Ginger Shrimp & Glass Noodles กุ้งอบวุ้นเส้น Goong Ob Woonsen

Pailin Chongchitnant • November 20, 2015

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This is something I always order without fail whenever we go to a seafood restaurant in Thailand! Glass noodles and shrimp are cooked together in a pot with lots of ginger, garlic and pepper. It's such a classic, with a unique flavour that makes it an iconic dish of Thai seafood restaurants.

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Goong ob woonsen

Ginger Shrimp & Glass Noodles กุ้งอบวุ้นเส้น Goong Ob Woonsen


Ingredients

Sauce:

  • 2 Tbsp soy sauce
  • 2 Tbsp oyster sauce
  • 1 tsp black soy sauce or dark soy sauce
  • 2 tsp sugar
  • 1 tsp toasted sesame oil
  • 120 mL chicken stock or water

The Rest

  • 80 g dry glass noodles (sometimes labelled "bean vermicelli" or "bean threads")
  • 8 - 10 medium shrimp, head on, shell on if possible
  • ½ tsp black peppercorns
  • ½ tsp white peppercorns
  • 6 cloves garlic
  • 15 slices ginger
  • 8 cilantro stems or 3  cilantro roots
  • 2 Tbsp vegetable oil
  • 1 green onion, sliced on a bias, or a handful Chinese celery leaves

Note: Traditionally, this dish is served right in the pot it is cooked in. So if you have a clay pot or a nice piece of cast iron ware with a lid, it would be perfect for this. Otherwise just use a regular pot and transfer it to a serving bowl after.

Ingredients and Kitchen Tools I Use


Instructions

Soak glass noodles in room temperature water for 10 minutes to soften. Drain. If you want, you can cut the noodles with scissors just a couple of times to shorten them and make them easier to eat.

Prep shrimp: Trim off the shrimp's long antennae and, if you want, the sharp pointy end on top of the head (I recommend trimming this off if you're serving kids). Using pointy scissors or a small paring knife, cut the back of the shrimp shell open all the way to the tail and remove the vein. Rinse and set aside.

Mix all sauce ingredients together and stir until the sugar is dissolved. Put the noodles and the shrimp into a wide bowl and pour the sauce over top. Toss the noodles and the shrimp in the sauce then let it sit while you prep the herbs, stirring it half way through.

In a mortar and pestle, grind the peppercorns until fine. Add the garlic and smash just until broken into pieces. Add cilantro stems or roots and smash them just to bruise. Add the smashed herbs, the ginger, and the oil to a heavy-bottomed pot with a tight fitting lid that is just big enough to hold the noodles and the shrimp.

Heat the pot over medium heat until the herbs are sizzling. Once you can smell the herbs in the air, a dd the noodles to the pot along with all the sauce, putting the shrimp on top. Cover and cook over medium high heat just until you can hear the sauce boiling inside. Then lower the heat to medium low and cook for 3 minutes.

Open the pot and stir the noodles around to redistribute the sauce, then cover and cook for another 2-3 minutes or until the shrimp and the noodles are done and the sauce is no longer pooling at the bottom. Taste, and if the noodles are not fully cooked, add a splash of water or stock, then stir and let it cook a bit longer until done.

Turn off the heat, transfer to a serving bowl (unless you're serving it right from the pot), top with green onions or Chinese celery leaves. Cover the bowl (you can just use a plate) and let the herb steam for at least one more minute or until ready to serve. Serve with jasmine rice. Enjoy!

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