Pad Thai | Simple no-wok recipe, cooks in 3 minutes

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 19. 05. 2024
  • Thanks to Fetch Rewards for sponsoring this video! Download Fetch now and use code RAGUSEA and get 3000 points on your first receipt! → fetch.thld.co/araguseaapr
    **RECIPE, MAKES TWO BIG PORTIONS**
    For the sauce:
    1 tablespoon fish sauce (can use soy sauce instead)
    2-3 tablespoons sugar
    1/2-2 teaspoons tamarind concentrate (I used 2 and loved it, but Lauren thought it was way too acidic)
    2 tablespoons ketchup
    1 teaspoon soy sauce (very optional)
    ***It's possible to replace both the fish sauce and tamarind with 3-4 tablespoons of Worcestershire sauce. Not the same, but pretty good.
    Everything else:
    1 bunch green onions
    1 thumb of ginger
    3-4 garlic cloves
    1 red chili (very optional)
    4-8 oz (60-120g) mung bean sprouts (I like a lot of them)
    4 oz (60g) Pad Thai noodles (narrow, flat rice noodles)
    1 boneless, skinless chicken breast (shrimp or tofu work great too)
    2 eggs
    a big handful of roasted peanuts (50g?)
    picked cilantro leaves and lime wedges for garnish
    salt
    oil
    Mix up the sauce and let the sugar dissolve while you do everything else. Put a big pinch of salt in the eggs and beat them thoroughly - let them sit and loosen while you do the rest. Coarsely chop the peanuts.
    Thinly slice the green onions, keeping the greens and whites separate. Peel and coarsely chop the garlic and ginger, and put them in the same bowl as your onion greens. Thinly slice the chili and put it in with the onions and ginger/garlic. Pick the cilantro leaves and cut the lime wedges.
    Cut the chicken into three sections and then into very thin slices against the grain. Separate into two piles. Get the bean sprouts open and ready, get your salt and a glass of water handy.
    Fill a nonstick pan with water (not the water you have in the glass) and bring it to a boil. Put in a pinch of salt and the noodles. Cook, stirring constantly, for half as long as the package suggests (I did 2-3 minutes). Dump them in a strainer and pour cold water over them to stop the cooking and keep them from sticking to each other. Leave them in the strainer for now.
    Wipe out the pan and return it to the high heat, and put in a thin film of oil. Season the first pile of chicken with salt. When the oil just starts to smoke, put in the chicken and quickly get it spread out to a thin layer. Let it brown without moving it for a minute.
    When the chicken pieces are opaque 2/3rds of the way up, put in half of your onion/ginger/garlic/chili mixture and stir it aggressively. Push it over to one side of the pan (it's ok that the chicken and veg aren't fully cooked yet), then pour half of the eggs into the other side and get them spread out to a thin layer. Let the egg partially solidify before breaking it up into sheets with your spoon.
    When egg seems almost cooked, dump in half the noodles, a third of the sauce (you can always add more sauce if you think it needs it), half the bean sprouts, a few chopped peanuts, and stir to combine. Finally, use a splash of water from the glass to help you get everything stirred up, deglaze the pan, and get the level of saucy texture you want.
    Put it on a plate, garnish with the cilantro, onion greens, lime wedges and more peanuts. Wipe out the pan and cook the second portion. (It's possible to cook both at once if you have a wok or a really big nonstick pan with a really powerful burner, but I think this comes out better if you do one at a time so it can get the necessary intense heat.)
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 2,1K

  • @ethanl5527
    @ethanl5527 Před 3 lety +3741

    As an Asian dude one of the biggest mistakes I see people make when trying to stir fry is giant portion sizes. Stir fry is all about high heat and fast cooking, which keeps everything as flavorful as possible. Great video Adam.

    • @mattwilson7443
      @mattwilson7443 Před 3 lety +15

      isn't that a major benefit of cooking with a wok?

    • @mattwilson7443
      @mattwilson7443 Před 3 lety +36

      @@ethanl5527 thank you for the thorough explanation. I've learn something today. Also that dudes technique is killer!

    • @mmummumm
      @mmummumm Před 3 lety +19

      Just made Adam's Pad Thai and absolutely nailed it except for one thing: the colors. Chicken turned out too white and whitened the rest of the dish.
      I think it was definitely because of this, a big portion, not so thin chicken chunks and a not so big non-stick pan.
      Next time I'll keep it tiny, thanks for the input!

    • @ethanl5527
      @ethanl5527 Před 3 lety +28

      @Stavex Yeah if your portion sizes are too big you end up steaming your dish.

    • @diehlr
      @diehlr Před 3 lety +9

      One of my friends is half asian. Her idea of stir fry is loading a fry pan with a couple of inches of food and simmering for 20 minutes. Apparently the half asian she is doesn't involve cooking!

  • @shinymuuma
    @shinymuuma Před 3 lety +4860

    Little tips from a Thai guy.
    Fry thin slice shallot and add it to the sauce. This is one of the sources of Pad Thai aroma, together with fish sauce and tamarind.

  • @GrizzlyHemlock
    @GrizzlyHemlock Před 3 lety +1514

    I used to own a restaurant in Thailand. Thais don't prep the noodles with hot water at all. They set them in cold water and let them soak for hours. The noodles absorb water, soften, and go into a fried dish soft but slightly firm. The cooking does the rest, and the noodles taste and "mouth" feel right.

    • @bocahdongo7769
      @bocahdongo7769 Před 3 lety +68

      It is still normal to soak the noodle in hot water, atleast in SEA.
      Less glassy, but still fine

    • @edcastillo4456
      @edcastillo4456 Před 3 lety +198

      @@bocahdongo7769, I'm not Thai, but I've been cooking Pad Thai since 1985, before most of America knew about Thai food. I learned by asking the cook, a Thai immigrant, at a local Thai restaurant in the Los Angeles area at the time. Soak noodles in cold water. Hot water will change the texture and make it very different from cold soaked noodles. Sure, it's still edible if soaked in hot water, but the "bite" of the noodle is not the same. I'll trust and stay with a Thai native.

    • @dylanw8823
      @dylanw8823 Před 3 lety +9

      @@edcastillo4456 How long to soak in cold water?

    • @GrizzlyHemlock
      @GrizzlyHemlock Před 3 lety +65

      @@dylanw8823 Several hours, you can put them in the night before or in the morning to use at night, and you can do a large quantity and just leave them there for days, ready to go for any fried noodle dish.

    • @eldoradocanyonro
      @eldoradocanyonro Před 3 lety +42

      Different types and brands of noodles react differently--follow the directions on the container they came in.
      Unless you make your own, in which case you probably aren't reading this anyway.

  • @Fuuntag
    @Fuuntag Před 2 lety +340

    PSA: if you are trying to make this recipe you should be aware the tamarind concentrate Adam uses is about 2-6 times as strong as every other purée, extract, concentrate on the market. To give you a sense of this it has 31.25 grams of sugar per 100 grams however the next strongest has 11 grams per 100 grams thanks to how much the other brands dilute the mixtures. Please adjust your recipes accordingly e.g. I doubled/tripled up on mine and it worked quite well and my reproduction of this went from “nearly there but missing something” to bang on. 👍🏻

  • @shrimpkid7908
    @shrimpkid7908 Před 3 lety +3113

    “Smells like feet, tastes like meat” is my new catchphrase.

    • @deego3781
      @deego3781 Před 3 lety +155

      I hope you are referring to your fish sauce

    • @notoriousb.o.g.9901
      @notoriousb.o.g.9901 Před 3 lety +128

      Please don’t make this a fetish.

    • @nashsok
      @nashsok Před 3 lety +88

      Funnily enough, this catchphrase works for actual feet as well!

    • @TheSlavChef
      @TheSlavChef Před 3 lety +15

      "wash these things" a wise Slav once said.

    • @hampustornros
      @hampustornros Před 3 lety +24

      Smells like feet, it is my meat.

  • @Whatwhat3434
    @Whatwhat3434 Před 3 lety +575

    Adam, months ago you gave us a brief glimpse into the depression you experienced while in Rochester. On my bad days, your story sticks with me and gives me strength. It does get better. Thank you.

    • @nikosfilipino
      @nikosfilipino Před 3 lety +7

      What episode was that?

    • @eschlerc
      @eschlerc Před 3 lety +44

      @@nikosfilipino The episode about him being the Mariah Carey chord guy

    • @eristheslayer
      @eristheslayer Před 3 lety +34

      @@eschlerc that's by far my favorite non food video

    • @dekudude8888
      @dekudude8888 Před 3 lety +4

      @@eristheslayer That one and the Jani Lane video are very good

    • @bensoncheung2801
      @bensoncheung2801 Před 3 lety +6

      All I remember from that episode is that he supports Mariah Carey for a pretty good reason.

  • @jamiehwang3076
    @jamiehwang3076 Před rokem +119

    hi adam, i just wanted to say thank you for your recipes! im autistic and i have trouble with food (sensory issues), but ive found that eating healthy amounts is a lot easier when it's food that i've cooked myself, and i've gotten super into cooking thanks to your videos.
    this pad thai recipe has been a recent fixation of mine, i've found that it's a lot more convenient to soak the noodles in cold water at the beginning so that i can do all my prep while the noodles soak. it's usually perfect timing for getting the noodles to that parboiled level of softness (although i usually only make one portion, i don't think it'd work as well for multiple portions since the noodles would keep getting softer) & i rinse the noodles once in tap water to make them less sticky in the pan. i've tried using different ingredients and veggies like bok choy, enoki mushrooms and thinly sliced carrots and it's helped me start eating more types of ingredients as well, because i like the process of trying out new recipes enough to step out of my comfort zone w/ textures and tastes :)
    thank you adam!

    • @jxff2000
      @jxff2000 Před rokem +12

      I’m autistic as well; my special interest is food and cooking, and ironically enough, I’m a self professed home cook with gut issues 😅😂

    • @voryndagoth404
      @voryndagoth404 Před rokem +10

      yooo same? im autistic and adam ragusea helped teach me better cooking technqiues and generally made me develop a special interest in cooking. my mom now always asks me to make his irish pot roast recipe :]

    • @waterbaby3
      @waterbaby3 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Autistics unite!! 💪🏾 Same. I wish every CZcams recipe was as descriptive and literal as Adams

  • @dakotahrivers6640
    @dakotahrivers6640 Před 3 lety +31

    you just got the sub from me. No overproduced set, not cheesy royalty free music, no unneeded banter about how it's your great grandmother's favorite recipe. This is how these kind of videos should be done.

  • @salikraees9690
    @salikraees9690 Před 3 lety +4604

    “Smells like feet, taste like meat” is also accurate for actual feet.

  • @techman5852
    @techman5852 Před 3 lety +813

    “I know exactly what he's talking about. I sprout mung beans on a damp paper towel in my desk drawer. Very nutritious, but they smell like death.”

    • @chillchill2779
      @chillchill2779 Před 3 lety +34

      Thanks a lot Creed

    • @heyreeen
      @heyreeen Před 3 lety +29

      That's the distinct old man smell.

    • @SiccazHD
      @SiccazHD Před 3 lety +2

      Thought the excact same thing 😂

    • @LadyPisces96
      @LadyPisces96 Před 3 lety +1

      Great quote 👏🏻 👏🏻 😂 😂

  • @MrMokey24
    @MrMokey24 Před rokem +76

    Perfect for single people with not much time to cook, faster than ordering food, for sure. Not too unhealthy, thank you for this recipe!

  • @tavishn
    @tavishn Před 3 lety +287

    Adam, your style of adapting dishes to be cooked realistically in a 'restricted' environment is great. I currently have a very tiny japanese kitchen and it's even more restricted, but this is one of your videos I can follow!

  • @David-km1wf
    @David-km1wf Před 3 lety +752

    Honestly would recommend a neutral oil or peanut oil for Pad Thai. Adam is Italian so he probably barely notices the strong flavour olive oil has.

    • @santouchesantouche2873
      @santouchesantouche2873 Před 3 lety +45

      The Thais use a lot of oil in this dish tbh. I am partial to olive oil taste compared to others but I think mostly it's a health thing. Olive oil is healthier than seed oils

    • @blackmber
      @blackmber Před 3 lety +121

      I find myself editing olive oil out of a lot of recipes. It’s so popular but for the price I’d rather use it where the flavour is part of the dish instead of competing with it.

    • @skinnylegend-7330
      @skinnylegend-7330 Před 3 lety +23

      i agree, the smoke point is also low which can make it unideal for stir frying but it seems to work well enough in this recipe

    • @santouchesantouche2873
      @santouchesantouche2873 Před 3 lety +39

      @@skinnylegend-7330 I actually think it's a myth about olive oils smoke point. It's higher than we think. It's high water content is what we see burn off not smoke.

    • @eldoradocanyonro
      @eldoradocanyonro Před 3 lety +9

      @@santouchesantouche2873 Depends. Regular Olive Oil is around 350 or higher. Extra Virgin is down in the 200s (Fahrenheit)

  • @SilverCymbal
    @SilverCymbal Před 3 lety +1532

    Sees the title......MMMMMMMMMM - Great topic to accomplish the impossible at home!

    • @TheSlavChef
      @TheSlavChef Před 3 lety +16

      Adam makes the impossible possible!

    • @ee4396
      @ee4396 Před 3 lety

      e e

    • @PlanetComputer
      @PlanetComputer Před 3 lety

      fgjh

    • @MsHackthat
      @MsHackthat Před 3 lety +18

      Take it from me. Ive used to work at 3 different thai restaurant. Just use this. Chicken stock, fish sauce, pumpkin sauce, chilli sauce. You could add soy sauce for colour and a little bit of lime juice, a little bit of sugar. Thats the base at least. Add your greens, although here in bordering malaysian region, we use bitter, leafy greens and the sprout of mung beans.

    • @suedeB05
      @suedeB05 Před 3 lety +3

      I mean there never was nor is there anything impossible about this. What a dumb comment

  • @Rose_Nebula
    @Rose_Nebula Před rokem +26

    What I love the most about Adam’s videos is they don’t just teach you recipes, they teach you techniques and WHY you use them.

  • @earlgreycoffee
    @earlgreycoffee Před 3 lety +44

    Seeing Adam cook Thai food makes me soooo happy. And the fact that he mentions that the Thai-American version is sweeter is absolutely spot on lol. this is the kind of pad thai you get outside Thailand. It's not 100% authentic but it's pretty good!

    • @letschan4162
      @letschan4162 Před 3 lety

      I find pad thai in the USA alot less sweet than the one in Thailand lol

    • @WeeTheDuck
      @WeeTheDuck Před rokem +4

      @@letschan4162 yeah many Thai streetfood vendors cook super super sweet. A good padthai place wouldn't be that way though. It's just easier and cheaper to cook a sweet padthai rather than a savory one.
      p.s. As a tip, shrimp fat is the hidden key in making the best padthai. Go wild

  • @mbanimation8018
    @mbanimation8018 Před 3 lety +1046

    "Time for the mother and child reunion!"
    Me: 😶

    • @CultureStress
      @CultureStress Před 3 lety +113

      Hopefully this means we've got an oyakodon video coming soon....yummy

    • @adams3616
      @adams3616 Před 3 lety

      Yeah...

    • @vincentbecker7850
      @vincentbecker7850 Před 3 lety +20

      Yep time for all of you to go vegan

    • @CultureStress
      @CultureStress Před 3 lety +9

      @@vincentbecker7850 I tried...does not work for my brain/body system, unfortunately.

    • @TheSlavChef
      @TheSlavChef Před 3 lety +8

      This what I say when I am making chicken with eggs.

  • @jackkerr6537
    @jackkerr6537 Před 3 lety +110

    Why does he rhyme everything in this video. It’s amazing.

  • @theolindh3263
    @theolindh3263 Před 3 lety +22

    I've done variations of this recipe probably 10 times the last 2 weeks and I love it! I can now make pad Thai from thought to fork in less than 15 minutes! Keep it up with the effective recipes!

  • @uncaringbear
    @uncaringbear Před 3 lety +52

    Pad Thai is like Carbonara - both dishes are not overly complex but people can have very strong opinions on how it should be made. Also, worcestershire sauce is a real unsung hero in Asian cooking, it's so versatile!

    • @taiwandxt6493
      @taiwandxt6493 Před 7 měsíci

      I mean, to be fair he's not claiming it's authentic.

  • @arealhuman3677
    @arealhuman3677 Před 3 lety +953

    “Smells like feat, tastes like meat”
    It’s either the quarantine or the fan base, it’s getting to him.

  • @Tacospaceman
    @Tacospaceman Před 3 lety +762

    *Dear Adam*
    Firstly I want to say how much I appreciate that while you cook your meal EXACTLY how YOU want to eat it, all of your known variations of the meal are listed for (vegan, vegetarian, low-fat/carb/sugar/calorie) dieting people.
    And I think it’s awesome that if you don’t have this not-too-typical ingredient BOOM “Worcestershire sauce.”
    It’s something I think, that not a lot of people really express, and I’ve seen family members at gatherings have to skip a meal because they weren’t thought about, or simply weren’t able to eat it because (some medical or dietary reason here)
    And the fact that you say oh if you can’t eat this animal because this animal is sacred, here’s your sweet sweet substitute, and then you’d go on to say that it’s different, but it isn’t worse or better, or why you’d choose this over that. It makes each and every video you make so miuch more entertaining, and enjoyable to watch and listen to, especially when you’ve gone so far out of your way just to provide *QUALITY AUDIO* just to top it all off.
    You truly are an amazing human, teacher, and father.
    As a fellow dad I can tell you that your kids, your family, and your students appreciate you and love you as much (and more) as your faithful audience.
    Have a great weekend
    Thank you so much Adam.
    *-Austin, AKA, Tacospaceman*
    Ps.
    😂 “smells like feet, tastes like meat” a very unusual expression for me to hear,
    Followed by “hear comes the mother and child reunion” tasty, but possibly a distasteful way to put it 😂 still Bravo 10/10 video.
    I’ll be sure to get all the ingredients and forget to try making it while they spoil in my kitchen ❤️ peace I’ll see you in the next upload lol.
    Edit: *it’s been 2 months since writing this, and I Did, totally forget to make it. And when I remembered I did get the ingredients, and some did spoil. HERES TO ATTEMPT #2*

    • @justsomeguyskid3548
      @justsomeguyskid3548 Před 3 lety +33

      Mate how much time did that take to write u

    • @phoenixboygaming9981
      @phoenixboygaming9981 Před 3 lety +24

      That's a whole essay
      I'm impressed

    • @Tinil0
      @Tinil0 Před 3 lety +20

      As far as I know, the mother and child thing is common. I know Japanese has Oyakodon,
      親 or "oya" of course meaning "parent" and 子, "ko", meaning "child". It's a chicken and egg rice bowl (Hence the
      丼, or bowl at the end)

    • @Tacospaceman
      @Tacospaceman Před 3 lety +8

      @@phoenixboygaming9981 thanks. It was at most 1 page, but it’s how I feel, and even if he doesn’t see it, I wanted to write him a little letter any way :)

    • @Tacospaceman
      @Tacospaceman Před 3 lety +9

      @@justsomeguyskid3548 like 20 minutes? Idk. But it’s not about the length of the comment. It’s about sending a message. Literally.

  • @snowinjuly4872
    @snowinjuly4872 Před 3 lety +26

    I am SO happy you talked about this! People have this horrible misconception that a jet engine and a wok are necessary for wok dishes, and I've been unsuccessfully trying to tell them that you can do ALL of that just as well with small portions, a stove on high, and a little bit of time to let the pan warm up and store a bit of energy.

  • @wolfgangvolos5425
    @wolfgangvolos5425 Před 3 lety +8

    I was instantly inspired by this despite not having the right ingredients at home. I used Worcestershire because I wasn't leaving to get something that smells like feet until the weekend. I also added some Red Curry Paste and smoked paprika. The package of noodles said "Stir Fry" but I can't remember what they were exactly. Thick yummy noodle is all my brain can remember. Red bell peppers, loads of green onion whites, a good squeeze of lime juice, along with enough garlic and ginger to make my wife demand I eat in the other room. I literally wept when eating my strange home-made dish because the umami was beyond anything I've ever tasted (thank you natural msg in my tomato paste). Thank you Adam for showing me something that inspired my new favorite at home meal.

  • @Tengokujin
    @Tengokujin Před 3 lety +76

    "Mother and child reunion" - so, when's your oyakodon video? :p

  • @user-ks5gh5dn5c
    @user-ks5gh5dn5c Před 3 lety +15

    I remember some years ago I commented on your video asking to make Pad Thai and you said that you’d love to but it’s too difficult. Today marks a happy day in history

  • @evilbull8995
    @evilbull8995 Před 3 lety +12

    The non-sped-up 3 minutes of the pad thai, with the awkward pauses, reminds me so much of the pizza and lasagna video and the other really old videos. It's nice to see how much you have grown over the last couple of years, keep it up :)

  • @rw9707
    @rw9707 Před 2 lety +7

    A mixed a tablespoon of peanut butter with the sauce because I didn’t have peanuts, and it turned out so good!

  • @ohdogwow2
    @ohdogwow2 Před 3 lety +309

    It's like Adam never saw the movie "Mean Girls" because he keeps trying to make Fetch happen...

    • @rashoietolan3047
      @rashoietolan3047 Před 3 lety +16

      I called Blockbuster on my blackberry.
      They are no longer carrying that movie on vhs!!!

    • @mattkim96
      @mattkim96 Před 3 lety +12

      @RASHO IE'TOLAN what? Mean girls is a pretty modern movie (2006), neither niche nor old enough to be devoid of a pop culture reference.

    • @chandlerbryant6680
      @chandlerbryant6680 Před 3 lety +17

      @@mattkim96 it's 17 years old. Back when our parents played us stuff from the 80s. we called them classics. It was the 2000s. This lacks 3 years from being in that category.

    • @muhilan8540
      @muhilan8540 Před 3 lety +8

      @@chandlerbryant6680 it's still widely referenced today

    • @chandlerbryant6680
      @chandlerbryant6680 Před 3 lety +1

      @@muhilan8540 not really no

  • @seancallahan5030
    @seancallahan5030 Před 3 lety +73

    This man like 70% of the time posts the exact recipe I'm thinking about trying to make at home. Right on time again!

  • @AndromedaCripps
    @AndromedaCripps Před rokem +6

    Made this for the first time tonight Adam, and family was very impressed. I followed your directions extra carefully and made sure to do all my prep before, and let me tell you, cooking that fast and that hot is SCARY (not like that I’m in danger but that my poor food is 😂) but I managed to pull it off first try and it came out DELICIOUS!!! The best part of this recipe is that you can use entirely Western kitchen staple ingredients for the sauce and have it still taste different from everything else you cook! The only things you have to buy special are really the rice noodles, which are shelf stable! Often with Asian recipes, I find myself buying all sorts of sauce ingredients and/or vegetables that I would never use in my day-to-day kitchen, and those types of foods go bad before I get around to using them sometimes. This recipe, if I keep around sone noodles, I could whip up even on a night when I don’t have much in the pantry (minus the bean sprouts perhaps)!!
    Anyway, I will DEFINITELY be making this again, I’m already craving it after having dinner earlier tonight 😂😂😂 Thank you!!!

  • @ivanspinelli7768
    @ivanspinelli7768 Před 3 lety +40

    Hey Adam, think you could make a video about what's up with microwaves and why people like Ramsay seem to hate them? Or maybe a look into the history of them could be pretty interesting. Keep up the good work!

    • @carsonagar3987
      @carsonagar3987 Před 2 lety +1

      They were invented to humanely heat up hamsters 👍

    • @carsonagar3987
      @carsonagar3987 Před 2 lety +1

      @moon butter yeah, in the 1950’s scientists were experimenting with freezing something to death and heating back up again to see what would happen

  • @katelensworld
    @katelensworld Před 3 lety +42

    When he was saying "and grab the water... " around 8:52, I thought he was being sarcastic and was gonna add white wine XD

    • @HavenarcBlogspotJcK
      @HavenarcBlogspotJcK Před 3 lety +3

      Im thai and i was like : "oh no dont even fkn think about it" when that happen

  • @mrbeef3528
    @mrbeef3528 Před 3 lety +32

    This video is a goldmine for all the Adam Ragusea YTPs floating around youtube rn

  • @hufflepuffwannabe
    @hufflepuffwannabe Před 3 lety +2

    this is one of the best instructional videos I've ever seen! everything is so clear!

  • @alexderus7480
    @alexderus7480 Před 2 lety +4

    Just tried this recipe, turned out so good! The technique is everything. I can see this being a weekly thing. Thank you!

  • @d-fan
    @d-fan Před 3 lety +82

    "Say grace before eating, Timmy."
    "We thank thee, Lord, for this our food. And the sponsor of this dinner, Fetch Rewards!"

  • @mrbeef3528
    @mrbeef3528 Před 3 lety +22

    Really loved the real-time cooking there, would love to see it in future videos as well!

  • @acommenter4252
    @acommenter4252 Před 2 lety +7

    I made this and it turned out AMAZING! One key is definitely to do it your own way! Add as many mung bean sprouts as you want. My dad likes a lot. Probably even more than Adam.
    And for sauce, make it taste how you want. Adam mentioned this-- just play around with different things until you like it! For me, I wanted a lot more soy sauce and you gotta be careful with the fish sauce, its a lot stronger once you cook it.
    Add peanuts-- or not. I loved them, my sister hated it.
    Just do what you like. We did tofu, fried it off the same way he did chicken.
    It was great. Great recipe again Adam

  • @PMein1990
    @PMein1990 Před 2 lety +2

    Cooking pad Thai in individual small portions was one of the most important aspects of cooking it at home that I ever discovered. I was quite pleased with myself to see you started the video with the same finding.

  • @EXkurodaigo666
    @EXkurodaigo666 Před 3 lety +124

    Adam : traditional way of cooking pad thai noodle is to let them seep in boiled water from kettle.
    Me as a Thai : *straight away throw the raw noodle in the pan*

    • @dasungeheuer3873
      @dasungeheuer3873 Před 3 lety +26

      Cold Water = Firm Noodles Warm Water = Soft Noodles

    • @IMJwhoRU
      @IMJwhoRU Před 3 lety +1

      Do you just add more water to cook the noodles?

    • @EXkurodaigo666
      @EXkurodaigo666 Před 3 lety +5

      @@IMJwhoRU Yeah but not so much water, just about 1-2 cup of it

    • @EXkurodaigo666
      @EXkurodaigo666 Před 3 lety +5

      @ཏྦཱལ་ག་པོ། some people here would actually soak it too but only in room temp. water.

    • @randodox8375
      @randodox8375 Před 3 lety +1

      We be doing it like that, u just straight up put that shit into the wok xD

  • @Kskillz2
    @Kskillz2 Před 3 lety +40

    Hey Adam! Can you do a video on making soft pretzels? 🥨

  • @edenrome2245
    @edenrome2245 Před 2 lety +3

    made this with your tricks & substitutions tonight, made my whole family very happy! thanks Adam

  • @TIMTalksCooking
    @TIMTalksCooking Před 2 lety +14

    Really great demonstration! I've completely failed at Pad Thai every time I've tried to make it. Making one portion at a time as you do here makes a lot of sense. Since each is so quick, unless you're feeding a crowd, it shouldn't be a problem. I can't wait to try this!

    • @sid6645
      @sid6645 Před rokem

      So how did it go? I'm planning on trying this myself, so I wonder how the recipe is.

  • @calissecestquoila
    @calissecestquoila Před 3 lety +3

    Thanks Adam, I followed approximately 30% of the instructions and used about 30% of the ingredients and it still turned out great!

  • @fedechiossone9932
    @fedechiossone9932 Před 3 lety +6

    Chicken plus eggs: "Mother and Child reunion".
    That was a nice one.

  • @alexanderscherer4537
    @alexanderscherer4537 Před rokem +2

    This is one of my absolutely favorite recipes that you've made. So fun to make and nearly everything in here I can pull out of my garden!

  • @lupo.420
    @lupo.420 Před rokem

    This is what is love about this channel, quick, informative and easy to follow cocking videos

  • @zoolock2379
    @zoolock2379 Před 3 lety +9

    I love the real-time section. It actually puts some confidence in me

  • @connerpoppke6780
    @connerpoppke6780 Před 2 lety +7

    Made this tonight, it was absolutely amazing and super quick for a weeknight meal

  • @waterbaby3
    @waterbaby3 Před 9 měsíci

    Thank you for being so descriptive and literal, and for explaining why and why not to do certain things. Really appreciate this

  • @dmereel
    @dmereel Před 2 lety +1

    I appreciate that you give advice to plant based foodies also. Love the channel!

  • @SW4GK1NG
    @SW4GK1NG Před 3 lety +39

    Seeing the food of my country being represent is always flattering, also about the sauce part, if I were you I would just skip the tamarind thingy and go full ketchup, and personally I think the defining taste of Pad Thai is from the sugar and crushed peanut

    • @nikosfilipino
      @nikosfilipino Před 3 lety +6

      Interesting, ive never heard of a pad thai recipe that didnt have either tamarind or pickled ginger in it

    • @letschan4162
      @letschan4162 Před 3 lety +4

      Could also just use peanut butter as the sauce

    • @SW4GK1NG
      @SW4GK1NG Před 3 lety +6

      @@nikosfilipino I mean, if you are not trying to be authentic then you could have just skip the tamarind in my opinion, flavor-wise it should still be similar

    • @dusscode
      @dusscode Před 2 lety

      @@SW4GK1NG highly doubt it would be similar.

    • @raerohan4241
      @raerohan4241 Před rokem

      @@dusscode Ketchup (and tomatoes in general) aren't ingredients traditionally added to pad Thai. Ketchup is used in American pad Thai recipes as a substitute for tamarind, because it used to be much harder to obtain in America. If you want to try as best you can for authenticity, use the tamarind and skip the ketchup entirely. I have no idea why the original commenter suggested the opposite - if you can get the tamarind, that should be the ingredient you opt for, unless you prefer the American-style version.
      Also, you can skip the ginger, as it's also not part of traditional pad Thai. Don't boil the rice noodles either - soak them in water for about 15-20 minutes and they're good to fry. You can leave them longer if you need to, it can vary by brand.

  • @smingjr
    @smingjr Před 2 lety +9

    This was a delicious meal. I would highly recommend it. It's quick and easy for my family of 3 and everyone can be ready to eat in about 5 minutes

  • @Tainted16
    @Tainted16 Před 2 lety +2

    This pad thai looks great Adam! Has always been an intimidating dish for me to cook but you make it look so easy I think I'll try it again! Thank you!

  • @Activated_Complex
    @Activated_Complex Před 3 lety +4

    Right on! Using half bean sprouts half noodles really is one of those tricks that, once you try it, you’ll wonder why you weren’t doing it years ago. It helps keep the noodles from clumping up into the tangled brick shape you get in some takeout orders. Which is a texture and aesthetic some people like more than others, but for me, that’s easy to get somewhere else. I’m generally looking for a less clumpy finished product.

  • @johntitor1054
    @johntitor1054 Před 3 lety +64

    “Mother and child reunion, one chicken breast” I was not expecting that

    • @InvaderAlex22
      @InvaderAlex22 Před 3 lety +6

      You should look up the Japanese ricebowl dish oyakodon

  • @bkim7000
    @bkim7000 Před rokem +7

    God bless you dude, I'm trying this tonight! 💝🙌

  • @TheXxxeeelll
    @TheXxxeeelll Před 2 lety +2

    The best pad Thai recipe for home cooking on the planet 👏🏻

  • @Dell-ol6hb
    @Dell-ol6hb Před 3 lety

    Stir fry is one of my favorite cooking methods, it’s very fast, fun, versatile and above all delicious.

  • @jonsnow6631
    @jonsnow6631 Před 3 lety +9

    Tofu is a really good addition too!

  • @hongdekong
    @hongdekong Před 3 lety +6

    You are awesome Adam. I love pad thai and I am happy to see that you have found some of the same things that I have experienced (such as boiling the noodles instead of soaking). Will definitly try the addition of ketchup. I've used sweet chili sauce as well, which (unsurprisingly) works well too. I was a bit emotional tonight, but your enthusiasm always cheers me up. :)

  • @eltiolavara9
    @eltiolavara9 Před 3 lety +27

    thanks for the easy substitute ingredients actually, most other cooking channels would list 400 fancy ingredients and provide absolutely no substitutes and go like "no you CANNOT replace this. the WORLD WILL LITERALLY EXPLODE if you replace this"

  • @chrisfournier6144
    @chrisfournier6144 Před 2 lety +5

    I agree with your portion sized cooking for stir fry! I've never had Pad Thai with ginger and think it would make it too Chinese tasting. I've always had Pad Thai with fried tofu and shrimp. My trick which I figured out from may favourite Pad Thai ever (From The Bamboo Club in Toronto - chef Wandi Young) was of course to have the noodles in cold water for at least an hour prior to the meal. Once it was go time I drain the noodles and add a tablespoon of Thai Chili sauce. Stir it in and it gives the noodles a fresh red colour and some heat. Tweak the heat with roasted chilis as garnish.
    Pad Thai is a top ten dish for me, it's not hard to make you just have to be a mise en place kinda cook!
    I enjoyed your tweaks, thanks for the great video!

  • @fiveminutezen
    @fiveminutezen Před 3 lety +3

    Adam, I’ve been doing my stir frys recently in a cast iron Dutch oven. I can charge it up with a ton of heat, the thing will pretty much cook the whole meal with the burner off (I’m exaggerating) I then slide everything under the broiler for 4 minutes at the end to get a little extra char. I’ve never cooked with tamarind, next tine I’m at the Asian market I’ll probably grab some. P.s. Lad Nar is my go to Thai dish. Thanks for all the great content, you keep making it I’ll keep watching it.

  • @RockTheCage55
    @RockTheCage55 Před 2 lety +4

    I made this tonight. I was a little hesitant on the ketchup in the sauce but, you know what, it works!! It just made a single portion so i cut it in 1/2 and 2oz of noodles didn't seem like a whole lot. I was wrong. It made a rather large portion that i am sure would fill up anyone. That being said i would go with Adam's recommendation & cook 1 portion at a time. I used a large cast iron skillet & i think if i would have doubled the recipe and cooked it the same time it wouldn't have worked as well. I wanted to use the chile in the recipe that is optional but i couldn't find it in the 2 different grocery stores i went to. It looks like it was a fresno chile and i've seen them before but i think they might be a seasonal thing. So i could either use the 2 hot chiles that are always available: Jalapenos & Serranos. In the end I decided to just use a red bell pepper (ya i know no heat). I also don't boil rice noodles. Just soak them in tap water for 1 hour and perfect. No need to boil. Anyways I recommend this to anyone and for Thai food its is really easy (Thai food can be involved sometimes).

  • @Mike-ox1gm
    @Mike-ox1gm Před 3 lety

    Yes! I was just thinking about how much I’d love to see your take on South East Asian dishes. Commenting before watching it but I’m seeing a frozen shot of noodles hitting the plate and I’m stoked.

  • @AndersonRancan
    @AndersonRancan Před 3 měsíci

    Just made it for lunch, and it was amazing, thank you!

  • @susansmith7415
    @susansmith7415 Před 2 lety +3

    I didn't have tamarind so used 2 tblsp worchetershire, juice of half a lime, shrimp instead of chicken, added thinly sliced sweet red pepper, and sirracha instead of the hot red pepper. Oh, was too lazy to do it twice so made the double size serving in one 'go' using a large frying pan. Turned out great! Will definitely make again. Thank you.

  • @CJKeene06
    @CJKeene06 Před 3 lety +73

    “The mother child reunion” is the most I’ve laughed at a cooking video in a long time.
    Probably since the Babish 4/20 video.

    • @bobthomas8342
      @bobthomas8342 Před 3 lety +2

      It's a Paul Simon song. Allegedly saw it on the menu in a chinese restaurant.

    • @hbfdfgjcyk555
      @hbfdfgjcyk555 Před 3 lety +10

      It's the name of a Japanese dish, oyakodon

    • @karaqakkzl
      @karaqakkzl Před 3 lety +5

      @@hbfdfgjcyk555 oyakodon
      Oya = parents
      Ko = child
      Don = dish, bowl

  • @MrSupertrooper1
    @MrSupertrooper1 Před 3 lety

    This is such a good video. The live timer really works!

  • @mthlay15
    @mthlay15 Před rokem

    You're telling me you have a kitchen spike for your receipts. Respect 🙏

  • @yoshitheshibainu8898
    @yoshitheshibainu8898 Před 3 lety +94

    Hey Adam, could you do more Indian food recipes?

    • @chidambaranathans1975
      @chidambaranathans1975 Před 3 lety +12

      Indians speak English ( I am an Indian ) I think Adam makes great recipes but if not you can definitely get Indian recipes from micillien star chefs. Check out "herbas kitchen"

    • @vaibhavjain5227
      @vaibhavjain5227 Před 3 lety +16

      You should check out Ethan chlebowski! He has number of Indian food dishes.

    • @Granger744
      @Granger744 Před 3 lety +2

      @@vaibhavjain5227 +1 for Ethan. Great breakdown of technique and theory for Indian/Pakistani recipes.

    • @yoshitheshibainu8898
      @yoshitheshibainu8898 Před 3 lety

      @@vaibhavjain5227 Yeah, he has a lot of good Indian recipes (I’m Indian myself haha)

    • @yoshitheshibainu8898
      @yoshitheshibainu8898 Před 3 lety

      @@chidambaranathans1975 @bongeats also has a number of awesome recipes (imo)

  • @bkim7000
    @bkim7000 Před rokem +3

    Omgaawwd just tried it and it was sooooooo good!! I'm so freaking excited!! The only thing I did differently was I used Thai chili tips which made it spicy and delicious thank youuuuuu!!!!🤸‍♀️🎉🙌❤️😋

  • @takehirolol5962
    @takehirolol5962 Před 3 lety

    Love how all the recipes from CZcamsrs are for only one or couples...really nice...

  • @Anton680x
    @Anton680x Před 2 lety

    I made this tonite for me and my wife... it was awesome!! Thanks Adam. 😊

  • @samueld92
    @samueld92 Před 3 lety +35

    “Time for the mother and child reunion” hahahahaha! 😂

  • @blakfloyd
    @blakfloyd Před 3 lety +106

    Adam either intentionally or unintentionally just smoked out Uncle Roger with the no-wok approach and will probably get at least 100k new subs in the next month.

    • @bocahdongo7769
      @bocahdongo7769 Před 3 lety +11

      We all know the no-work approach is the best approach in home kitchen

    • @thegoodgeneral
      @thegoodgeneral Před 3 lety +41

      Chinese Cooking Demystified also stands by no-wok for a variety of Chinese cooking and they are a 100% more reliable Chinese cooking resource than Uncle Roger.
      Roger, to me, represents a sort of on-purpose ignorance, the kind of intentional obtuse adherence that I think Adam aims to dispel with his exploratory attitude.

    • @valhallakombi7239
      @valhallakombi7239 Před 3 lety +42

      @@thegoodgeneral Just so you know, his primary job is that of a comedian. I know people take it too far but I hate it when people consider him a chef. Chinese cooking demystified is obviously better than a comedian when it comes to food.

    • @thegoodgeneral
      @thegoodgeneral Před 3 lety +24

      @@valhallakombi7239 yeah, that hasn’t gone over my head or anything. Nevertheless people cite him as a reliable resource, and like you I think that’s a little disheartening.

    • @brainwashingdetergent4322
      @brainwashingdetergent4322 Před 3 lety +3

      He fak up

  • @jsparger
    @jsparger Před 3 lety

    Tried this and it worked out great. Thanks for doing all the work 🙌

  • @dialect64
    @dialect64 Před 2 lety

    I always love your descriptions of what you are doing, and why... because I may agree or disagree with what you are personally going for, but I also get the concept for the technique, which I can apply to my taste. Cheers!

  • @Pavme
    @Pavme Před 3 lety +4

    Adam and Joshua keep reading my mind with their recipes

  • @Ninchun
    @Ninchun Před 3 lety +7

    I am Thai and this looks sooo good :D I don't believe in that authentic food tast better. I believe good food tast good :D

  • @99BakerG
    @99BakerG Před rokem

    Fantastic recipe! I had this dish the other day at my local Thai place and was very impressed. So, I thought I would give your recipe a try. And you weren't kidding about how fast it cooks. I think I just found my new favorite dish. Thai food is generally delicious and healthy. The only drawback is that you have to go to a really well-stocked Vietnamese grocer to find all the ingredients.

  • @wilsonseto1
    @wilsonseto1 Před 3 lety

    dude, i just discovered you! I love the way you cook the way I do! saving all those dishes with the one step 1 pan method.

  • @justacat2318
    @justacat2318 Před 3 lety +35

    There's a variation of this is Thailand called 'Pad Thai Gung Sod'
    which is basically Pad Thai with river prawns 🍤
    To Adam: You did really well with the noodles despite craking them 🍜

  • @beriukay
    @beriukay Před 3 lety +3

    @7:45 just watch that seed jumping around like it's the star of the show!

    • @lambsaucefinder7407
      @lambsaucefinder7407 Před 13 dny +1

      You know your pan is perfectly hot when the small things starts jumping!
      Learning from my experience.

  • @1970daywalker
    @1970daywalker Před 3 lety

    Thank you for sharing. Enjoyed the video and the recipe, will try this soon.

  • @JasonJeffrey-EasyKnifeLife

    I can't wait to try this. I do have a wok, but a quick meal I can make for myself when I'm home alone. This right here is what I'm talking about!

  • @enfjftw
    @enfjftw Před 3 lety +4

    The real-time part was so fun haha!

  • @alberttantivit9474
    @alberttantivit9474 Před 3 lety +7

    I think this recipe is fine (as a Thai person), sure it’s not completely authentic but what really is authentic given how every place in Thailand has their own recipe and preference at the end of the day. Also I’m not mad at Adam using ketchup or Worcestershire sauce especially he’s not claiming that these recipes are authentic (this video is just giving people an easy recipe on how to make Pad Thai at home), heck I also agree with Adam that most places that makes Pad Thai make it too sweet (they use a lot of palm sugar, way too much! But apart from that almost all of the ingredients would’ve been used in a Pad Thai (any protein can work and chicken breast is a easy protein to work with) and it might come be very useful for me when I’m abroad making this when I don’t have all the recipes in hand so nice job there Adam!

  • @andrzejbroniarek9256
    @andrzejbroniarek9256 Před 2 lety +1

    This recipe worked fantastic. Thank you Adam.

  • @newtonscradle6589
    @newtonscradle6589 Před 3 lety +2

    Adam love love love this, just made it & then cooked a second portion straight after! Its so good, tastes like ordering take-out

  • @ekrip2051
    @ekrip2051 Před 3 lety +43

    As a Thai, I want to explain that even Thai people not everybody can cook pad Thai because it is a very complicated dish especially the source. This simplified version is something like cooking NY pizza with swiss cheese lol, but don't get me wrong here I also use tomato concentration dilute with water instead of tomato Purée because that is what I can found at my foreign grocery. I also believe in his pinciple which is "make foods as you like".

    • @bocahdongo7769
      @bocahdongo7769 Před 3 lety

      Ketchup is surprisingly also a good substitute for tomate paste.

  • @fromnaras
    @fromnaras Před 3 lety +6

    From a Thai person...this is somewhat accurate for Americanized, mall pad Thai especially for quick restaurants who don’t want to import ingredients. But not traditional, authentic pad Thai.

    • @emmamemma4162
      @emmamemma4162 Před 3 lety +1

      What would be some (easy) changes to make it better/ more authentic, in your opinion?

    • @seobinmoon1575
      @seobinmoon1575 Před 3 lety +2

      @@emmamemma4162 I would not use ketchup at all. Not sure about mall pad thai but at least here -Thailand - I haven’t ever had ketchupy pad thai. Well I have it just wasn’t that great.
      Instead of cooking the chilies with the other ingredients I would opt for chili powder after you finish cooking as a topping alongside with the crushed peanuts.
      Pad thai goong or pad Thai with prawns is my favorite but obviously you can change the proteins out to whatever you want.
      Almost forgot, but dehydrated/ fried cubes of tofu is amazing in pad Thai. Adam did say you can substitute it as the main protein but imo it’s something that you should keep in any variation.
      You want to go overboard with the oil when you’re frying up those eggs. The savory flavors come from this so it’s very important. Try imagining that you’re coating the ingredients with egg instead of them being separated.
      You can put in dry rice noodles straight into the wok/pan, just add a lil more water to compensate.
      If you really want to go full on authentic add a pinch of msg, nothing too extravagant you should be able to find pure msg at your Asian grocery store. Just makes everything taste better idk.
      Also adding extra sugar, chili powder, peanuts and fish sauce to your liking is normal.
      Hope this helped!
      Ps. My username doesn’t indicate that I’m Thai and you’re very correct in assuming so. But I have lived in Thailand for the past 13 years so I know some stuff :>

    • @emmamemma4162
      @emmamemma4162 Před 3 lety +1

      @@seobinmoon1575 Thank you for the in-dept answer! I already made a first attempt at this dish. The ingredients came from the corner store, so I had to make do with their selection. I used the following ingredients:
      Shallot onions (as suggested in another post)
      Garlic
      Ginger
      A dried chilli fruit (ours are really strong, it overpowered the tamarind and the fish sauce)
      Sugar (I went with two tablespoons, next time I'll use less since the dish was a bit too sweet for our liking)
      Tomato paste (I had an opened tube I needed to use, but I might not use tomato anything next time)
      Soy sauce (in lieu of MSG)
      Vinegar (I'll leave it out next time)
      Fish sauce (could have used more!)
      Tamarind sauce (should have used more of this as well!)
      Chicken breast
      Egg
      Salted and roasted peanuts
      Mung beans
      Plenty of rapeseed oil (it's readily available here and has a neutral flavour)
      A touch of cilantro (it's nor my favourite herb)
      Lime
      Unfortunately the store didn't carry rice noodles, so I used Thai style wheat noodles. It was OK, but I'm gonna get me some rice noodles next time I go to the super market.
      All in all this tasted good, but it was more like an improved version of your generic "Westerner makes Asian style stir-fry" and less Pad Thai than I would have liked. The secret is probably in the sauce. I'll make a new attempt once I get a hold of some rice noodles.

    • @seobinmoon1575
      @seobinmoon1575 Před 3 lety +1

      ​@@emmamemma4162 You'll only improve from here! I think you should go heavy on the tamarind sauce when you're making pad thai. The best way to get that pad thai taste is if you have the balance between the tamarind and oil :> Hope that helped!

    • @emmamemma4162
      @emmamemma4162 Před 3 lety

      @@seobinmoon1575 Thank you! That confirms my suspicion I didn't use enough tamarind. Now that I know it's not that strong, I will use it more liberally.

  • @jneiljoyner
    @jneiljoyner Před 3 lety

    I've been waiting for this video! Love pad Thai. Thank you!!

  • @Pavme
    @Pavme Před 3 lety

    You should always do more of these types of tutorials, your really skilled

  • @TooMuchGinger
    @TooMuchGinger Před 3 lety +8

    Maybe now I understand how the Italians felt on the carbonara video 😆 I honestly recommend Hot Thai Kitchens recipe for Pad Thai instead. Chopped dried shrimp and thinly chopped shallots are so important for the flavor and aromatics!

    • @hhoi8225
      @hhoi8225 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes this makes me depressed

    • @Becky0494
      @Becky0494 Před 3 lety

      Is there a comparable replacement for people allergic to shellfish?

    • @poom323
      @poom323 Před 3 lety

      @@Becky0494 I don't know what can be replaced, but it's still fine and delicious even it doesn't has any shrimp.

    • @TooMuchGinger
      @TooMuchGinger Před 3 lety

      @@Becky0494 The dried shrimp is there to provide a lot of umami flavor. MSG is a good way to introduce some umami into a dish. Not sure what the substitute would be exactly but you could play around with it! Maybe start with 1/8 a teaspoon of MSG and increase it if it's not enough. Another way could be to add some dried mushrooms, as they also provide some umami, but they could add a mushroomy flavor as well that might not be welcome to some.

    • @wendy1022
      @wendy1022 Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for the recommendation! I'm watching her video now. Looks great.

  • @ehsan_kia
    @ehsan_kia Před 3 lety +5

    "It helps to have a freshly sharpened knife for this", smooth, though surprised he didn't wink and link to his previous video!

  • @jamesblanco7323
    @jamesblanco7323 Před 2 lety

    Just made the recipe. Absolutely wonderful, thank you Adam! :)

  • @villiandustybit
    @villiandustybit Před 3 lety +6

    Woo! Been waiting to see this video all week! And Pad Thai - awesome!