When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: recipe using thai peanut sauce noodles cold water bath

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. This Creamy Peanut-Lime Chicken With Noodles Will Shake Up ...

    www.aol.com/creamy-peanut-lime-chicken-noodles...

    Bring a medium pot of water to a boil; generously season with salt. Add noodles and stir to prevent sticking. Remove from heat and let soak until tender, 13 to 15 minutes.

  3. Joy Bauer shares 3 zesty coleslaw recipes to liven up your ...

    www.aol.com/news/joy-bauer-shares-3-zesty...

    Thai-Inspired Coleslaw with Peanut Sauce. Joy Bauer. This slaw brings together the crispness and nutrition of shredded cabbage, carrots and bell peppers with the green goodness of edamame ...

  4. List of Thai dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Thai_dishes

    A beef noodle soup with slices of very tender beef (nuea pueay). Spicy fried wide rice noodles. Fried wide rice noodles with beef, pork, chicken, or seafood in a thickened gravy. Rice noodles with beef or pork (and sometimes offal) in a brown broth which contains cinnamon, star anise and sometimes blood.

  5. Thai salads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thai_salads

    Thai salads are not served as entrées but are normally eaten as one of the main dishes in a Thai buffet-style meal, together with rice (depending on the region, this can be glutinous rice or non-glutinous rice) or the Thai rice noodle called khanom chin. Specialised khao tom kui (plain rice congee) restaurants also serve a wide variety of Thai ...

  6. Khanom chin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khanom_chin

    Khanom chin or Khanom jeen (Thai: ขนมจีน, pronounced [kʰā.nǒm t͡ɕīːn]) are fresh, thin rice noodles in Thai cuisine which are made from rice sometimes fermented for three days, boiled, and then made into noodles by extruding the resulting dough through a sieve into boiling water. Khanom chin is served in many kinds of stock ...

  7. Khao chae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khao_chae

    Media: Khao chae. Khao chae (Thai: ข้าวแช่, pronounced [kʰâw t͡ɕʰɛ̂ː]) is "rice soaked in cool water". "Khao" means "rice" and "chae" means "to soak". [1] Around the time of King Rama II, the recipe was adapted from a Mon dish and then modified. It was meant to be made and consumed in the hot season, from mid-March to the ...

  8. Nam phrik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nam_phrik

    Nam phrik (Thai: น้ำพริก, pronounced [ná (ː)m pʰrík̚]) is a type of Thai spicy chili sauce typical of Thai cuisine. Usual ingredients for nam phrik type sauces are fresh or dry chilies, garlic, shallots, lime juice and often some kind of fish or shrimp paste. In the traditional way of preparing these sauces, the ingredients ...

  9. Nam tok (food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nam_tok_(food)

    In Central Thailand, nam tok is mainly a spicy soup stock enriched with raw cow blood or pig's blood. Blood is often used in Thailand to enrich regular noodle dishes. One of the most popular variants of the nam tok noodle soup is known as kuai-tiao mu nam tok. It includes broth, blood, noodles, bean sprouts, pieces of liver, pork, dumplings ...