I usually make this when I’m craving something like pad thai but don’t want that heavy, overly sweet version. This one is a bit calmer — still full of flavor, but you don’t feel like you need a nap after.
Also, adding salmon instead of the usual chicken or shrimp makes it feel a bit more like a proper meal, not just noodles.
Related recipes: Easy Thai Shrimp Soup at Home
Broccoli Grape Salad with Balanced Sweet and Savory Flavor
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Ingredients
How to make it
- Start with the noodles. Cover them with hot water and let them soak until pliable — they should bend easily but still feel slightly firm. If they get too soft at this stage, they’ll fall apart later in the pan.
- At the same time, heat the oven and roast the salmon with half of the olive oil, salt, and pepper. Cook just until it flakes — usually around 10–12 minutes. Don’t overdo it, because it will warm up again later. Once done, set it aside and break it into large pieces.
- Heat the remaining oil in a wide pan or wok. Add the garlic and stir briefly, just until you smell it — it burns fast, so don’t walk away here.
- Add the bell pepper, carrot, and spring onions. Stir-fry over fairly high heat so they soften slightly but keep their crunch. If they start releasing too much liquid, the heat is too low.
- Push everything to one side of the pan and crack in the eggs. Let them set for a few seconds, then scramble gently. It’s fine if they stay in soft pieces rather than fully mixed in.
- Add the drained noodles along with the soy sauce, fish sauce, lime juice, and brown sugar. Toss everything together — at first it might look uneven, but after a minute or two the noodles will loosen and take on the sauce.
- Taste at this point. You’re looking for a balance: salty, slightly sweet, a bit tangy. If it leans too sweet, a squeeze more lime helps; if it feels flat, a tiny splash of fish sauce usually fixes it.
- Right at the end, gently fold in the salmon so it stays in chunks and doesn’t break apart completely.
- Finish with peanuts and fresh cilantro.
- (I once added the salmon too early and kept stirring — it basically disappeared into the noodles. Still good, just not what I wanted. Adding it at the end keeps those nice pieces intact.)
More ideas: Hearty Mushroom Salad with Warm Pan-Fried Oyster Mushrooms
Quinoa Tabbouleh with Bright Herbs and Lemon Flavor








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