Nuoc Cham Noodles

Desperate for fresh, raw vegetables in Taiwan, we frequented the Vietnamese Noodle restaurant.  Warned against it by all locals for fear of the worms that lived in raw foods, we plunged forward and learned that better to have the raw and deal with the worms later. This is a crispy and fresh Vietnamese meal.

Ingredients

  1. For the nuoc cham sauce:
  2. 1 clove garlic
  3. 2 to 3 Thai bird chiles (or 1 small jalapeƱo or serrano chile), cored, seeded, and minced
  4. 1/2 tsp. ground chile paste
  5. 2/3 cup hot water
  6. 1/4 cup granulated sugar
  7. 1/4 cup fish sauce
  8. 2 Tbs. fresh lime juice
  9. 2 Tbs. shredded carrots (optional)
  10. For the greens:
  11. 2 cups washed and shredded romaine, red, or green leaf lettuce
  12. 2 cups fresh, crisp bean sprouts
  13. 1-1/2 cups peeled, seeded, and julienned cucumber
  14. 1/3 to 1/2 cup roughly chopped or small whole mint leaves
  15. 1/3 to 1/2 cup roughly chopped or small basil or Thai basil leaves
  16. For the noodles:
  17. 8 oz. dried rice vermicelli
  18. For the topping:
  19. 1/2 lb. thinly sliced beef
  20. 1 small onion
  21. 1-2 tsp. hot pepper (to taste)
  22. For the garnishes:
  23. 2 Tbs. chopped roasted peanuts
  24. 12 sprigs fresh cilantro

Steps

  1. Mix the nuoc cham sauce:
  2. In a mortar and pestle, pound the garlic and fresh chiles to a paste. (Or mince them together with a knife.)
  3. In a small bowl, combine this garlic and chile mixture with the chile paste, hot water, and sugar.
  4. Stir well.
  5. Add the fish sauce and lime juice and combine.
  6. Float the carrots on top.
  7. Let sit for at least 15 minutes before using on noodles.
  8. Assemble the greens:
  9. Divide the lettuce, bean sprouts, cucumber, mint, and basil among four large soup or pasta bowls.
  10. Cover each bowl with damp paper towels and refrigerate.
  11. Cook the noodles:
  12. Bring a medium potful of water to a rolling boil.
  13. Add the rice vermicelli and, stirring often, cook them until the strands are soft and white, but still resilient, 3 to 5 minutes. Don't be tempted to undercook them, as they must be fully cooked to absorb the flavors of the dish.
  14. Rinse them in a colander under cold water just until they're cool and the water runs clear.
  15. Let the noodles drain in the colander for 30 minutes, and then set them aside for up to 2 hours, unrefrigerated.
  16. For the topping:
  17. Quick cook in wok thinly sliced beef with onion and hot pepper. Topping can be served hot or slightly cooled.
  18. To assemble the salads:
  19. Remove the salad bowls from the refrigerator 20 to 30 minutes before serving. The greens and bowl should be cool, not cold.
  20. Fluff the noodles with your fingers and divide them among the prepared salad bowls.
  21. Put the cooked topping on the noodles and garnish each bowl with the peanuts and cilantro.
  22. Pass the nuoc cham sauce at the table; each diner should drizzle about 3 Tbs. over the salad and then toss the salad in the bowl a few times with two forks or chopsticks before eating.

No-personal-image Check out Disty's profile.


Comments

Clampittphoto_thumb

Cynthia: As someone who travels a great deal, and who knows people who have suffered hideously from worms and other parasites, I would not recommend that anyone else take the "deal with the worms later" advice offered at the top of the recipe. Diseases caught from fresh vegetables in exotic locales can be dangerous, and you can actually have done irreparable damage (usually to your liver) by the time "later" comes around -- and you can even be dead, depending on what you catch. Get things you can peel, or go to a fancy hotel, where they will have treated the vegetables. Or wait till you get home. But do not take lightly the warnings of both locals and the Centers for Disease Control.

comment left Mar 27, 2008

No-personal-image

salgal: Disty,
Just printed this out. It sounds great - thank you!

comment left Mar 09, 2008

Links

Other recipes from Disty

About

Viewed 164 times
Favorited 1 time
Number of servings: 4
Prep time: 30 minutes
Cooking time: 10 minutes
Tags: vietnamese cuisine

Publication status

Available on Disty's profile

Add comment


This application requires Flash Player 7 (or better).

To download the latest version of the Flash Player: Click Here.

After installing the Flash Player, you may need to close and reopen the browser.