Recipe: Cast Iron Pad Thai

Yield: 4 generous servings

Instructions

1.

Cook your noodles according to the directions on the package (usually 3-4 min). Rinse under cold water to keep them from sticking/cooking further.

2.

Make your sauce by whisking sauce ingredients together in a bowl.

3.

Preheat Field Skillet on low heat for 5 minutes.

4.

Increase heat to medium high and add 1 tablespoon of your preferred oil.

5.

Add the tofu or chicken. Cook chicken until cooked through (3-5 minutes) or sear tofu until it is lightly browned on all sides (approx. 2 minutes/side). Remove protein from skillet and set aside.

6.

Add another tablespoon of oil and allow it to heat up. Add green onion, red pepper, garlic, bean sprouts and carrots to the skillet. Stir frequently for about 3 minutes or until the veggies are crisp tender.

7.

Push veggies to the sides of the pan and add about a teaspoon of oil to the center. Add the beaten eggs, and break them into small pieces with your slotted turner as they cook.

8.

Remove skillet from heat. Cast iron has great heat retention, so your pad thai will stay warm even after it’s removed from the burner.

9.

Add noodles, sauce, protein and peanuts to the pan. Toss everything to combine.

10.

Garnish the top with your preferred extras! Serve straight from your skillet with lime wedges.


Seasoning Rating: Safe

A well-seasoned cast iron skillet handles acidic ingredients just fine, so cooking this dish in your Field skillet shouldn’t have much of an impact on your well-established seasoning. And because you are adding seasoning to your pan while cooking the protein and veggies and simply adding in the acidic ingredients at the end, this also lessens the impact.

Serving straight from the pan will keep your food nice and warm, but we would recommend cleaning things up right after dinner and following the Field Method to keep your cast iron in good shape!

Seasoning Ratings:

Best—These dishes are the best options for building resilient seasoning, and surefire choices for getting tricky pans back on track.

Better—The best way to keep your skillet in great shape is to cook frequently, and cast iron-friendly dishes like these are your bread and butter.

Safe—These recipes won't strip seasoning away from your pan, but won't really add any, either.

OK—Be sure to clean up promptly. Recipes with this rating might feature acidic ingredients which can affect seasoning if not washed soon after cooking.