresh squid or cuttlefish, scored and finely sliced

ground white pepper

1–2 teaspoons preserved Chinese vegetable (dtang chai), rinsed and drained

2 heaped tablespoons chopped spring (green) onions

2 heaped tablespoons chopped Asian celery (optional)

8 oz fresh wide rice noodles

1–2 teaspoons dark soy sauce, to taste

good pinch of white sugar

2 eggs, ideally duck eggs

1 cup loosely packed, very coarsely cut Chinese lettuce

pinch of deep-fried garlic

1–2 tablespoons chopped coriander

sauce Siracha, to serve

Slice the chicken and briefly marinate it in a drizzle of light soy sauce. Crush the garlic to a somewhat coarse paste with the salt—either by pounding it using a pestle and mortar or finely chopping it with a knife.

Heat the wok then add 2 generous tablespoons of the oil. Add the chicken and the cured squid and lightly stir-fry until golden and almost cooked. Stir in the garlic paste, a pinch of white pepper, the preserved Chinese vegetable and 1 tablespoon each of the spring onions and Asian celery (if using). By now most of the oil should have been absorbed; drain off any excess.

Pull apart the rice noodle strands and add to the wok, spreading them over the contents of the wok and onto the surface of the wok itself. Leave undisturbed for a moment–up to 30 seconds–then gently begin to stir and shuffle the noodles and the wok. It is important not to break the noodle strands while doing this. Drizzle the noodles with the extra 2 tablespoons of light soy sauce, the dark soy sauce and the sugar. Sprinkle them with most of the remaining Asian celery and spring onions, along with a good pinch of white pepper. Turn up the heat slightly to caramelize the noodles, stirring occasionally and carefully. After a minute or two, push the noodles to one side of the wok and add the remaining tablespoon of oil. Turn up the heat, crack in the eggs and fry until they are just beginning to set and the edges of the whites are beginning to brown. Lightly break up the eggs, then gently stir and fold in the noodles, simmering them for a few minutes so that they caramelize and char slightly. Finish with the Chinese lettuce and the remaining Asian celery.

Serve the noodles sprinkled with the deep-fried garlic, the remaining spring onions, the coriander and a pinch of white pepper.

Accompany with a bowl of sauce Siracha.

  • https://images.ctfassets.net/2658fe8gbo8o/AvYox6VuEgcxpd20Xo9d3/769bca4fbf97bf022190f4813812c1e2/new-default.jpg?h=250

    Gillian Ferguson

    Supervising Producer, Good Food

    CultureRecipesFood & Drink
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