Thai Recipes
38 recipes

Thai Ginger Chicken Soup with Coconut Milk

Thai Sweet Basil Pesto with Peanuts

Quick Thai Red Curry Shrimp with Coconut Milk

Crispy Vermicelli-Wrapped Fried Shrimp

Vegetarian Thai Yellow Curry with Cashews

Healthy Turkey Pad Thai with Coconut Milk and Fresh Herbs

Thai Basil Pork Stir-Fry with Bok Choy and Sriracha Lime Sauce

Easy Chicken and Shrimp Pad Thai with Peanuts

Thai Spring Rolls With Homemade Peanut Sauce

Thai Shrimp Fire Pot Soup with Coconut Curry Broth

Poached Salmon with Thai Curry Coconut Sauce and Peas

Thai Curry Chicken Crescent Roll Pot Sticker Sandwiches

Lao Crispy Rice Salad (Nam Khao) with Pork and Herbs

Thai Red Curry Sea Scallops with Coconut Milk and Fresh Herbs
Thai cooking balances four tastes in nearly every dish. Sweet, sour, salty, bitter. Fish sauce provides salt. Palm sugar or regular sugar adds sweetness. Lime juice brings acid. Chilies and herbs deliver heat and bitterness.
A proper pad thai uses 2 tablespoons fish sauce, 2 tablespoons palm sugar, and 1 tablespoon tamarind paste for every 8 ounces of noodles. That ratio appears everywhere. Tom yum soup? Same balance, different ingredients.
You need a hot wok. Really hot. Restaurant burners hit 100,000 BTUs. Your home stove manages 15,000 BTUs on a good day. The workaround is cooking in small batches, maybe 2 servings at a time. Let that wok smoke before adding oil.
Fish sauce smells terrible. Tastes amazing. Buy a Thai or Vietnamese brand like Tiparos or Red Boat. The bottle should list only anchovies and salt. Skip anything with added sugar or preservatives.
Coconut milk comes in cans. Shake the can first. If you hear liquid sloshing, put it back. Good coconut milk separates into thick cream on top, thin milk below. You want that separation for curries. The cream fries in oil first, developing flavor before you add the watery part.
Most Thai dishes cook in under 15 minutes once you start. Prep takes longer. Pound curry paste in a mortar for 20 minutes. Slice vegetables uniformly so they cook evenly. Soak tamarind pulp in hot water, then push through a strainer.
Green papaya salad requires an actual green papaya, not an unripe regular papaya. Different fruit entirely. Find them at Asian grocery stores, hard as a potato. Shred with a julienne peeler or pound with a knife.
Thai basil wilts instantly. Add it off heat, stirring just until it softens. Regular basil won't work. Neither will dried Thai basil. Some ingredients have no substitutes.
Essential Ingredients
Key Techniques
FAQ
What wok should I buy for Thai cooking?
Carbon steel woks work best, 14 inches diameter minimum. Season it like cast iron. Nonstick woks can't handle the 500F+ temperatures Thai stir-fries need. Round-bottom woks require a wok ring for stability on home stoves. Expect to pay $30-50 for a decent one. Your first 10 dishes might taste metallic until the wok develops patina.
Can I make Thai curry from scratch without a mortar and pestle?
You can, but the texture suffers. Granite mortars with 2-cup capacity cost about $25. Food processors chop rather than crush, releasing different flavors. If you must use a processor, add 2 tablespoons water and pulse in 5-second bursts. Hand-pounded paste takes 20 minutes but lasts 2 weeks refrigerated.
Why does my pad thai turn out mushy?
Soak rice noodles in room temperature water for 45-60 minutes until pliable but still firm. Never use boiling water. Cook over highest heat for just 2-3 minutes once drained. Most home versions fail because of low heat or overcooked noodles. Work in 1-2 portion batches maximum.
How spicy should authentic Thai food be?
Thai restaurants typically use 5-10 fresh chilies per single serving. That equals 250,000-500,000 total Scoville units. Most Americans prefer 1-3 chilies. Start conservative and increase gradually. Remember that coconut milk reduces heat by about 50%, while sugar amplifies spicy perception.