How to Make Chicken Pad Thai at Home (2024)

Updated: Dec. 06, 2023

Chicken pad thai uses lots of pantry staples and a few special Thai ingredients to create a meal that is sweet, salty and slightly nutty.

This chicken pad thai recipe keeps your prep and cooking to under an hour, and with a few new pantry purchases, it’s a pretty affordable meal to make at home. This classic meal is a stir-fried noodle dish. While this recipe uses chicken, other popular proteins include tofu, pork and shrimp. Whether you’ve had it at a Thai restaurant or have been lucky enough to travel to Thailand to enjoy it there, it’s worth learning how to make it at home.

What Is Pad Thai?

Pad thai fuses a fun combination of flavors and textures like tanginess, caramelly sweetness and salty notes, thanks to the peanuts and fish sauce. And while flavorful, it’s not spicy unless you add your own heat to it. Tang and hints of lime are prevailing notes that are essential to a chicken pad thai recipe. These flavors make it distinguishable from its more savory and soy-based stir-fried noodle siblings, such as pad see ew or pad kee mao.

Key Ingredients in Pad Thai

There are many essential Thai ingredients, and this dish uses a few that you’re not going to want to skip.

Rice Noodles

Rice noodles are quintessential to Thai cuisine, and there are so many kinds! Pad thai is made with a flat rice noodle, which gives a nice bite and natural sweetness to the dish. It’s similar to the shape of linguine or fettuccine. This makes the dish naturally gluten-free. Once you’ve added these flat rice noodles to your pantry, there will be endless ways to use them in your cooking (like this tasty rice noodle salad recipe!).

Tamarind Paste or Concentrate

Tamarind is a fruit pod whose flavor can be comparable to biting into a lime. It’s very tangy with caramel notes, and a great alternative to using lime if you don’t want to add too much liquid to a dish. It comes in either a packed square or jar of concentrate. You can always make your own seedless concentrate from the tamarind pack, but for beginners, I think the concentrate is a great shortcut as it’s consistent and there are many uses for it.

Fish Sauce

Fish sauce is a standard condiment used in Thai cooking and a must for making pad thai. It’s a lovely alternative to using salt when making stir-fries, curries and sauces. If you are vegan or vegetarian or prefer not to use fish sauce but something that has a similar taste, there are great alternative fish sauces on the market.

Mung Bean Sprouts

Mung bean sprouts are not your usual sprouts—they have a juicier crunch than standard sprouts you’d use for your sandwiches. These are commonly used in a lot of Asian cooking because of their health benefits and great bite they give to noodle soups or saucy dishes. You can find them at most standard grocery stores in their specialty produce section. A tasty substitute is shredded cabbage.

How to Make Pad Thai with Chicken

I use my own special technique of making the sauce pretty silky by adding the pre-whisked eggs into the wok the same time as the tamarind base. I recommend having everything already prepared as described from the ingredients list so you don’t have to pause mid-recipe to slice. This recipe makes three to four servings.

Also, if you like experimenting and trying different recipes; dive into thischicken satay recipewith a creamy, peppery peanut sauce for dipping.

Ingredients

How to Make Chicken Pad Thai at Home (1)Malina Syvoravong for Taste of Home

  • 7 ounces flat rice noodles (most packages are 14 ounces, so use half)
  • 1/3 cup tamarind concentrate
  • 1/2 cup fish sauce
  • 3 tablespoons brown sugar
  • 2 tablespoons paprika (optional, for color)
  • 1 chicken breast, sliced into 1/2 inch strips
  • 3-4 tablespoons high heat cooking oil, plus more if needed
  • 2 eggs, cracked and whisked
  • 1 small yellow onion, sliced
  • 2-3 garlic cloves, minced
  • 2 cups bean sprouts
  • 3-4 green onions, using only the green portion, cut into 3-inch strips
  • 2 teaspoons lime juice
  • 1 cup peanuts, roughly chopped (use cashews or another nut if allergic)
  • 2-3 tablespoons dried chili flakes, optional
  • 2-3 limes, cut into wedges

Directions

Step 1: Soak noodles

How to Make Chicken Pad Thai at Home (2)Malina Syvoravong for Taste of Home

Soak rice noodles in a large bowl of warm water for at least 30 minutes prior to cooking. Strain out from the water and set aside until ready to cook.

Step 2: Make the tamarind sauce

How to Make Chicken Pad Thai at Home (3)Malina Syvoravong for Taste of Home

Mix your tamarind concentrate, fish sauce, brown sugar and paprika together in a small bowl. Set aside.

Step 3: Cook the chicken

How to Make Chicken Pad Thai at Home (4)Malina Syvoravong for Taste of Home

Heat your wok or frying pan to a medium-high temperature, add your oil and let it coat the surface, then add your onions and chicken. Let the onion sweat and chicken partially cook, about two to three minutes, then add your garlic and stir.

Step 4: Stir in the rice noodles

How to Make Chicken Pad Thai at Home (5)Malina Syvoravong for Taste of Home

After the garlic has been added, let it cook with everything for a minute. Add your rice noodles, and cook until it’s partially softened. Then you can finally add half of the peanuts, half of the green onions and about half of the mung beans. Using tongs, give this a toss so that it’s thoroughly mixed in with the rest of the stir-fry.

Step 5: Add the tamarind sauce

Finally, pour in the tamarind sauce and whisked eggs over the stir-fry until it’s well-coated. Stir it around until it looks like the eggs are cooked, and the sauce has absorbed into the noodles. This should take another three to four minutes.

Step 6: Serve

Plate the chicken pad thai with the rest of the fresh veggies and peanuts. Serve it with lime wedges and red chili flakes on the side.

Tips for Making Chicken Pad Thai

Is there a substitute for tamarind paste in chicken pad thai?

The tamarind can be substituted with most things that have a very tart lime flavor; it’s the tang that you are looking to replace. Start with an equal amount of lime juice to the tamarind concentrate as the recipe calls for. I’ve also known folks to use blended dates and lime juice as an alternative!

What other noodles can I use for chicken pad thai?

To keep the dish gluten-free, I would try bean-thread noodles as they are great for stir-frying as well. For noodles that are similar in shape and form but wheat-based, try using fettuccine or linguine. Use the cooking directions on the box or cook until al dente.

What other proteins can I use in pad thai?

The classic proteins used in pad thai are usually shrimp, pork and tofu. Our shrimp pad thai recipe serves four and cooks up in 30 minutes. Not a seafood fan? Opt for a pork pad thai. The pork tenderloin has a strip of fat along the length of it that adds delicious flavor to the dish as it cooks.

How should you store leftover chicken pad thai?

Thankfully, pad thai is pretty easy to store! You can just toss it in an airtight container or a resealable plastic bag and store for three to four days.

How to Make Chicken Pad Thai at Home (2024)

FAQs

What is Pad Thai sauce made of? ›

Pad Thai Sauce is made with fish sauce, oyster sauce, brown sugar and tamarind. Tamarind is the ingredient that is the heart and soul of Pad Thai sauce, giving the sauce the sour flavour that Pad Thai is known for. It's an ingredient used in South East Asian cooking, like this Malaysian Beef Rendang.

What is chicken Pad Thai made of? ›

What is Chicken Pad Thai Made of? This Thai street food dish is primarily made with small pieces of cooked chicken, eggs, rice, noodles, an assortment of veggies and seasonings. Then it's all tossed in a sweet and savory sauce. My sauce is made with ketchup, fish sauce, sugar, garlic, peanut butter, and lime.

What is a substitute for tamarind paste in Pad Thai? ›

If your recipe calls for 1 tablespoon tamarind paste, substitute with 1 tablespoon vinegar mixed with 1 tablespoon brown sugar. If using fresh lime juice, substitute 2 tablespoons lime juice for every 1 tablespoon tamarind paste. Both substitutes work best when the amount of tamarind paste is 2 tablespoons or less.

How long to soak rice noodles for Pad Thai? ›

Soak the dried rice noodles in cool or lukewarm water for 30 minutes, or until they're limp but still firm to the touch; later cooking in the wok will soften them more. Drain the noodles thoroughly in a colander and set aside while preparing the other ingredients.

What are the ingredients in a taste of Thai Pad Thai? ›

ingredients: palm sugar, water, tamarind, shallot, sweet radish, garlic, soybean oil, potassium chloride, maltodextrin, miso (soybean, rice, salt), salt, hydrolyzed vegetable protein (soybeans, corn, maltodextrin), yeast extract, paprika oleoresin, citric acid, alpha-tocopherol (antioxidant), chili oleoresin.

What sauce does Thai use? ›

Prik nam pla is a sauce that Thai people use as the all-purpose flavour enhancer. It is a tableside condiment you put on the finished dish, much like salt and pepper in the West, but it's not something you cook with. Prik nam pla is salty, spicy, umami and acidic.

What can I use instead of tamarind sauce? ›

Lemons and limes combined with maple syrup, date syrup, or honey, can make excellent substitutes for tamarind paste due to their similar acidity and sweetness levels. Though not an exact match, lemon and lime juice can approximate the sourness of tamarind when used carefully in recipes.

What does tamarind taste like? ›

What does it taste like? Tamarind has a unique, sweet-sour flavour that makes it popular in sweet and savoury dishes alike. Its flavour has been compared to tangy lemon or lime balanced by sweet caramel notes, or a cross between lemon, apricot and dates.

What is tamarind made of? ›

The fruit comes from the tamarind tree and is cocooned inside seed pods. It has a date-like texture and is crushed to make tamarind paste or a less-diluted tamarind concentrate. The fruit can also be extracted from fresh pods or purchased in chunks. It is a culinary staple in the Caribbean, India, Thailand, and Mexico.

What happens if you don't soak rice noodles? ›

Do I need to soak my rice noodles before stir frying? You will need to soften dried noodles before stir frying by soaking them in boiling water. Fresh rice noodles, available at Asian grocery stores, do not need to be soaked before adding to your stir fry, as they will cook during frying.

Is it better to soak or boil rice noodles? ›

Rice noodles are very easy for home cooks to make — simply soak them in warm water (not cold water, not hot water) for 10-15 minutes, or until they are soft. Unlike wheat pasta, you don't need to boil rice noodles; the warm water is enough to cook them through.

Why is my pad Thai sour? ›

Tamarind: Tamarind pulp/paste is a sticky, sour product that's called for in authentic Pad Thai recipes. For our family though, it'd be a single use ingredient and we wouldn't have a need for it outside of this recipe. Furthermore it seems the product can vary taste-wise depending on the brand/source.

Why is Pad Thai sauce orange? ›

When it's sold in restaurants outside Thailand, the noodles are sometimes bright orange – that's because sauces or spices, like paprika, have been used instead of tamarind. Authentic Pad Thai is a light reddish-brown colour.

Why does Pad Thai taste so good? ›

There is a scientific reason why Pad Thai is so delicious. It follows a Thai culinary tradition of using all five tastes which are salty, sour, sweet, spicy and bitter. That is why the dish is so tantalizingly tasty!… It hits all five flavor profiles in the mouth!

Does Pad Thai always have peanut sauce? ›

It might have shrimp, fish sauce, peanuts or sometimes cashews, egg, tofu (soy), and sometimes soy sauce (which contains wheat) and wheat starch (if one uses fresh noodles instead of dried rice noodles).

Does Pad Thai always have soy sauce? ›

It is usually a mixture of fish sauce (condiment made of fish), oyster sauce (made from oyster extract), brown sugar and tamarind (tree seed), but can also include shrimp, garlic, shallots or red chili pepper. Some establishments or chefs may use soy sauce, which is traditionally made by fermenting soybeans and wheat.

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