Mee Siam is cooked with rice vermicelli or meehoon although it is called mee. Siam is the ancient name for Thailand where their cuisine is noted to be spicy, sourish and sweet. This dish has all these tastes, that's how the name derived.
Ingredients:
250g rice vermicelli or meehoon, soaked for five minutes and drained
200g beansprouts, remove root tips
250g prawns
2 pieces fried beancurd (tau kwa), sliced
100g chives, cut into 4cm-5cm lengths
1/4 cup oil
1 tbsp of assam jawa, add 1/2 cup warm water, squeeze and strain
2 cups of water(for cooking the prawns)
Pound:
3 cloves garlic
6 shallots
1 tbsp preserved soya beans (tau cheong)
50g dried prawns
12 dried chillies, soaked
2 pieces buah keras(candlenuts)
1 stalk serai (lemon grass) - sliced
1 sq inch belachan
Seasoning:
1 tsp sugar or to taste
1 tsp chicken stock granules
1/4 tsp pepper
1 tbsp Nampla (fish sauce)
Garnishing:
Chinese celery (kan choy) chopped
2 limes, cut into wedges
2 hard-boiled eggs, sliced
1 red chilly, sliced
Shallot crisps
Method:
Bring the 2 cups of water to the boil and add in the prawns, remove prawns as soon as they are cooked and put them in a bowl of ice water to stop the cooking. When cooled, peel the prawns and leave aside for garnishing.
Heat oil in a wok and stir-fry ground ingredients until fragrant. Add tamarind juice and 1 cup of stock from cooking the prawns. then bring to a boil and simmer for five minutes.
Add meehoon and stir-fry. Mix in beancurd slices and toss the meehoon well. Add seasoning and a squeeze of lime juice. Lastly add in the beansprouts and the chives toss until breansprouts and chives are just limp.
Dish mee siam onto platter. Garnish before serving.
Serves
Hi Lily
ReplyDeleteI tried your recipe and it was very good. Tasted quite close to the mee siam that is sold in the hawker centres.
Do you think adding crushed peanuts might make it a little better?
ANONYMOUS
ReplyDeleteglad you like the taste. Pad Thai has crushed peanuts and since mee siam must be originated from Siam, adding crushed peanuts will be good too.
hi lily....madethis today, but mine does not look like urs at all...it is a much lighter colour.....:(
ReplyDeleteLily:
ReplyDeleteIs this dish the same as Pad Thai?
speedolight
ReplyDeletethe pad thai noodle is specific to the dish so is mee siam. although it is called mee it is cooked with rice vermicelli only.
taste wise too is very different.
hello Lily what a lovely, mouthwatering blod you have! I'm so glad to have found your blog. Pictures looks great!
ReplyDeleteamrita
ReplyDeletethe color of the noodles depends on the type of tau cheong, dried chillies used. The taste is more important
Lily,
ReplyDeleteGreat site! Do you have a recipe for 'wet' mee siam? That is what I grew up with.
Thanks...
mb
ReplyDeleteyou must be singaporean. there is a sauce of tau cheong and chillies to serve with mee siam.
Hi Lily,
ReplyDeleteYesterday I made ur meesiam for dinner and it was delicious. I used almost the 3 out of the 4 bundles and it was wiped out....haha
i am making baked otak otak now...
June
june
ReplyDeletei would like to make otak otak but without the daun gadok the kick will not be there
Hello Lilyng, do you have a sambal belchan recipe, similar to an indonesian style. My email is gregerri@hotmail.com. I'm from australia and love asian food.
ReplyDeleteCheers greg
greg
ReplyDeletedo you want a sambal belacan for cooking or as a condiment
Hi Lily,
ReplyDeleteFirst of all, I would like to thank you for all the wonderful recipes you have posted. Knowing that those of us living abroad can still get a little taste of home is priceless.
I would like to know what is the brand of tau cheong did you use for the mee siam.
anonymous
ReplyDeletei am not very brand concious. i will use any brand, at the moment i am using the korean bean paste
Hi Lily,
ReplyDeleteI am gonna try this dish :D
I am wondering whether the belacan, candlenut and lemon grass are necessary ingredients? Out of the 3, which one would be the most important one? I have not seen candlenuts here and i am not sure how often i would use belacan if i were to buy it.
Also, instead of pounding, you think putting it in the food processor will work? I know the flavor would not be as good as pounded.
Thanks!
Yimnmeng
The belacan is the most important ingredient. The candlenut/buah keras is there just to thicken the sauce. Lemon grass is added flavor.
yes, the food processor does a good job in fact better than pounding.
i happ to come here by accidient and wow, nice site and great recipes! love yr mee siam
ReplyDelete