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Prawn Hokkien Mee Recipe (Prawn Noodle Soup)

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Prawn Mee, also locally known as Penang Hokkien Mee or Prawn Mee, is a popular hawker dish served in Southeast Asian countries like Singapore, Malaysia, et al. the dish is as delicious as it is healthy and sumptuous. It packs a gastronomically delighting punch with a mix of noodles and vermicelli in a spiced broth seasoned with a signature chilli paste and shallots. What makes this dish uber delicious is the tasteful mix of shrimps and pork ribs. *Slurps*

Though easy to make, this noodle soup takes a lot of practice to perfect. And once you achieve that perfection, you’ll be eating this amazing Asian dish for the rest of your lives! So put that apron on and get ready to whip up the best prawn noodle soup you’ve ever had!

 

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Feature Image: Miss Tam Chiak

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Prawn Hokkien Mee Recipe (Prawn Noodle Soup)
A spicy prawn noodle soup with pork.
Votes: 0
Rating: 0
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Rate this recipe!
Cuisine Asian
Cook Time 4 hours
Servings
people
MetricUS Imperial
Ingredients
Toppings
For the stock
For the chili paste
Cuisine Asian
Cook Time 4 hours
Servings
people
MetricUS Imperial
Ingredients
Toppings
For the stock
For the chili paste
Votes: 0
Rating: 0
You:
Rate this recipe!
Instructions
For the chili paste
  1. Blend the chili paste ingredients with a mini food processor until finely ground and well blended.
  2. Heat up the wok and add cooking oil and stir fry the chili paste for 5 minutes. Set aside.
  3. In the same wok (unwashed), add in a little oil and cook the shrimp topping.
  4. Add in a little chili paste, sugar, and salt.
  5. Pan-fry the shrimp until they are slightly burned. Once cool, slice into halves.
For the Hokkien Mee
  1. Add 15 cups of water into a pot and bring it to boil.
  2. Add in all the shrimp heads and shell and simmer on low heat for about 2 hours or longer until the stock becomes cloudy and tastes like prawns.
  3. Strain the stock through sieve and transfer the stock into another pot. Discard the prawn heads and shells. Also scoop up and discard the orange “foam” forming at the top of the stock.
  4. Bring the stock to boil again and add in half of the chili paste (or more if you like it spicier).
  5. Add in the pork ribs and continue to boil in low heat for another 1-1.5 hour until the pork ribs are thoroughly cooked.
  6. Add rock sugar and salt/fish sauce to taste.
  7. To serve, place a portion of yellow noodles, rice vermicelli, water convolvulus and bean sprouts in a bowl. Ladle hot stock over. Add a few pieces of pork ribs and top with meat slices, sliced shrimp, egg quarters, and sprinkle with shallot crisps.
  8. Serve hot.

Binge eater by day and binge watcher by night, Ankita is fluent in food, film, and Internet. When she’s not obsessing over the hottest trends, tacos, and the perfect author’s bio, you can find her under a pile of Jeffery Archer’s novels or looking for the nearest wine shop.