Yam wunsen sai mu (noodle soup w/pork)
4 Servings
Ingredients
Quantity | Ingredient | |
---|---|---|
8 | ounces | Ground pork |
1 | tablespoon | Chopped garlic |
4 | cups | Soup stock |
2 | ounces | Wunsen (cellophane noodles); soaked in warm water for about 15 minutes |
¼ | cup | Fish sauce |
1 | cup | Sliced phak bung (swamp cabbage); ordinary cabbage or kale will do as a replacement |
2 | Spring onions (green onions/scallions) thinly sliced; including the green segment | |
¼ | cup | Phak chi (whole coriander plant - including the root); chopped |
1 | teaspoon | Prik Thai; about (ground black pepper) |
1 | tablespoon | Fish sauce |
1 | tablespoon | Maggi sauce |
1 | tablespoon | Minced garlic |
1 | teaspoon | Prik Thai (ground black pepper) |
1 | teaspoon | Rice flour (or cornstarch) |
Directions
FOR THE SOUP
FOR THE MARINADE
Date: Sat, 16 Mar 1996 08:41:21 -0500 From: The Meades <kmeade@...> (by way of If ever there was a subject close to my heart (well, my stomach is close to my heart -- especially when I overeat), it is noodle soups. I guess that I eat a noodle soup or stir fried noodle dish about 8 times a week, and the repeat cycle is about 3 months. However, they have a nasty tendency to read rather repetitively: the techniques and basic principles involved come down to 4 or 5"signature" dishes, of which this is one.
When a soup is described as a "yam", it means that everything is just tossed into the stock as it simmers. This soup is also sometimes called Kaeng Jued Wunsen (Kaeng Jued implies a rather bland soup -- by Thai standards!).
This can be made with a variety of ingredients, but the most interesting are probably pork (as here), beef, chicken, shrimp, meat balls, fish balls, shrimp balls, or "monkey balls" (a mixed meat ball ~ not actually made from monkey meat!), or one of the various Thai sausages, as well as vegetarian options (for a quick veggie variation try marinating some tofu in dark sweet soy sauce for about 3 hours and then using that instead of the pork).
Maggi sauce is a dark (nearly black) sauce made by the Maggi corporation, and widely available...
Method: Mix the marinade ingredients, mix with the ground pork, and make the pork into small meat balls, then set aside and leave to marinate for 3 or 4 hours.
Soak and drain the noodles.
Bring the stock to a boil and add all the ingredients except the noodles, and continue to boil until the meatballs are cooked through, when they will float.
Remove from the heat, pour into a serving bowl and add the noodles (note the immersion in the near boiling soup is enough to cook the noodles).
Serve with the usual Thai table condiments (nam pla prik [chilies in fish sauce], prik dong [chilies in vinegar], sugar, prik phom [ground chilies], and ground peanuts. Colonel Ian F. Khuntilanont-Philpott Systems Engineering, Vongchavalitkul University, Korat 30000, Thailand CHILE-HEADS DIGEST V2 #270
From Glen Hosey's Recipe Collection Program, hosey@...
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