We Love God!

God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

Why care about being holy? Why be willing to say no to your flesh and yes to God, day in and day out? Because the world desperately needs to see what God is like. Because it is your created purpose and your ultimate destiny to be holy. Because of the price Jesus paid to make you holy. Because you are a saint. Because holy people get to see and know God. Because you’re getting ready to move to a place where there is no sin. And because your example may inspire someone who is watching you to choose or reject the pathway of holiness.
Nancy Leigh DeMoss

While you struggled with addiction, was it ever accompanied by the fear of the Lord? Did you ever have a keen sense of the presence and holiness of God when you struggled with addictions? Did you ever have a sense that you were spiritually growing in repentance, faith, and obedience while in your addiction? When we have a disease, we can still be growing in the knowledge of Christ, but addictions are incompatible with spiritual growth.
Edward Welch

Pad Thai — General Notes

0
(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Thai Info/tips, Thai 1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

Information:

INSTRUCTIONS

Rice Noodles: ============= You can use fresh or dried, in widths from 1/8
to 1/2 inch wide.  I've never tried fresh. The dried ones have to be soaked
in water to soften them. The recipes call for soaking in cold water,
lukewarm water, hot water, and boiling water for anywhere from 7 minutes to
2 hours.  I put mine into warm tap water and let them soak while I'm
preparing everything else. Just before I start cooking, I dump them into a
colander to drain.  One recipe suggests cellophane noodles as an
alternative to rice noodles -- I've never tried that variation.
Meat or No Meat: ================ The most common meat called for is
shrimp, with chicken and/or pork use in addition to or in place of the
shrimp.  Some recipes add bean curd; some substitute it for the meat. Jeff
Smith's recipe uses deep fried bean curd. My own variation is to substitute
various veggies (asparagus, red bell pepper, broccoli, snow peas, or
whatever else looks good.) As Nancie McDermott says, "Thai cooks blithely
tinker with the classic formula to create signature variations, and you
can, too."
Oil and Seasonings: =================== Cooking pad thai starts with
vegetable or peanut oil.  Most versions add garlic, and sometimes shallots,
shrimp paste (be prepared for the smell!), onions, fresh red chilies,
and/or preserved sweet white radish.
The Sauce: ========== What makes pad thai, in addition to the rice noodles,
is the sauce.  The general mix of flavors is sweet, salty, sour, and hot.
Typical ingredients are:
~~ fish sauce (sometimes soy sauce is used in addition, or in place of for
pure vegetarian versions) ~~ sugar (sometimes palm sugar is suggested) ~~
vinegar (various kinds specified; tamarind sauce or lime juice are
sometimes used instead) ~~ "red stuff" ~- may be paprika, tomato paste,
catsup, chili powder, hot chili sauce, chili paste with garlic, tomato
sauce, or cayenne pepper, depending on the recipe. ~~ Other possible
additions: salt, black pepper, chicken stock, dried shrimp powder. One
recipe calls for boiling the sauce before using.
Eggs: ===== Anywhere from 0-6. Some recipes call for beating the eggs
before adding; others suggested breaking the yolk after adding the egg to
the pan. Various techniques are suggested for manipulating the egg while
cooking.  One recipe calls for cooking the egg before starting the pad
thai, cutting it into strips, and then adding the egg strips back at the
end of cooking. I haven't tried this myself but have had it in restaurants.
Bean Sprouts and Scallions: ========================== These are usually
added last in cooking, or added to the finished dish without cooking.
Garnishes: ========= Various things can be added to finished dish as an
edible garnish:
~~ lime or lemon wedges ~~ ground roasted chilies ~~ ground roasted peanuts
~~ dried red chili flakes ~~ fresh coriander leaves ~~ cucumber slices ~~
dried shrimps ~~ fried basil leaves ~~ cherry tomatoes ~~ mint sprigs
Experiment, and enjoy!
From: stigle@cs.unca.edu (Sue Stigleman)
From Gemini's MASSIVE MealMaster collection at www.synapse.com/~gemini

A Message from our Provider:

“It is not how much we have, but how much we enjoy, that makes happiness. #Charles Spurgeon”

How useful was this recipe?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this recipe.

We are sorry that this recipe was not useful for you!

Let us improve this recipe!

Tell us how we can improve this recipe?