Noodles Rice
Goong Ob Woon Sen
Goong Ob Woon Sen or proper name – Goong Ob Woon Sen Mo Din
(literally, shrimp baked with mung bean vermicelli noodles in clay pot) is
originally a Thai-Chinese dish (created by Chinese in Thailand ).
Goong Ob Woon Sen is well known and popular dish – it is a restaurant and food
catering dish, you don’t see it at street vendors.
We have very famous and popular food catering businesses in Nakhon Pathom
Province . Nakhon Pathom
Province is one of the central provinces of Thailand ,
is about 58 km. away from Bangkok .
When we talk about Nakhon Pathom we will think of 2 things from this province,
one is Phra Pathom Chedi, a chedi commissioned by King Mongkut in 1870, it is
one of the tourists’ destination and the other one is food catering, this style
of catering is called “Dto Jiin” or Chinese Table means Chinese food with a set
of 10 -12 dishes including dessert, are served at the round tables for 10 -12
people per table. I don’t know how many food caterers are in Nakhon Pathom
exactly but it’s a lot. The caterers will carry pots, pans, chairs, tables and
necessary utensils or kitchen wares with them in a big truck and they do it for
any occasion across Thailand
in a very reasonable price with fresh made food from scratch.
One of popular dishes on the food catering menus is Goong Ob
Woon Sen. This dish normally we use the large size of Tiger shrimp or fresh
water shrimp. The frozen tiger shrimp and fresh water shrimp from Thailand
are available at Asian grocery stores.
*** If Chinese celery is not available, it can be replaced
by coriander or cilantro.
For 4 servings
Ingredients
240 g (Dried) Mung Bean Vermicelli noodles
1 ½ lbs. Shrimp (size 31 – 40 /lb or larger)
1 root Ginger 2 ½ inch
long, slices
10 - 12 slices Fat pork
1 cup Chinese Celery, cut into 1 inch long
1 tsp Ground peppercorn
6 roots Coriander or cilantro
4 cloves Garlic
2 tbsps Soy Sauce
2 tbsps Oyster Sauce
2 tbsps Sesame Oil
½ cup Water
Instruction
- Soak Mung bean vermicelli noodles in lukewarm water for ½ hour or until soft and drain, and cut into 4 inches long. Set aside.
- Pound
peppercorn, coriander roots and garlic in a mortar and pestle (chop
coriander roots and garlic first before put in the mortar and pestle so
that it’s easier to be broken in small pieces but not paste like yet)
1. Lay fat pork and ginger over bottom. - In a mixing bowl (see picture), combine shrimp, Mung bean vermicelli, mixer from 2., soy sauce, oyster sauce and sesame oil, and mix well. Set aside.
- In clay pot (see picture), lay fat pork over clay pot bottom and layer ginger slices on fat pork.
- Transfer
the mixer from the mixing bowl to the clay pot and let shrimp stay at the
bottom (see picture) and noodles on the top, before put on the heat pour
(spread) ½ cup of water on noodles and cover with the lid.
1. Mix in a bowl. 2. Transfer to clay pot. - Bake on the stove burner over medium heat until steam coming out and continuing for another 2 -3 minutes or until shrimp is cooked. Stir in Chinese celery.
- Remove from heat and serve immediately.
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