![]() ![]() They come in several ways, depending on your local Asian market. Using fresh wide rice noodles is crucial for this recipe as the soft, chewy, and charred noodles provide the base for this gravy. Once you have the ingredients organized in groups, the prep time is a breeze! I'm going to break them down and organize them into 3 groups so that you have a flow to help with ease and speed up the cooking process. Don't be intimidated by the ingredient list. They are the same thing, the wide rice noodles stir fry with gravy. Rad Na, Rat Na, Rad nah, Lad na, Kwe Tiau Radna, or Geuy Tiew Rad na. Expect to see some of these spellings and names of this dish in your local Thai restaurants. You will see a few spellings for this recipe. The charred and chewy wide noodles are enough as a meal on their own! You might need to buy extra noodles because you can't stop eating them alone! Spellings of Rad Na Well, Rad Na has a special place in my heart and hopefully in your kitchen soon too! I love that Rad Na is not so sweet, yet it still holds a fair taste of a stir-fry dish's savory and umami flavors. LOL (See my emotional attachment to this dish?) (: ![]() If I have to guess, all the lively cousin dishes like Pad Thai, Pad See Ew, and Drunken noodles are so popular that Rad Na gets left behind. I'm baffled that this Thai noodle dish is not more popular outside of Thailand. Rad Na is a Thai-Chinese noodle dish with many flavors, techniques, and ingredients used in Chinese cooking. It is a full-flavored dish, usually eaten with some leafy vegetables and your choice of protein. The wide flat rice noodles are cooked until charred, and then a perfectly balanced umami gravy is poured over them, making it the ultimate comfort food. In this case, it's the noodles that are covered by gravy. So literally means to pour over the face, implying, a thoroughly coverage of the entire surface of anything that's being poured over. Rad in Thai means pouring over, while Na means face.
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