Laad Na

Greg and I went to Sawatdee a week or so ago and I was determined to try something different than the same old red curry I get every time we go there. I needed to branch out.

So I opened the menu and the first thing I saw was something called Laad Na. It was described as such: Fun noodles (those are the big wide lasagna, looking ones) stir fried with egg in a bean sauce topped with stir fried broccoli and Napa cabbage in a savory gravy. I just loved the words “savory gravy�? so I ordered it. It was delicious.

I looked all over the Internet for a recipe and none seemed to be like what I had. But some were close. So I printed them all out and then improvised and tried to come up with something that would be similar. This is what we came up with. It’s not exact, but it’s darn close.

The photo is of the actual dish I had at the restaurant. I didn’t take one of my masterpiece because we used the wrong kind of noodles (can’t find “fun�? noodles here) so it didn’t look exactly right. When I had it in the restaurant I had tofu, at home we used chicken. I liked the tofu much better.

Laad Na

Marinade:
3/4 pound boneless, skinless beef, chicken breast, tofu or pork, cut into 2 x 1/4 x 1/4-inch strips, or 3/4 pounds shrimp
2 teaspoon thin soy sauce
2 teaspoon Chinese cooking wine
2 teaspoon cornstarch

Noodles:
1/2 bag wide rice noodle
2 tablespoons soy sauce
1 tablespoon black bean paste
2 eggs

Sesame oil
2 cloves garlic smashed

Gravy:
2 cups chicken broth
2 teaspoons black bean paste
1 Tablespoon soy sauce
½ teaspoon fish sauce
¼ cup Chinese cooking wine

To thicken:
¼ cup water
1 tablespoon cornstarch

Place noodles in a bowl and pour hot or boiling water over them to soften. They need to sit for about 25 minutes or so, so this is a good time to get everything else ready.

Assemble marinade ingredients in a bowl and set aside.
Assemble gravy ingredients in large measuring cup or mixing bowl, set aside.

Cut up the broccoli and cabbage, and yep, you guessed it, set aside.

Now you’re ready to begin cooking. Once you start, it’s hard to stop, so you want to make sure everything is ready.

Heat wok, add soy sauce and black bean paste and rice noodles, cook for just a couple of seconds and then add the egg. Scramble it all up until the egg is done and noodles are covered with the sauce. Place the noodles in the serving bowls.

Heat oil in wok. Add marinated meat/tofu and cook until white (for pork or chicken, starting to brown for tofu). Remove and dish out in serving bowls.

Adding more oil to the wok if necessary, add the garlic and cook until it becomes fragrant. Add the broccoli and cabbage and stir-fry until the broccoli begins to soften and turns a deeper green. Remove to serving bowls.

Add gravy mixture to the wok and let it boil for a few moments. Once it’s at a good boil slowly add the cornstarch/water mixture and stir until thickened. Ladle over the other ingredients in the bowls. Optional but good, add some freshly ground black pepper just before eating.

Posted under Cooking, Pasta, Random Thoughts, Soups and Stews, Vegetarian

This post was written by Amy on March 22, 2006

Indian Beef With Cucumber Rice

We made this last night. It was really yummy. It lost some of it’s flavor the second day, and I thought the rice needed salt, but it was really pretty good. The meat has to cook at least this long or it won’t be tender.

1 1/2 lb. lean beef boneless chuck roast
1 c. plain nonfat yogurt
1 tsp. cardamom seeds (removed from pods), crushed
1/4 tsp. ground cloves
1/8 tsp. ground nutmeg
1 tbsp. reduced-calorie butter
2 lg. onions, chopped (about 2 cups)
1 tbsp. grated gingerroot
2 cloves garlic, finely chopped
3/4 tsp. coriander seed, crushed
1/2 tsp. cumin seed
1/4 tsp. ground turmeric
3/4 tsp. salt
1/4 c. cold water
1 tbsp. cornstarch
1 tbsp. Gold Medal all-purpose flour
Cucumber Rice (below)
1/4 c. plain non-fat yogurt
Chopped fresh cilantro

Trim fat from beef roast. Cut beef into 1-inch cubes. Mix 1 cup yogurt, the cardamom, cloves and nutmeg in glass or plastic bowl or heavy plastic bag. Stir in beef. Cover and refrigerate at least 4 hours.

Heat butter in 10-inch nonstick skillet until melted. Cook onions, gingerroot and garlic in butter about 2 minutes, stirring frequently, until onions are tender. Stir in beef mixture, coriander, cumin, turmeric and salt. Heat to boiling; reduce heat. Cover and cook about 1 hour 30 minutes, stirring occasionally, until beef is tender.

Shake water, cornstarch and flour in tightly covered container; gradually stir into beef mixture. Heat to boiling, stirring constantly. Boil and stir 1 minute. Serve beef mixture over Cucumber Rice. Drizzle with 1/4 cup yogurt. Sprinkle with cilantro.

CUCUMBER RICE:

2 c. hot cooked rice
1 med. cucumber, seeded and chopped (about 1 cup)
2 tbsp. lemon juice

Mix all ingredients.

Posted under Beef, Cooking

This post was written by Amy on March 20, 2006

High School Meme

Hopkins_logo.gif.pngWho were your best friends?
Rachel, Molly, Martha, Susan

Who did you have a crush on?
Depends on the week. I had lots of crushes, but was totally in love with a friend. Yes, a boy.

What sports did you play?
Is cheerleading a sport? I did that. Nothing else.

What kind of car did you drive?
I didn’t have my own car, but would occasionally drive my mom’s Dodge Omni. I know, I was so cool, can you stand it?

It’s Friday night, where you at?
Probably at home with “the girls� or at one of their houses watching MTV and eating junk food. Maybe cheering a game. Hanging out at a pizza place.

Were you in the “In Crowd”?
No, but I was in the group “just below you�. (Rachel knows what that means). I was not in the elite, but not a complete misfit. Or was I? Hmmm….

Ever skip school?
Hell yes. Whenever I could.

Ever smoke?
No, not until college.

Were you a nerd?
No. Would never have been called that. Dork, perhaps, but not nerd. Nerd implies smart. People often used the word “weird� for me.

Did you get suspended/expelled?
No

Can you sing the Alma Mater?
Oh god, maybe if reminded a little. But probably not.

Who was your favorite teacher?
Probably the health teacher, Mr Wagner. But Mr. Nordli was cool too (Music).

Favorite class?
Choir, pretty much hated everything else.

What was your school’s full name?
Hopkins High School

School mascot?
Royal (WTF is that?) I think it was a lion.

Did you go to Prom?
Yes, I went my senior year. With a guy who was pretty much only dating me so that he’d have a prom date. He was nice enough though. I wonder where he is now? Hmmm.

Where did you work?
I worked at the Knollwood Mall Theater with Rachel. We also worked at other locations within the same movie chain.

If you could go back and do it over, would you?
No way. Some of it was fun. But mostly it was just painful.

Last one, favorite memory of your Senior Year?
Holy crap, that was 22 years ago! I don’t know. Some of the football games that Rachel and I cheered together were fun. The plays were always fun too.

Posted under Random Thoughts, fun/games

This post was written by Amy on March 18, 2006

Snow? Yeah, you could say that…

It knocked the tree over!

Bent Tree

The rest of the backyard:

Side yard

The side yard AKA Rivendale:

rivendale.jpg

This one I just thought was really cool: It’s small, but if you click on it it will get bigger:

snow_02.jpg

Posted under house

This post was written by Amy on March 14, 2006

This is so cool

laadna1.jpg

OK so first of all, this is a photo of my dinner that I ate just about a half an hour ago. Why did I take a picture? Because it was awesomely good….and I got my new cell phone with a camera in it! So I’ve pretty much been taking photos of everything. It’s so cool. I love it.

Anyway, so we went to Sawatdee and I decided that I was not going to order the same curry I get every single time. So I ordered the first thing I read on the menu. It was called Laad Na. It was desccribed as such: Fun noodles (those are the big wide lasagne, looking ones) stir fried with egg in a bean sauce topped with stir fried broccoli and Napa cabbage in a savory gravy. I just loved the words “savory gravy” so I ordered it. It was delicious.

I just tried to find a recipe online, but none looked like what I had. I’ll let you know if I’m able to re-create it at home.

Update: We did re-create this at home. See here for results.

Posted under Cooking

This post was written by Amy on March 12, 2006

“Desert” Island?

funb.jpg

Why do people say “desert island�? As in, “Sarah McLachlan’s ‘Fumbling Towards Ecstasy’ is a desert island CD.�

Correct me if I’m wrong, but I don’t believe there are any islands in the desert. There’s not even any water, how can there be islands?

Shouldn’t the phrase be “deserted island�? I mean, what you’re saying basically, is that these “desert island� items are things that you would bring with you if you were stuck on an island with no one around, right? Deserted.

Oh and remember this: when people ask you which CDs you’d bring to said island, none of them will do a damn bit of good without a battery operated CD player and a shitload of batteries. So be sure that’s in your list of requests.

Posted under Random Thoughts

This post was written by Amy on March 10, 2006

I finally got to see Charlotte Martin in concert!!

charmarpur_03.jpg
It’s been years in the making, but I finally got to see Charlotte. For those of you who know Terami, I was introduced to Char’s music through her. Through a series of odd events, I have managed to miss her every time she’s played here. But not this time! She was incredible. Just fabulous. Read the review and see some more photos. (Isn’t she gorgeous?)

Posted under Music

This post was written by Amy on March 10, 2006