| Yield | 0 |
|---|---|
| Source | Many people make this recipe, it would be hard to pinpoint who exactly began it but it is Thai in origin. |
| Prep Time | hours |
| Country | Asia |
| Main Ingredient | Beef |
| Meal | Soups + Stews |
| Season | Any Time |
| Yield | 0 |
|---|---|
| Source | Many people make this recipe, it would be hard to pinpoint who exactly began it but it is Thai in origin. |
| Prep Time | hours |
| Country | Asia |
| Main Ingredient | Beef |
| Meal | Soups + Stews |
| Season | Any Time |
Ingredients: Beef Neck (I love this cut but it's difficult to find - you can use many different types of beef, it depends on if you want to make the broth from scratch - IF you do, you MUST have bones on your meat. I've used short ribs and these work well but are more greasy and beef neck has a nicer shred in my opinion. If you are going to sidestep the 3-4 hours of cooking beef broth properly then you can buy some beef broth cubes or broth in a box or can and just buy a cut such as sirloin, skirt steak, etc, slice thin and add towards the end so it doesn't overcook and get chewy). **Medicinal note: cooking with the beef neck has the added bonus of getting a really rich broth from the marrow of the bone which is very good in conditions where you are weak, anemic, or post partum and post menstrual.
Ingredients cont'd: Garlic, Thai basil (it is more aromatic - but you can use sweet
Italian as a substitute), fresh bean sprouts, morning glory (aka. water
spinach) or pak kana (aka.
Chinese broccoli), shallots, star anise, cinnamon bark, thick sweet soy
sauce (you can use regular soy sauce if you don't have this), white
pepper, fish sauce (aka. nam pla), lime, dried or fresh rice noodles (the thickness depends on your taste - I like sen lek which is the middle thickness (less than a fettucini and more than the thin string noodles).
**Medicinal note:
star anise is good for the digestion and is a TCM herb, cinnamon bark
is excellent for warming the kidneys and promoting circulation, basil
is good for the digestion, white pepper can help in cases of diarrhea
(considered a "cold stomach" in TCM), and garlic has endless uses (anti
viral, anti bacterial, blood circulation, etc) but since it will be
fried here it doesn't have as strong a benefit as if it were to be used
raw (note: you need to smash the garlic and give it 15 mins. for the
chemical reactions to take place to get the most medicinal benefit out
of it - more on garlic later!).
Now, on to the next thing : HOW
do you make these delectable noodles? Well, here are the steps and feel
free to post questions if they are not clear enough.
1. Put beef neck (approximately 3-4 lbs depending on how many you will be cooking for but this will provide at least 8 hearty bowls of broth and beef with your noodles), in a big stock pot, covered in water. Add star anise (2-3 is sufficient, less if you don't like the taste of anise), 1 cinnamon bark (small size is fine), white pepper (1 tspn, you can add more to taste later), 1 tbspn of thick sweet soy sauce (if you use regular soy sauce, add 1 tbspn sugar). Bring to a rolling boil and let it simmer for a longgggg time (depending on how fresh the meat is) it should take about 2-3 hrs for the meat to begin to fall off the bone). Once it's cooked a while add some fish sauce to taste (but at least 1 tbspn if not more).
2. Meanwhile: soak the rice noodles (if they are dry) in water;
slice up some shallots into thin half moons; slice up limes (NOT lemons
which are yellow in color and much too sweet); wash the basil and leave
on the stems; wash the bean sprouts; coarsely mince up some garlic and
fry in vegetable oil so it's crispy then leave to the side in a small
dish; make a small dish of prik nam pla with dried chile powder and fish sauce so you have a nice chile sauce for those that want more salt/more chile in their soup.