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Home Cuisines Thai Recipes

Pad Thai

By:Nagi
Published:14 Jan '20Updated:30 Jul '23
947 Comments
Recipe v Video v Dozer v

This is a Pad Thai recipe that truly stacks up to great Thai restaurants yet is totally doable for every home cook with just a trip to your every day grocery store. With the slippery noodles, signature sweet-savoury flavour, sprinkle of peanuts and tang from lime, this is a Thai food favourite for good reason!

This is a reader-favourite recipe included by popular demand in my debut cookbook “Dinner”!

Chicken Pad Thai in a black skillet, fresh off the stove, ready to be served.

Pad Thai recipe

Pad Thai is one of the world’s most beloved noodle dishes. Along with Thai Green Curry and Red Curry, this is the dish by which every Thai restaurant is measured. In fact, I was trying to find the “best” Thai restaurant in my area just last week and it brought me much amusement that Pad Thai was the baseline of a favourable or unfavourable rating for almost every review!

If you’ve been disappointed by basic Pad Thai recipes in the past, have faith – I promise this one delivers!

Close up of Chicken Pad Thai.

What is Pad Thai??

Pad Thai is a Thai noodle stir fry with a sweet-savoury-sour sauce scattered with crushed peanuts. It’s made with thin, flat rice noodles, and almost always has bean sprouts, garlic chives, scrambled egg, firm tofu and a protein – the most popular being chicken or prawns/shrimp.

Authentic Pad Thai

Authentic Pad Thai on the streets of Thailand has a distinct fishy/prawny “funk” (which sounds thoroughly unappetising but is actually completely addictive and the very essence of true Thai street food). If authentic is what you’re after, try this Prawn/Shrimp version I shared from Spice I Am Thai restaurant.

On the other end of the spectrum, a quick Google is all it takes to find a myriad of basic westernised versions which are typically made with not much more than something sour (vinegar, lime juice), soy sauce and sugar. These recipes will not taste like any Pad Thai you’ve had from a restaurant.

This recipe I’m sharing today lies in the middle between hardcore authentic version (which even I find borderline too fishy) and very basic westernised recipes that tend to lack the proper depth of flavour and are typically too sweet.

It truly stacks up to your favourite Thai takeout – except less oily (restaurants tend to use loads of oil) – but you will not need to hunt in the dark corners of an Asian store to find the ingredients.

Chicken Pad Thai in a black skillet, fresh off the stove, ready to be served.

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.

Authentic Pad Thai is made with Tamarind pulp which comes in a block (size of a soap bar) which is then soaked in hot water, then pressed through a sieve to make tamarind puree.

To make life easy, I use ready made tamarind puree which is sold at supermarkets here in Australia. 🙌🏻🙌🏻 Or Asian stores, obviously (and it’s cheaper).

Sauce for Pad Thai and Tamarind Puree
Can’t find Tamarind Puree?

Believe it or not, a great substitute is ketchup. With a few tweaks to the recipe, you can achieve a similar, extremely good outcome!

A comparison of Pad Thai made using a Tamarind sauce and a ketchup sauce.
Comparison of Pad Thai made with Ketchup sub option, compared to authentic version. 

The Noodles

Pad Thai is made with flat dried rice noodles which can be found in everyday supermarkets.

I recommend Chang’s “Thai style” rice noodles rather than the actual Thai brand rice noodles (Erawan Rice Sticks – red pack below) that are sold at supermarkets.

Chang’s are less prone to breaking and require just 5 minutes of soaking in hot water.

The Erawan Rice Sticks are far more prone to breaking when stir frying.

Best Noodles for Pad Thai - Changs rice noodles

Other ingredients in Pad Thai

Here are two more ingredients that are very Pad Thai-centric: firm tofu and garlic chives.

You’ll find firm tofu at the supermarket too – go for the firmest plain tofu you can find (read the label, give the packet a squeeze to check). Don’t even think about trying this with soft tofu – it will just totally disintegrate!

Garlic chives are the big brother of normal chives. They taste like garlicky chives (I know, you’re shocked right? 😂) and are shaped like blades of grass. These are also sold at supermarkets here in Australia (with the other fresh herbs). Sub with extra garlic and green onions if you can’t find them.

Firm Tofu and Garlic Chives for Pad Thai

How to make Pad Thai

Once you’ve gathered the ingredients, the making part is actually very straight forward!

As with all stir fries, make sure you have all the ingredients prepared and ready to toss into the wok or skillet because once you start cooking, things move fast!

How to make Pad Thai
Overhead photo of Chicken Pad Thai on a rustic white plate with a side of cucumbers, ready to be eaten.

I cannot believe how I’ve just written about Pad Thai without barely pausing for a breathe.

I’m going to stop here before I run out of space for the recipe. 😂

So – meet your new favourite Pad Thai recipe. The one you will make over and over again, any night of the week, just by popping into Woolies on the way home. WHOOOOT!!!!! – Nagi xx


Watch how to make it

This recipe features in my debut cookbook Dinner. The book is mostly new recipes, but this is a reader favourite included by popular demand!

Hungry for more? Subscribe to my newsletter and follow along on Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram for all of the latest updates.

Chicken Pad Thai fresh off the stove ready to be served

Pad Thai

Author: Nagi
Prep: 20 minutes mins
Cook: 10 minutes mins
Total: 30 minutes mins
Mains
Thai
4.95 from 378 votes
Servings2 – 3 people
Tap or hover to scale
Print
  • 2360
Recipe video above. Here's a Pad Thai recipe that really does taste just as good as takeout from good Thai restaurants, and you'll find everything you need at the supermarket! I use chicken here but feel free to switch with any protein, even prawns/shrimp. 
If you're after a truly authentic Pad Thai recipe, see here – but be warned that most people will find it a little too "real" for their palettes because Pad Thai in Thailand has stronger fish sauce/dried shrimp "funk". (Don't misread that word! :))

Ingredients

  • 125 g / 4oz Chang’s Pad Thai dried rice sticks (Note 1)

Sauce:

  • 1 1/2 tbsp tamarind puree , NOT concentrate (Note 2)
  • 3 tbsp (packed) brown sugar
  • 2 tbsp fish sauce (Note 3)
  • 1 1/2 tbsp oyster sauce (Note 4)

Stir Fry:

  • 2 – 3 tbsp vegetable or canola oil
  • 1/2 onion , sliced (brown, yellow)
  • 2 garlic cloves , finely chopped
  • 150 g/5oz chicken breast (or thigh) , thinly sliced
  • 2 eggs , lightly whisked
  • 1 1/2 cups of beansprouts
  • 1/2 cup firm tofu, cut into 3cm / 1 1/4″ batons (see photo)
  • 1/4 cup garlic chives , cut into 3cm / 1 1/4″ pieces
  • 1/4 cup finely chopped peanuts

For serving:

  • Lime wedges (essential)
  • Ground chilli or cayenne pepper (optional)
  • More beansprouts

Instructions

  • Place noodles in a large bowl, pour over plenty of boiling water. Soak for 5 minutes, then drain in a colander and quickly rinse under cold water. Don’t leave them sitting around for more than 5 – 10 minutes.
  • Mix Sauce in small bowl.
  • Heat 2 tbsp oil in a large non stick pan (or well seasoned skillet) over high heat. Add garlic and onion, cook for 30 seconds.
  • Add chicken and cook for 1 1/2 minutes until mostly cooked through.
  • Push to one side of the pan, pour egg in on the other side. Scramble using the wooden spoon (add touch of extra oil if pan is too dry), then mix into chicken.
  • Add bean sprouts, tofu, noodles then Sauce.
  • Toss gently for about 1 1/2 minutes until Sauce is absorbed by the noodles.
  • Add garlic chives and half the peanuts. Toss through quickly then remove from heat.
  • Serve immediately, sprinkled with remaining peanuts and lime wedges on the side, with a sprinkle of chilli and a handful of extra beansprouts on the side if desired (this is the Thai way!). Squeeze over lime juice to taste before eating.

Recipe Notes:

1. Rice noodles – I’ve tried every rice stick sold at supermarkets in Australia. Chang’s is the best – it’s less prone to breaking when it’s tossed in the pan. See photo in post. If you can’t find Chang’s, use another that is 2 – 3 mm / 0.1 ” thick. Avoid wider rice noodles, they are more prone to breaking.
If using the the Erawan brand rice noodles (see photo in post), soak in room temp tap water for 40 – 45 minutes until noodles are silky but still a touch firm. DO NOT follow the packet directions to boil – they disintegrate in the pan!
125g doesn’t sound like much noodles but they expand when soaked.
2. Tamarind is the heart and soul of Pad Thai. The authentic version starts with tamarind pulp which needs to be soaked then strained. Puree is sold in a jar at supermarkets (Asian section), far easier! It’s a scoopable soft paste (see video).
It can be labelled as Tamarind Puree or Paste (not to be confused with Tamarind concentrate which is stronger – use about 1/3 of the amount if you have this). In Australia it’s sold at Woolies, Coles, Harris Farms (Asian section) as well as Asian stores. There’s a few different ones on Amazon US – here is the cheapest one. 
Use leftovers for  Beef Rendang !
KETCHUP SUBSTITUTE if you can’t find tamarind. Use this for the Pad Thai Sauce instead of ingredients listed above:
1 tbsp ketchup, 2 tbsp brown sugar, 2 tbsp fish sauce, 2 tsp oyster sauce, 1 tsp dark soy sauce*, 2 tbsp rice vinegar (or 1 tbsp white vinegar).
See in post for explanation, and cynics, don’t judge until you’ve tried this! It’s remarkably good and quite close to the base Pad Thai recipe!: 
* This is mainly for colour, so can be substituted with light or normal soy sauce and flavour will still be the same.
3. Can be substituted with light soy sauce though you will lose a bit of the flavour edge that fish sauce gives it.
4. Not in authentic Pad Thai but is essential for this everyday version.
5. Garlic chives look like blades of grass and taste like garlicky chives. If you can’t find them, it’s not a deal killer. Best to substitute with chopped shallots (aka green onion / scallions)/..
6. General note: I use a skillet here, I find it easier. But if you have a well seasoned wok, make it in that if you want!
7. Nutrition per serving, assuming 2 servings. The weight doesn’t take into account the water absorbed by the noodles. I think it’s closer to 350g / 12oz per serving. It’s a generous serving!

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 650cal (33%)
Keywords: Pad Thai, What is pad thai?
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

Originally published May 2018. Updated January 2019 with a new video, new step photos. No change to recipe.

More Thai food favourites

Good Thai is sorely lacking in my neighbourhood – so it’s critical to have recipes for all my favourite Thai dishes!

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White bowl with Tom Yum Soup (Thai soup) with prawns / shrimp, mushrooms, tomato and garnished with coriander and chilli
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Close up photo of Thai Fish Cakes on a plate, ready to be eaten
Thai Fish Cakes
Thai Red Curry with Chicken in a skillet, fresh off the stove.
Thai Recipes

Life of Dozer

Flashback to when I first published Pad Thai back in May 2018 when he tore his cruciate ligament and was confined to a small space during his recovery. He does an excellent sad face. 😢

Happy to report that 3 months later, he was back to his wild, crazy self!

Dozer the Golden Retriever restricted to a play pen while injured
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Hi, I'm Nagi!

I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative!

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947 Comments

  1. Kimberly Olmstead says

    April 19, 2024 at 8:30 am

    5 stars
    I made this today…it was incredible. My mom also really liked it. I really liked the sauce a lot…I did not use brown sugar..I bought solid can sugar..melted it down in a pan and incorporated it into the sauce…delicious.

    Reply
  2. Aimy says

    April 16, 2024 at 12:14 am

    could i use some precooked chicken in this? i have some roast chicken left over

    Reply
  3. Sally says

    April 2, 2024 at 8:45 pm

    This is a fantastic recipe! I can only get the Erewan brand noodles at my local woolies, and I’ve found if you boil them for only 4 minutes they don’t disintegrate 😃 (saves the 40 minute soak!)

    Reply
    • Sally says

      April 2, 2024 at 8:46 pm

      5 stars
      Forgot to add rating!

      Reply
  4. Rose says

    April 2, 2024 at 5:28 am

    5 stars
    Ketchup version+half sugar amount+homemade vegan fish sauce+vegetarian oyster sauce+a BIG thank you to nagi=DELICIOUS pad Thai sauce!

    Reply
  5. April says

    March 18, 2024 at 7:44 am

    3 stars
    I tried this today and I used similar noodles, following package directions and they did not cook through. The 2 Tbsp fish sauce was strong, however this is a mostly balanced flavor. Next time I will have to really check the noodles before adding to sautée and reduce the fish sauce to 1 tbsp maybe. Great recipe though!

    Reply
  6. Judy says

    March 14, 2024 at 12:13 am

    Easy and tasted great. I used about half the amount of sugar and it was just right for me.

    Reply
    • Judy says

      March 14, 2024 at 1:22 am

      5 stars
      Forgot to add my rating

      Reply
  7. Amy says

    March 12, 2024 at 5:15 pm

    Best tasting Pad Thai recipe I’ve found and super quick to whip up which is a bonus. Made it with tofu and prawns, subbed chives for green onions as that’s what I had in the fridge, and used tamarind paste (1/3 of the suggested amount) – it was delish! Even the fussy teen loved it which is amazing. Perfect quantity for 3 for us too,

    Reply
  8. Chloe says

    March 9, 2024 at 6:18 pm

    Which veggies could you add? Green beans?

    Reply
  9. Sarah says

    March 7, 2024 at 12:05 pm

    5 stars
    So easy. I’ve made it with tamarind and the ketchup sauce if no tamarind available and both taste great.

    Reply
  10. Lydia says

    March 5, 2024 at 4:45 pm

    5 stars
    Absolutely delicious! I doubled the recipe without an issue and I used the tamarind concentrate. Thank you for the note on the difference between the puree and concentrate! My husband said it was the best dish I have ever made! I also used shrimp instead of chicken. It was restaurant quality, thank you!

    Reply
  11. Thomas Westran says

    March 3, 2024 at 2:38 pm

    5 stars
    I made this recipe for the first time last night. My son shared a photo to some friends, one of whom has cooked in Asian restaurants for years. He commented that he couldn’t tell mine from take out

    Reply
  12. Renato says

    February 25, 2024 at 2:54 pm

    5 stars
    Reminded me of holiday in Koh Samui. Love your recipes. Think Dozzer does the sorrowful face to get sympathy, as all Labs do.

    Reply
  13. Amber says

    February 21, 2024 at 2:07 pm

    5 stars
    This pad thai was great, I’ve made it a few times now and it’s my go-to recipe for chicken pad thai. I use the tamarind puree substitute from Note 2 and it works really well. I like to double the recipe so that my husband and I have leftovers for a couple of days to take to work and such.

    Reply
  14. Sally B says

    February 20, 2024 at 5:47 am

    5 stars
    This is incredible, even my mother in law from Thailand loved it 😊 Fantastic recipe
    Thank you x

    Reply
  15. Angie says

    February 6, 2024 at 12:54 pm

    Hands down, the best at-home Pad Thai recipe I’ve ever tried. It really does taste restaurant quality!

    Reply
  16. Stinky Farty Face says

    January 31, 2024 at 1:36 pm

    5 stars
    Love this recipe, added extra limes to it and my GF really horny.

    Reply
  17. Wendy Betz says

    January 25, 2024 at 1:12 pm

    What can I add to make this extra spicy? We love medium heat but I feel like Take out gives us mild?

    Reply
  18. Judie says

    January 24, 2024 at 8:21 am

    5 stars
    We tried this last night. Omg I can’t believe how great the flavour was and that I didn’t need a little jar of pad Thai sauce…. Just hunt for tamarind at local supermarket (so excited when I found it) and stuff I keep in the pantry. We have some heart, kidney, IBS, diabetic health issues at home so I used carrot and peppers instead of onions (and added onions to non-ibs plates at the end), monkfruit instead of sugar and cabbage noodles instead of the real deal. So amazing to have the “I ate restaurant flavours Thai food last night” experience without the morning BGLs spike. Don’t get me wrong…. I’m still eating stir fry at our local little Thai restaurant, but this was a meal I used to miss ordering.

    Reply
  19. Véronique says

    January 23, 2024 at 9:54 pm

    Hi! I am wondering if I can use Tamarind sauce. Is that the same as puree? TIA!

    Reply
  20. Kate Kainu says

    January 19, 2024 at 6:13 am

    5 stars
    Pad Thai is my daughter’s favorite dish. That includes not only Asian, but all cuisines. She likes it served with peanut sauce, so I decided to make it for her along with your Thai Chicken Satay and Pineapple Fried Rice. All three dishes turned out absolutely fantastic!!! My daughter said the Pad Thai I made was better than she could get at any restaurant in town. My kitchen looked like the Cat in the Hat and Things 1 and 2 cooked dinner, but it was so, so WORTH IT! I love you and your website and Dozer. Thank you a million times for all the work you put in for us all. You are a gem and I am so glad I found you. Thank you again. 🙏

    Reply
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Hi, I'm Nagi!

I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative! Read More

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