Recipes, Tom Yum

Tom Yum Soup (Thai soup) Recipe

Tom Yum Soup (Thai soup) Recipe

Tom Yum Soup

Asian food has some of the best soups in the world! From the rich coconut Laksa Noodle Soup to Vietnamese Beef Pho, and Japanese Ramen, there’s a vast variety and Thailand’s Tom Yum Soup is right up there with the best of them.

And the bonus? Tom Yum Soup is good for you, with just 156 calories per serving and very low fat.

TWO TYPES OF TOM YUM

First up, let me explain that there’s two different types of Tom Yum Soup:

  1. Clear Tom Yum Soup (Tom Yum Goong Nam Sai); and
  2. CREAMY Tom Yum Soup (Tom Yum Goong Nam Khon) which is made from the clear version with the addition of evaporated milk and a good hit of Thai Chilli Paste.

I’ve no idea which is more popular, and truthfully I like both equally so I don’t play favourites. The creamy version has a slightly bigger flavour punch because of the addition of the chilli paste. The evaporated milk really doesn’t add flavour, it just changes the appearance.

What goes in Tom Yum Soup

There’s 2 parts to Tom Yum Soup:

  1. Making the soup broth; and
  2. The stuff that goes in the broth.

Firstly, the broth. In addition to items shown below, you also need the head and shell of the peeled prawns/shrimp (see image below). If you can’t get whole prawns, don’t worry – in the recipe notes, there’s directions for making this with frozen pre-peeled prawns!

Key to this soup broth are all the fragrant fresh herbs and spices you see below. The kaffir lime leaves, lemongrass, galangal, chilli and garlic. They impart such beautiful flavour into the soup!

And here’s the stuff IN the soup.

How to make Tom Yum Soup

The ingredient gathering is the hardest part of this recipe, being that the aromatics aren’t pantry staples and depending how well stocked your grocery store is, might require a trip to an Asian store.

The making part is very straight forward, calling for not much more than plonking and simmering, straining, more plonking then simmering again. EASY!

See? A lot of plonk and simmer above to make the broth.

And more plonk and simmer below when you add the “stuff” into the soup.

That’s how you make the clear version of Tom Yum Soup which I find is the one more commonly served at Thai restaurants in Sydney.

The broth looks deceptively simple – clear and unassuming. But wait until you try it! It’s got terrific complexity of flavour from the prawn/shrimp shells – basically it’s a homemade prawn stock with a ton of aromatics added!!

 

 

 

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