hot and spicy noodles, three ways

recipes

hot and spicy noodles, three ways

It was International Hot and Spicy Food Day on Jan 16th and we extended it to a week, bringing you the spiciest noodles from the spiciest part of the world, Asia.

Asian cuisine is known for its spice and its incredible flavour. But all these spices have incredible health benefits as well – the likes of turmeric, cumin, garlic, ginger all have antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and anti-microbial effects.

We thought noodles were the best to embody the spice and flavour profiles of different parts of Asia, so here goes, enjoy!

hot and spicy noodles, three ways
pad thai

pad thai

thai-inspired

A classic thai dish we all adore and you can’t deny the pure bliss you get from the feeling the peanut crunch as you bite into it, the tangy sourness from the sauce and lime and the after heat from the chilli. A fully body experience really.

"hakka" noodles

indo chinese-inspired

While Hakka cuisine often refers to a style of cuisine of those who settled in the harbour and port areas of Hong Kong, for many in South Asia, “Hakka cuisine” is often your childhood interpretation of Chinese cuisine. Hakka noodles is actually an Indian/Pakistani version of North Eastern Chinese cuisine – nothing representative of the authentic hakka cuisine. But either ways, here’s a tribute to childhood, street style indo-chinese food!

hakka noodles
biang biang noodles

cumin paneer biang biang noodles

chinese-inspired

This has been the most fun because we got to bang (or biang) noodles with our hands, paired with a spicy sauce from Xi’an. We took a homieats twist and used paneer instead pork or lamb to replace the protein in this dish!

pad thai

the stuff

thai rice stick noodles

the sauce:
3 tbsp brown sugar
4 tbsp soy sauce
45 ml water
4 tbsp tamarind (the hero!)

the protein:
15 shrimps
2-3 eggs
3-4 garlic cloves, chopped
1 onion, sliced
scallions, chopped
(bean sprouts if you like)

the garnish:
roasted peanuts, chopped
more scallions
dry chilli flakes
lime wedges

the method

  1. Soak the noodles in water for an hour.
  2. Prep the sauce. Melt the sugar in medium heat until it turns dark brown.
  3. Immediately add the water, tamarind and soy sauce. (don’t worry if the sugar hardens!)
  4. Let it simmer and turn off the heat to let the sugar dissolve.
  5. While the sugar dissolves, time to get the stir fry in. 
  6. In a pan, sear the shrimps.
  7. Take them off the pan, and add garlic, onion and scallions until they wilt.
  8. Now, check if the sugar is dissolved and the sauce is all smooooth.
  9. Turn the heat up and drain and add the noodles in the pan and pour the sauce into the pan.
  10. Stir until the sauce is all soaked up and cooked. add a little water if the noodles are undercooked.
  11. Shove the noodles to the side, add oil and crack a couple of eggs.
  12. Break the yolks and let it cook for a bit before you stir up the noodles.
  13. Add the shrimps back in and stir.
  14. Pop onto a plate. Sprinkle some chilli flakes, peanuts and scallions.
  15. Squeeze some lime, twirl on a chopstick and enjoy!

hakka noodles

the stuff

egg noodles

the veggies
3 garlic cloves, minced
1/2 inch ginger, minced
1 red onion, diced
1 green chilli, diced
1 red bell pepper, sliced
1 carrot, sliced
leeks (or scallions… or both), thinly sliced

the spice & sauce:
2 tbsp soy sauce
1 tsp siracha
1 tbsp rice vinegar
salt and pepper, to taste
1 tsp chilli oil, to serve

the method

  1. Boil and drain your noodles (follow the instructions on your packet!).
  2. Coat the drained noodles in some oil to prevent them from sticking.
  3. Heat up some oil in a wok then dump in your ginger, garlic, and green chillies. 
  4. Next up, onions. Then the rest of your veggies.
  5. Saute until slightly soft but still a bit crunchy. 
  6. Push them to the sides and make a well in the middle.
  7. Pour in the soy sauce, siracha, and rice vinegar in the middle. stir to coat the veggies well. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
  8. Dump in your noodles and give it a bigggg stir.
  9. Final touch – some chilli oil for that extra spice and voila!

cumin paneer biang biang noodles

the stuff

the noodles:
400g flour
220 ml water
1/2 tsp salt

Side note: the instructions from Omnivore’s Cookbook is probably better, follow that!

the spice:
2 tbsp cumin seeds
2 tsp sichuan peppercorns (or just normal)
1 tsp coriander seeds

the sauce:
1/2 cup chilli oil
3 tbsp rice wine vinegar
1/4 cup rice wine
8 tsp soy sauce

the veggies: 
a block of paneer
1 red onion, sliced
1 chilli, sliced
garlic and ginger, minced
coriander, to serve

the method

  1. First, prep the noodle dough. Stir water and salt until it dissolves.
  2. Add flour into a large bowl and splash water, little by little, mixing it with chopsticks or a spatula.
  3. Once all the water is added, the dough looks like shaggy threads.
  4. Knead the dough into a rough ball. (doesn’t have to be smooth!)
  5. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let it rest for 20 min.
  6. Once the dough is rested, knead it for 1-2 min until it’s smooth.
  7. Divide the dough in half and roll each dough into a 1/2cm thick oval.
  8. Lather it up in oil and let it rest for 2 hours.
  9. Meanwhile, prep the spice. Add cumin, peppercorns and coriander to a dry pan and roast over medium heat for 5 min, until you hear them pop.
  10. Take the spices off the heat and grind them – manual pound on a mortar and pestle like we did (great arm workout) or a quick 1 min press on an electric grinder.
  11. In a bowl, marinate the cubed paneer with half the fresh spice, salt and oil for 15 minutes.
  12. Prep the sauce. Mix the chilli oil, vinegar, wine and soy sauce.
  13. Add oil to the pan and add garlic, ginger and the paneer until its brown.
  14. Add onions and chillies and fry until they’re soft.
  15. Add the remaining spice mix to coat everything.
  16. Pour the sauce and stir fry for another 30 sec and turn the heat off.
  17. By now, the noodle dough should be all stretchy, so boil a pot of water.
  18. Take your prepared dough and cut them lengthwise, we embrace difference and diversity so we had different lengths and widths (or really just amateurs).
  19. Now the fun bit, stretch each piece as much as possible by banging or bianging it against the table.
  20. Throw it into the boiled water and cook for 1-2 min.
  21. Drain the noodles and toss it in the spicy sauce in medium heat.
  22. Drop in some coriander and YUM.

© 2022 homieats

tacos, three ways

recipes

tacos, three ways

It’s #NationalTacoDay in the UK, so here’s a little spin on this Mexican favourite. Using Earth & Wheat’s chilli tortillas, we reconstruct tacos taking you from from Mexico to Sri Lanka, Thailand and India, with bits of amma’s kitchen in all three of them.

This was particularly exciting because tacos are one of the most versatile foods that allows you to mix and match different flavours, truly living up to our flowing concept. And so, if you have a taco flavour you’d like us to try, comment below!

pulled roast chicken & eggplant sambal

jaffna-inspired

Eggplant sambal and chicken curry is a common feature during  a Sunday lunch at our home. What Amma would usually feed us with rice, we decided to put this on a taco. 

crispy battered cod & "papaya" salad

thai-inspired

We couldn’t find raw, green papayas so here’s a twist with green apples. And those spicy sweet sour taste could only go well with some battered fish!

pan-fried paneer masala & coriander chutney

indian-inspired

We take some quintessentially Indian flavours in this third twist – paneer masala and coriander chuntey with some good ‘ol fresh red cabbage salad.

pulled roast chicken & eggplant sambal

the stuff

the main:
chicken breast (or jackfruit)
chilli powder
cumin powder
coriander powder
turmeric
salt & pepper
oil

the salad:
1 eggplant
1 onion
turmeric
oil
2 tsp cumin
3 tsp mustard 
ginger-garlic paste
4-5 dried chillies
apple cider vinegar

the dressing:
yoghurt
lemon
chives
salt & pepper

the method

  1. Pre-heat the oven to 200oC.
  2. Rub the chicken breast with all the spices and pop them into the oven for about 30-40 min.1 2
  3. While the chicken cooks, slice them eggplant and onion into thin strips.
  4. Stir fry with a pinch of salt and turmeric. 
  5. While they cook, grind the cumin, mustard, ginger-garlic paste in a food processor.
  6. You know the eggplants and onions are well-cooked when they are in a nice brown shade. It’s now time to turn off the flame and mix the ground spices in with some vinegar.
  7. Prepare your sauce by squeezing some lemon into a scoop of yoghurt.
  8. Once the chicken is done, pull it apart into shreds with two forks (sounds like our lives but hey!).
  9. Time to assemble: scoop some pulled chicken onto a tortilla, top it with a bit of the eggplant sambal, and drizzle that yoghurt sauce!

 

1 You can prepare this in advance, it always tastes better the day after when the chicken’s soaked in all the juices and spices!

2 If you’re using jackfruit instead, pull the jackfruit, shredding into pieces and fry it in a pan with the different spices.

crispy battered cod & "papaya" salad

the stuff

the main:
3 pieces of cod 
75g plain flour
100ml chilled water
salt & pepper

the salad:
3 green apples (or a raw green papaya), cut into matchsticks
1 dried red chilli
1 clove garlic
1 1/2 tbsp sugar
1 1/2 tbsp lime juice
1/2 tbsp tamarind paste
1/3 cup cherry tomatoes
4 green beans, sliced
1 carrot, chopped into matchsticks
2 tbsp chopped salted peanuts

the dressing:
honey
dijon mustard
olive oil
salt & pepper

the method

  1. Toast the peanuts over a medium heat until golden brown and set aside.
  2. Pound the chilli and garlic coarsely.
  3. Add in sugar, tamarind and lime juice and mix.1
  4. Toss in the beans and tomatoes and lightly pound.
  5. Drop in the carrots and apples and mix. Set aside.
  6. Whisk the chilled water with some flour, salt and pepper to make the batter. Coat the cod slices in the batter.
  7. In a pan, heat some oil at high heat to shallow fry the cod. Lower the heat if it starts splattering!
  8. Flip sides and cook until they’re all golden brown!
  9. Time for the dressing: mix equal amounts of honey, dijon mustard, and olive oil. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
  10. Assemble it the same way – the main stuff goes first, followed by that apple/papaya salad, and finally drizzle over some sweet-tangy sauce.

 

1 If you can’t find any tamarind, fish sauce works just as well. If you can’t find that either, well just pump up the lime juice quantity to match.

pan-fried paneer masala & coriander chutney

the stuff

the main:
paneer, cubed
chilli powder
cumin and coriander powder
masala powder
turmeric
yoghurt
salt & pepper

the salad:
red cabbage
vinegar
salt & pepper

the dressing:
fresh coriander
fresh mint
2-3 green chillies, chopped
1-inch ginger, chopped
lemon juice
salt & pepper

the method

  1. Rub the paneer cubes with all the spices mixed in yogurt. Set aside.
  2. Shred red cabbage, season with some salt and pepper.
  3. In a pan, heat some oil on medium-low heat. Fry the paneer cubes until golden brown on all sides.
  4. In a food processor, blend all the ingredients for the chutney.1
  5. It’s eating time! Crumble the fried paneer onto a tortilla, drop some fresh red cabbage salad, and top with the coriander chutney.

 

1 You can add some water and/or yoghurt depending on the consistency you like, to get a smoother texture.

© 2022 homieats