. . : Toam Yum Gai (Thai Soup) Recipe - Quick Recipes, Easy Meal Ideas, Food online : : .
. : : Menu : : .


> Categories:
Appetizers   Baked Goods   Barbeque   Basics   Beans and Grains   Beef   Beverages   Breads   Breakfasts   Cake   Candies   Canning and Preserving   Casseroles   Cheese   Chicken   Chocolate   Condiments   Cookies   Crock Pot and Slow Cooker   Desserts   Duck   Eggs   Fruits   Grains   Herbs and Spices   Holiday   Hot and Spicy   Jellies and Jams   Kids   Lamb   Liquor   Main Dish   Mexican   Nuts   Pasta   Pets   Quick and Easy   Recipes for Pets   Regional Cuisine   Rice   Salad   Sauces   Sausages   Seafood   Side Dish   Snacks   Soups   Stews   Stuffings   Sweets and Desserts   Vegetables   Vegetarian   Wild Game  

Toam Yum Gai (Thai Soup)
Category Rice
Total Hits 588
Rating Rating:0 | Voted:0 | voted : 0 times
1 Point 2 Point 3 Point 4 Point 5 Point 6 Point 7 Point 8 Point 9 Point 10 Point
The Recipe

---------------------------GENERIC CHICKEN BROTH--------------------------- 2 tb Olive Oil

1 ts Sesame Oil

3 Whole cloves

2 Bay leaves

1 Sprig of fresh thyme *

1 md Onion; cut into pieces

2 lg Carrots; cut into pieces

1 Chicken, cut into pieces **

6 c Water

------------------------------EVERYTHING ELSE------------------------------ Mushrooms *** Shrimp if you want *** 1 Stalk lemongrass

-- cut into 2 inch pieces 2 sl Galanga root

-- (more if you like -- chewing on them.) 4 Kaffir lime leaves

Cilantro leaves as desired 1 ts Chili sauce

2 tb Fish sauce

1 1/2 tb Lemon juice

----------------------------------OPTIONAL---------------------------------- Sliced hot peppers -(2 or 3 slices per serving) * (ad libbed with about 1 tsp or 1 tblsp of powdered thyme) ** (Some boneless skinless chicken pieces, plus some thighs with the bones bashed once with the back of a knife would be ok too -- the point being to get the flavor from the marrow out.) *** as many as you want, cut any way you want, of any kind you want Instructions: ============= Use a large covered stockpot. Heat olive and sesame oil on high heat. Add cloves, bay leaves, thyme, (these should be pounded a bit first to crack the fibers and release more flavor) and onion, carrots. Cover 2 minutes, stir if you want. Add chicken on top, and pour ONE cup of water over the tops of the chicken. Cover. Cook 5 minutes on high. Add remainder of water, cover, continue heating till it starts to boil, then turn heat down and simmer covered 30 minutes. Skim off foam occasionally. Remove chicken, debone, and cut into bite sized pieces. Strain soup, avoid getting the sediment at the bottom. (What you do with the leftover veggies after making a stock is up to you. I think they end up in Minnesotan hot dishes....) Take 4 cups of the stock, heat until it begins to boil, turn down the heat till it is just simmering. Add galanga, lemongrass, Kaffir lime leaves (bash them a bit to break the fibers--it allows them to release more flavor). Add mushrooms, chicken, (shrimp if you must). Stir in the fish sauce, chili paste. Cover, cook for another 5 minutes. Serve. Add lemon juice (just have slices of lemon or lime that you can squeeze) cilantro, and thinly sliced jalepenos or other hot peppers at the table. Fresh liquorice basil also adds a nice touch. Comments/Modifications: ======================= We cheated and used Swansons reduced salt chicken stock for the water in the beginning because we used boneless skinless chicken. Can't tell if it hurt or helped. Also had 4 shiitake mushrooms which had been soaking for several days, so they were cut up, and the soaking juice was added along with the chicken and mushrooms. About one cup of this. Big win. Yum. Source: "Smart Cooking" by Somebody (I forget) Kerr From: hiroki@limerick.cbs.umn.edu (Hiroki Morizono)

Render: 0.001 Sec ¦ By AhmBay