![]() ![]() It was sad.īut this time I took it slow, adjusted what I messed up on, and the smiles came. I ended up with a gooey like glue broth with tough, tiny slices of pork. So I was super stressed the first time I made it, trying so hard to make it taste like I remembered, but I was putting too much pressure on myself. We hadn’t eaten rad nah since Thailand, which was years ago. I’m glad that I figured out how to make rad nah that could bring us back in time-because the first time I attempted to make it, instead of smiling after my first bite, I cried out of frustration. I grabbed some plastic white bowls from the kitchen, emptied our bags of rad na goodness into them, tore open some Thai chili pepper flakes to sprinkle on top,T and smiled as I scooped a perfect bite onto a big metal spoon, ready to devour it. We carried it across the busy street, dashing across like we were playing tag with the motorcycles, taxis, buses and cars, and somehow made it safely across, to our office building, and up the elevator to our tutoring school on the third floor. Then he put all the balloon bags of rad na in to a plastic grocery bag. He did that even with the tiny bags of vinegar and peppers. I was mystified as I watched the serious, older gentleman of a vendor efficiently put the dark rice noodles in a clear plastic bag and confidently, and like doing a magic trick, tie a red rubber band across the top so that the bag was now full of air like a balloon. My Thai co-worker and I were standing in front of the rad na vendor in the back of the loud market, busy with the lunchtime rush. He smiled big as he scooped a perfect bite of noodles, gravy, pork and broccoli onto a big metal spoon ready to devour it.īut I went back in time to the bustling market across the street from the tutoring school, where I taught back when my Thai Hubby was just a hot Thai guy that I was dating. He picked up from the table a bottle of Thai Sriracha (which is only used in rad nah when in Sukhothai) and squirted it on the rad nah, sprinkled on some sugar, and a dash of vinegar too. Then the vendor dipped into a huge metal pot the size of a barrel and ladled a luscious, gooey gravy of pork and Chinese broccoli over the soft noodles.Īfter promising to tell his grandma that the vendor says hi, Thai Hubby took the steaming bowl to a metal dark blue table with chipped paint and sat on a rickety plastic blue stool. He had just watched a Thai street food vendor, an older, chubby woman wearing a faded red apron and a big smile, put wide dark brown tinted rice noodles into a faded blue plastic bowl. Thai Hubby arrived at a soi, aka side street, in his home town of Sukhothai, Thailand. Our first bite of rad na, aka lad nah, aka wide rice noodles with gravy, pork and Chinese broccoli was our Delorean that took us there. Sprinkle with Thai pepper powder, and serve with prik dong in a separate small bowl (cut the chiles a bit before placing in the bowl).Thai Hubby and I both zoomed back in time yesterday. Remove from heat.Īrrange the fried noodles on a serving plate, spoon the gravy over the noodles. Mix remaining tapioca flour separately with the remaining 1/2 cup chicken stock, then stir in with the chicken & broccoli until it thickens. ![]() When stock starts to boil, add broccoli and season with fish sauce, oyster sauce and sugar. Saute garlic in oil over medium heat until golden color, then add yellow bean sauce, stir well until fragrant. Fry this in a nonstick pan (noodles will stick to a wok so you should use a nonstick pan if possible) until golden brown. In a mixing bowl, separate the noodles and toss thoroughly with 1 tablespoon oil and the black soy sauce. Toss chicken with 1 tablespoon tapioca flour & the Maggi Seasoning. Our Thai cooking basket is a good tool to do this task. Add noodles to a pot of boiling water and boil for 1 minute, then rinse in cold water again, and set aside. Soak the noodles in warm water for 30 minutes then rinse in cold water. ![]()
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