If you love Thai food, especially authentic Pad Thai, you need this Pad Thai sauce recipe in your life! Made with tamarind paste, palm sugar, fish sauce, and garlic, learning how to make Pad Thai sauce is simple with this homemade, easy Pad Thai sauce recipe.
Did you know Pad Thai is one of the world’s most popular foods? A global phenomenon, Pad Thai is comforting street-food made of rice noodles stir-fried in a sour, sweet, savory Pad Thai sauce. It also happens to be one of the most ordered take-out dishes in America.
In less time than having to order Thai food and having it delivered, you could easily make this dish at home and it be as good if not better than your local Thai restaurant. I’m serious.
To make authentic Pad Thai, you have to understand what this dish essentially is. Pad Thai is a noodle stir-fry. And with most types of stir-fry, each dish is uniquely seasoned depending on the sauce. With so many variations of Pad Thai sauces on the internet, the most authentic Pad Thai sauce recipe has tamarind, palm, sugar, and fish sauce – sometimes pickled radish.
Some Pad Thai sauces call for none of these ingredients, which would make it not authentic. If you go through all the trouble to make homemade Pad Thai, shouldn’t your hard work go towards enjoying authentic version? If you see a Pad Thai sauce recipe calling for ketchup, DO NOT MAKE. I beg you. You can call it a noodle stir-fry but you won’t in good conscious be able to call it Pad Thai.
I’m going to walk you through how to make the most amazing restaurant quality Pad Thai by teaching you how to make Pad Thai Sauce – remember, every stir-fry dish depends on how it’s seasoned. Best of all, this sauce is easy. Like, 4-ingredients to heavenly Pad Thai sauce easy. Seriously, if you love Pad Thai, there is no good reason not to make homemade Pad Thai sauce. This recipe is so easy, you’ll be so happy to make this dish at home.
Imagine, you, glass of wine, Netflix, and homemade Pad Thai that you made. That is my definition of the perfect night.
Here is everything you need to know about making a kick-ass Pad Thai sauce
List of ingredients you need to make Pad Thai sauce:
- Tamarind Concentrate diluted with some water
- Palm Sugar
- Fish Sauce
- Fresh Cloves
The Pad Thai sauce flavor is a balance of the recipe ingredients of sour, sweet, and salty – umami.
Tamarind is acidic pulp from inside a tree pod (from the pea family) and is a common ingredient in Asian cooking. It adds a pleasant sour flavor to dishes and beverages.
Palm Sugar is derived from the sap of various types of palm trees including sugar and coconut. The sap is collected and boiled until all that’s left is a sticky sugar solid and is often spun into disks. The flavor of palm sugar is very different than refined white and brown sugar. It is noticeably less sweet, deeper and richer in flavor, and is naturally brown in color.
Fish Sauce is an intensely flavored sauce made from anchovies, salt and water which has gone through a fermenting process. Its strong, salty, fishy smell adds a layer of umami flavor that enhances Thai food. Without it, Thai dishes are not the same, including Pad Thai.
Garlic – Fresh garlic in combination with the other ingredients ties the sour, sweet, salty sauce ingredients together in a way only garlic can and does so well.
How to make the Pad Thai:
To make Pad Thai sauce, you cook all the ingredients in a pan until the sugar is dissolved. Once your sauce is ready, you can use it to make Pad Thai by stir-frying rice noodles and fresh ingredients such as tofu, chicken, shrimp, egg, and vegetables.
The Pad Thai sauce is added in slowly added in a little bit at a time to give the noodles a chance to absorb the flavor. You should always add the sauce in small amounts until you reach the flavor you’re looking for. To finish off the dish, roasted chopped peanuts are added to the top.
Over ten years ago before food blogs were a real thing, I discovered a mother-daughter duo who posted their Thai food family recipes on a site called Joys Thai Food. The site appears to be offline now you can find her authentic Thai Food recipes still on Youtube. Inspired by their authentic Pad Thai sauce recipe, I made an adapted version rivaling the best restaurant versions I had grown to love and were accustomed to.
The easiest and best way to make pad Thai is to make the sauce in advance and use as little or much as you need. The recipe makes just over a half a cup of sauce. You can refrigerate it up to a month.
If you do refrigerate the sauce and find it hardened, just microwave it for 30 seconds to soften it up. It will be perfectly warm and usable.
I hope you enjoy making this Pad Thai Sauce recipe – it is the gift that will keep on giving, satisfying all your Thai food cravings!
Other Thai Food Recipes You Might Enjoy:
Chicken Coconut Curry Soup
Acorn Squash Coconut Curry Soup
Chicken Satay and Peanut Sauce
- Pad Thai Sauce
- 3 tablespoons tamarind juice (paste) concentrate
- ¼ cup water
- ¼ cup palm sugar
- 2 Tbl fish sauce
- 2 cloves garlic, minced
- Pad Thai Stir-Fry Ingredients
- 8 ounces dried rice stick noodles
- 5 tablespoons vegetable oil, divided
- ½ smallish-medium red onion, thinly sliced
- 2 cloves garlic, minced
- ½ lb protein (thinly sliced chicken, beef, pork, shrimp, or cubed tofu)
- 1 egg
- 1½ cups mung bean sprouts, divided in half
- 1 cup carrots, julienned (match sticks), divided in half
- 4 green onions (scallions) cut diagonal in ½ inch segments
- ¼ cup cilantro, coarsely chopped
- ½ cup toasted peanuts, chopped
- Lime wedges
- To make pad Thai sauce, heat a small pan on medium low and add the tamarind concentrate, water, palm sugar, fish sauce, and garlic. Cook the sauce until the palm sugar has completely dissolved. At this point, you will want to carefully taste the sauce and tweak the sweetness or tangyness by adding a tiny bit more palm sugar or tamarind. Be careful, the sauce will be hot.
- Remove from heat and allow to cool 10 minutes before storing it in a jar or plastic container.
- Boil the rice noodles on high heat for 2 minutes then drain immediately, rinsing the noodles with cold water for just a few seconds. Noodles should be slightly firmer than al dente. Don’t worry, they will continue to soften and cook later when stir frying.
- Using kitchen shears, cut the noodle clump in half. This will make it a lot easier to stir-fry and eat.
- In a wok of large frying pan, heat 2 tablespoons of oil on high heat. Add to the pan the protein and cook for 2 minutes. Remove the protein and transfer to a plate or bowl.
- Return the pan to heat and add a tablespoon of oil. Allow the oil to heat up and add the onions and stir-fry (stir + fry) for one minute then add the garlic and cook for another minute, making sure to stir often enough so the garlic does not burn.
- Add the noodles to the pan and drizzle with the remaining 2 tablespoons of oil. Stir fry the noodles for two minutes. This will help the noodles soften a tiny bit more but more importantly will provide enough surface texture for the sauce to adhere to.
- Add 3-4 tablespoons of the pad Thai sauce continually stirring the noodles until they are coasted with sauce - about a minute.
- Add the protein back in and fry for an additional 2-3 minutes, adding more sauce if necessary. You don't want to noodles to be "wet." Instead you want to add a little bit at a time allowing the noodles and the other ingredients to soak in the sauce.
- Move the pad Thai over to one side of the pan. Add the last tablespoon of oil to the bare side then crack an egg over it. Scramble the egg with a wooden spoon and cook for 30 seconds.
- Add half the sprouts and half the carrots along with the scallions. Mix and stir-fry everything for 1 more minute, frying everything together.
- Test the firmness of the noodle. If the noodle is too firm, continue to stir-fry for an additional minute adding a spoonful of sauce if necessary.
- Remove pad Thai from heat and serve and garnish with remaining julienned carrots, spouts, cilantro, toasted peanuts, and a wedge of lime. Enjoy!
Updated May 3, 2018
Jolene says
Wow. My family just got done feasting on this. It was my first time making my own Pad Thai sauce. I usually just buy a Pre-made bottled sauce. This recipe is easy and tastes awesome! I substitute brown sugar for palm sugar and I didn’t have tamarind juice. I did have tamarind candy on hand and thought I’d just try melting it down in hot water. Sure enough it worked! My husband doesn’t usually like Pad Thai even at restaurants, but he ate seconds and thirds of my dish!
Thank you!
Kelly says
Wow, I can’t wait to try this! My husband and I LOVE Thai food, but my only complaint is I can’t seem to get it to taste as good as it does in the restaurant! I’m now hopeful!
Cookie says
Your post inspired me to make pad thai too! Thanks for sharing!
http://cookieloveseating.blogspot.com/2011/02/authentic-pad-thai.html
Matthew says
Quite tasty – but I had one problem. When I added the noodles they clumped together in a great big ball. Any ideas on what I might have done wrong?
Xee says
I made this tonight and i love it! A great recipe and will make it again for potlucks or parties.
alice says
Sarah,
Paste should work but I don’t have the conversion. You might want to try google.
Alice
Sarah says
This looks amazing! I went out to buy the ingredients today but I could only get was tamarind paste instead of the juice concentrate. Any idea what the equivalent of paste to juice concentrate might be? I might have to wing it tonight…
Worst case scenario I’ll just have to make pad thai again another time!
loveitorleaveit says
I’ve noticed some recipes call for rice wine vinegar in place of some of the tamarind paste, and specify peanut oil as the frying oil of choice. Any thoughts on this?
Thanks for your recipe and great pics! Will try this week.
kay di says
Is there a difference between tamarind juice and tamarind juice concentrate? I could only find tamarind juice and the tamarind brick at the asian supermarket.
Meriana says
Just made this recipe and it came out SO good. I did use brown sugar instead of palm sugar, but the sauce came out really good. I also didn’t have any tamarind concentrate, but I used some that was in a block and added water to make a sauce, strained the tamarind and continued making the sauce. This definitely fulfilled my craving for noodles. 🙂
lily says
I love this recipe because it is delicious and it isn’t so difficult to prepare so you can do it when you have guests at home because you don’t have to spend a lot of time.
alice says
Hi Shelly: You could substitute honey or brown sugar but I don’t know the conversion amounts. If you do substitute, it won’t have the subtle deep sweetness as honey or brown sugar would so make sure you decrease the sugar amount. Hope this helps.
Shelly says
Looks like a great recipe for pad thai but can I substitute the palm sugar for honey or brown sugar and still get the same affect?
Poptropica Cheats says
Your post is really yummy! I love Thai food as well! thanks for this information
alice says
Calla: Thank for your thoughtful comment. Fish sauce stinks. There is no way around it. You can try using less but it does add a great flavor to food.
Calla J says
Made this last night and it was just fabulous!! A bit of chopping involved as I was making for 5 people, but well worth the effort. Will definitely be making again. The only question I have is whether there is a brand of fish sauce that is not so “smelly”. My family’s only complaint was the fish sauce smell but they got over that once they started eating..Thanks Alice for a great recipe!
Love your website!!!!!!!!!!!!
Kathy Victor says
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Tobias Silvius says
I absolutely enjoy reading your articles, the variety of writing is fantastic.This post as usual was useful, I have had to bookmark your website and subscribe to your feed in ifeed. Your site looks spot on.
souda says
thank you alice, im gonna try again tonight.. my noodles looked more white than brown compared to ur picture perhaps not enough sauce? but it was still good! lol
alice says
Hi Souda,
Yes, the sauce is pretty quick but thins out when you stir fry it.
souda says
im making this now…is the sauce suppose to be thick? mine is pretty thick
souda says
im gonna try this recipe this weekend..i hope i do ok..
club penguin money cheats says
Interesting article… Thank you for the info!
Heidi says
Thank you SO much for posting this recipe! Seems I’m a bit late on the bandwagon as I just found your blog last week, but we just made the Pad Thai and it was FABULOUS! Couldn’t figure out where the heat should come from, so we added some cayenne (because I forgot there were Thai green chilies in the fridge) and it was great. A squeeze of the lime and a dash of soy sauce after plating added a nice brightness to the flavor. THIS WAS WONDERFUL – can’t wait to try more of your recipes. Thank you for doing what you are doing!
Manali & Terry says
We’re in Thailand at the moment, just took a Thai cooking class and this is really similar to how we made it! We used oyster sauce as well to round out the flavor. SO good!
We’re doing an around the world trip for a year, so I’ve been drooling over your food porn to remind me of home! I’m waiting for a chance to be close to an oven so I can make your Chocolate Banana Bread!!