Vietnamese Lemongrass Beef and Noodle Salad

Vietnamese Lemongrass Beef and Noodle Salad
Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times
Total Time
1 hour
Rating
5(1,327)
Comments
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Bun bo xao, a zesty stir-fry of marinated beef hot from the wok paired with room temperature rice noodles, makes a satisfying main-course salad year-round. Dressed with a classic Vietnamese dipping sauce and topped with roasted peanuts, the flavors are clean, bright and restorative. Yes, this recipe calls for a lot of ingredients, but the prep is simple, and it’s an easy introduction to Vietnam cooking for the uninitiated.

Featured in: The Vietnamese Noodle Salad Known as Bun Bo Xao

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Ingredients

Yield:4 servings

    For the Dipping Sauce

    • 4tablespoons Demerara or granulated light brown sugar
    • 3tablespoons rice vinegar
    • 4tablespoons lime juice, from 2 large limes
    • 4tablespoons best quality fish sauce, such as Red Boat
    • 2garlic cloves, minced
    • 11-inch length ginger, peeled and minced
    • 1medium-hot red chile, such as Fresno, chopped
    • 1hot red or green bird chile, thinly sliced

    For the Stir-fry

    • 12ounces rice vermicelli noodles
    • 1pound beef skirt steak or sirloin, in thin ¼-inch slices
    • 2tablespoons best quality fish sauce, such as Red Boat
    • 1tablespoon Demerara or granulated light brown sugar
    • 3garlic cloves, minced
    • 3tablespoons finely chopped lemon grass, tender centers only
    • 1head lettuce, such as butter lettuce or Little Gems, tender center leaves separated
    • 2tablespoons vegetable oil
    • 4scallions, slivered
    • 1medium carrot, cut in 3-inch lengths, julienned (about 1 cup)
    • 1small cucumber, 3-inch lengths, julienned (about 1 cup)
    • 13-inch length daikon radish, julienned (about 1 cup)
    • Mixture of cilantro sprigs, mint leaves, basil leaves and small perilla (shiso) leaves, about 3 cups
    • 4tablespoons crushed roasted peanuts
    • 4tablespoons fried shallots, available in Asian groceries (or make your own using this recipe)
    • Small handful bean sprouts or sunflower sprouts (optional)
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (4 servings)

772 calories; 27 grams fat; 7 grams saturated fat; 1 gram trans fat; 14 grams monounsaturated fat; 4 grams polyunsaturated fat; 99 grams carbohydrates; 6 grams dietary fiber; 18 grams sugars; 35 grams protein; 2394 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Make the Dipping Sauce

    1. Step 1

      In a small bowl combine sugar, rice vinegar and lime juice and stir to dissolve. Add fish sauce, garlic, ginger, chiles and ½ cup water and stir together. Let sit for 15 minutes for flavors to meld. (May be prepared a day ahead and refrigerated.)

  2. Step 2

    Bring a large pot of water to the boil. Add rice noodles, stir and turn off heat. Let noodles soften (5 to 8 minutes, depending on brand), then drain and rinse with cold water. Leave in colander at room temperature.

  3. Step 3

    Meanwhile, combine beef, fish sauce, sugar, garlic and lemon grass in a bowl. Massage seasoning into beef and let sit for 15 minutes.

  4. Step 4

    Line a serving bowl or four individual large wide soup bowls with a few lettuce leaves and top with noodles.

  5. Step 5

    Heat the oil in a wok over high heat. When wok is nearly smoking, add beef and quickly stir-fry until lightly browned and just cooked, about 2 minutes. Work in batches if necessary so meat browns and doesn’t steam. (If you do not have a wok, you may use a cast iron skillet and work in batches.)

  6. Step 6

    Top noodles with cooked beef, scallions, carrot, cucumber and daikon. Sprinkle with herbs, crushed peanuts and fried shallots (add sprouts if using). Drizzle lightly with dipping sauce and pass remaining sauce at table.

Ratings

5 out of 5
1,327 user ratings
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Comments

I make a LOT. of banh mi sandwiches at home and have read/tried at least a dozen ways of pickling the julienned carrots/daikon and, to be quite honest, I found the quick, supereasy method is just fine: shred your daikon/carrots (Oxo has a great julienne "peeler" for whem I'm too rushed for mandoline); a small t. sugar, 1/4-1/2C rice vinegar, pinch sea salt, mix and let sit 20-60 min. They are great, and hold over for a few days or more. Easypeasy....

Loved this! The sauce was great. I love heat, so I went all out on the chiles. I don't eat red meat too much, so I substituted it with extra-firm tofu. This was great! I still marinated the tofu in the sauce that is used for the beef, and the flavor was perfect. I realized after eating it how much heavier this dish is with the noodles. I agree with ckp, the noodles can be left out. I will do this the next time I make this dish.

I use whatever veggies are in hand. Red peppers, bean sprouts are good additions. Daikons are hard to find so I sub regular radishes julienned. Sometimes I just leave the noodles out! Key is enough of at least 3 herbs (mint, basil, cilantro). Meat: have tried pork loin (best), chick (dry), shrimp (good for my non-meat friends) and prefer to char quickly on stovetop grill vs stirfry.

This is probably the best recipe I’ve made from NYT. I grilled a flank steak and used the “rub” as a marinade for a few hours. Added veg oil to the marinade, and a few drops of sesame oil, and salt. And then the bowl ingredients I actually just made into a giant salad that everyone could help themselves. I can’t believe how good it tasted. I would say the only additions i made were some glugs of sesame oil and some salt. A !

I make this with 500g lean pork mince and reduce the fish sauce to 1.5tbsp and it’s delicious cooked down until brown and it has some caramelised bits. Also throw in some spring onions. A family favourite.

So, we bought 12 ounces of dry vermicelli. It made a HUGE amount. Did anyone think it was way out of proportion compared to all the other ingredients? o

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