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Tom Yum Goong (Thai hot and sour soup)

Updated: May 6, 2021

Prep time

10 mins

Cook time

20 mins

Total time

30 mins

Serves

3 - 5

Tom Yum Goong (ต้มยำกุ้ง) soup is one of the most well known dishes in Thai cuisine, and in this recipes you'll learn to make the authentic Thai street food style version. Enjoy this recipe for tom yum.

Ingredients


· 2 liters of water

· 4 stalks of lemongrass

· 1 inch chunk of galangal

· 10 kaffir lime leaves

· 10 Thai chilies

· 5 cloves of garlic

· ½ kilo shrimp

· 300 grams of oyster mushrooms

· 2 roma tomatoes

· 2 white onions (medium sized)

· 2 teaspoons of sugar

· 8 - 12 tablespoons of fish sauce (depending on your taste)

· 8 - 12 tablespoons of lime juice (10 - 15 limes)

· Handful of cilantro


Instructions


1. First thing to do is put about 2 litres of water in a pot to boil.

2. Then I like to start by squeezing my limes. This is not the first step of the recipe, but it’s best to have your limes squeezed so when you need them later, you don’t need to rush to squeeze them all. Slice about 10 limes and juice them all into a small bowl, and set them aside for later.

3. Take your stalks of lemongrass, and first tear off the outermost leaf and throw it out. Then, I like to use a mallet to lightly pound the lemongrass to release the flavours. Then just slice it diagonally into 1 inch strips or so.

4. Take about 1 thumb sized chunk of the root part of galangal, and chop it into slices.

5. Coarsely break about 10 kaffir lime leaves - no need to cut them, just tear them - which is going to help release their flavour.

6. Peel about 5 cloves of garlic.

7. I used about 10 Thai bird chilies (prik kee noo) for this recipe, but you can use however many you’d like. First, take off the stem, and then you can either just slice them in two pieces, or give them a little pound on your cutting board like I did (just be careful of flying seeds). You can also remove the seeds if you’d still like the chilli flavour but not as much heat.

8. Throw the lemongrass, galangal, kaffir lime leaves, garlic and chilies into the water. You can put on the lid just so it starts to boil and release all the herb flavours quicker.

9. Now prepare your shrimp (or whatever meat of choice you’re making tom yum with). Since I used goong mae nam (กุ้งแม่น้ำ), freshwater shrimp, I first chopped off all the tentacles.

10. Boil your soup with all the herbs in it for about 10 minutes, and you can go ahead and toss in the shrimp and turn the fire to low.

11. Then add your mushrooms, which you should pre rinse beforehand.

12. Take two roma tomatoes and two small white onions and slice them into wedges - you want them to be big and chunky. Then go ahead and add them to the tom yum.

13. If you’re using shrimp for this tom yum recipe, you might get some foam build up on top of your soup, in which case you can just lightly skim it off the top and toss it out.

14. Boil the tom yum for about 2 - 3 minutes.

15. Next, add about 6 tablespoons of fish sauce first, and 2 teaspoons of sugar. You may need more of each, but start with that.

16. Boil your tom yum for another minute or so and then turn off the heat. You don’t want your tom yum to be overcooked. The mushrooms and onions should be soft, and then it’s ready.

17. Once your heat is off, go back to your lime juice and add about 8 tablespoons of lime juice (depending on how sour you like it, I like it really sour).

18. Make sure you taste test until your tom yum is perfectly sour and salty. You might need to add more fish sauce, sugar, or lime juice.

19. Finally chop up a handful of fresh cilantro, throw it in the soup, and give your tom yum a final stir. The lime juice and cilantro taste fresher and more vibrant when not boiled, so that’s why I turn off the heat before adding them.

20. You now have Tom yum goong nam sai (ต้มยำกุ้งน้ำใส), the clear version of tom yum.


Notes

Tom Yum Goong (ต้มยำกุ้ง) is a Thai soup that's meant to be eaten with a variety of other Thai dishes. It's not normally eaten as an individual bowl of soup, the way it would be in Western cultures, but instead it's

a communal dish that goes together with other dishes and eaten with rice. See more of our authentic



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