This is our maintained fallback experience and it may not include every feature of the regular site.

Games Hub

Learn cooking skills through fun games!

Kitchen games (quiz, memory, and arcade) are rolling out on the web. Explore what's coming on the Features page.

See Features
Pad thai noodles with shrimp, peanuts, bean sprouts, lime, and cilantro

Recipe

Pad Thai

30 min 2 servings

Nutrition (est.)

Per serving: 1 serving

Calories
520
Protein
24g
Carbs
62g
Fat
20g

Rice noodles stir-fried with shrimp, egg, and sweet-sour-salty sauce, topped with peanuts and lime.

More

Before you cook

Background Recipe story & origin

Thailand's national noodle dish, created in the 1930s and now loved worldwide.

Pad Thai was created as part of Thai nation-building under Prime Minister Plaek Phibunsongkhram in the 1930s-40s. Facing rice shortages and seeking to unify Thai identity, the government promoted rice noodles as an alternative staple and developed a standardized noodle dish. The name literally means 'Thai-style stir-fried,' emphasizing national identity. The dish draws from Chinese stir-fry techniques but uses distinctly Thai flavors: tamarind, fish sauce, palm sugar, and dried shrimp. Street vendors were given the recipe, creating remarkable consistency across Thailand. The dish features wide, flat rice noodles (sen lek), eggs, tofu, shrimp or chicken, bean sprouts, and crushed peanuts. Pad Thai became Thailand's most famous culinary export, though the street versions in Bangkok often differ significantly from international adaptations, which tend to be sweeter.

Before you start Equipment you'll need
  • wok — Provides high heat surface and room for tossing noodles during stir-frying process
  • tongs — Provides best tool for managing noodles and ingredients during high heat cooking
Safety Safety & allergen notes
  • Noodles must be properly soaked; undersoaked noodles don't cook through.
  • Wok gets very hot; keep water away.
  • Work quickly once cooking starts; overcooked noodles turn mushy.
Non-negotiables Rules for success
  • Soak noodles in room temperature water, not hot.

    Hot water makes noodles gummy; room temperature soaking keeps them chewy

  • Make pad thai in small batches.

    Overcrowded wok steams noodles instead of frying them; max 2 servings at once

  • Add sauce and toss quickly.

    Sauce should coat noodles, not pool; too much liquid makes soggy pad thai

  • Push noodles aside to cook eggs.

    Direct heat sets eggs properly; mixing too early makes rubbery egg bits

Prep Get set first

About 8 min of prep

  • Soak rice noodles in room temperature water
  • Mix sauce ingredients
  • Cube tofu and pat dry
  • Peel shrimp if needed
  • Beat eggs
  • Chop peanuts
  • Cut lime into wedges

Pad thai cooks fast but requires everything ready. Once you start, there's no time to prep.

Ingredients

Scale
Imperial Metric

Instructions

  1. Prep the noodles

    Soak rice noodles in room temperature water 30 minutes until pliable but still firm. Drain. Mix tamarind paste, fish sauce, and sugar until sugar dissolves.

  2. Cook the tofu and shrimp

    Heat 2 tablespoons oil in wok over high heat (400-450°F surface). Add tofu and fry until golden, about 3 minutes. Add shrimp and cook until pink, about 2 minutes. Transfer to plate.

  3. Stir-fry the noodles

    Add remaining 1 tablespoon oil to wok. Add garlic, stir 15 seconds. Add drained noodles and sauce. Toss constantly until noodles absorb sauce and soften, about 2 minutes. Push noodles to one side.

  4. Add the eggs and finish

    Crack eggs into cleared space in wok. Let set 20 seconds, then scramble and mix with noodles. Return tofu and shrimp. Add half the bean sprouts and all scallions. Toss to combine. Transfer to plates. Top with remaining bean sprouts and peanuts. Serve with lime wedges.

Chef's notes

Dried shrimp and preserved radish are traditional but optional for home cooking.

Tamarind paste is essential; there's no good substitute.

Thai rice stick noodles are about 3mm wide; don't use wide pho noodles.

Serve immediately; pad thai doesn't hold well.

noadscooking.com — Pad Thai

What's next?

Keep cooking with more ad-free recipes from our catalog.

How did it go?

Were the directions clear?
Did it meet your expectations?
Would you make it again?
Add optional details