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Food

Khao Pad American (Strip Club Fried Rice) Recipe

Wikipedia claims that this dish was conceived by Thais during the Vietnam War as a way to make a buck off homesick American GIs. You'd find this in the same place as your expat biology teacher getting a lap dance.
Khao Pad American (Strip Club Fried Rice) Recipe

"The best way I can describe this dish is strip club food."

Servings: 2
Prep: 30 minutes
Total: 30 minutes

Ingredients

for the wiener blossoms:
1 pack of wieners (see Chef's Tip)
1 bottle of "Sauce Prik" (see Chef's Tip)
1 bottle of ketchup
white vinegar
canola oil

for the fried rice:
canola oil
1/2 cup frozen peas & carrots
350 grams cooked jasmine rice
2 tablespoons Maggi seasoning sauce
1 teaspoon granulated sugar
ketchup
50 grams raisins
1 large egg
2 slices lunch meat ham
3 wiener blossoms (see above)
2-3 fried chicken wings (use your favorite recipe or buy from Popeye's)
finely ground white pepper, to taste

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Directions

1) For the wiener blossoms, slice each wiener in half to form two mini wieners. On the flat end of the mini wiener, slice down the middle towards the round end. Go about half way or just a tad more than half. Roll the wiener 90 degrees and slice again. The idea is that you are scoring the wiener with a deep x, or 2 perpendicular lines that intersect right in the center of the wiener, thereby creating 4 petals or legs. Into a Dutch oven, wok, or heavy-bottomed pan, pour canola oil until about 2/3 full. Heat the oil to 360 degrees Fahrenheit. Fry the wieners in batches by lowering a few at a time into the oil, then lifting them out with a wire strainer once the petals bloom outward (about 30 seconds). For the sauce, whisk 1 part sauce prik to 1 part ketchup. Whisk in 1 tablespoon of white vinegar per cup of the other ingredients. For example, if you mix 1 cup sauce prik with 1 cup ketchup, whisk in 2 tablespoons of white vinegar. Set aside.

2) For the fried rice, in a wok over high heat, heat 1/4 cup canola oil. When the oil starts to smoke, throw in the frozen peas & carrots. Stir regularly and cook for about 30 seconds.

3) Add the rice and toss with the peas and carrots. Cook the rice for about a minute, then add the maggie seasoning sauce and sugar. Stir. Squeeze in ketchup to taste—about 2 tablespoons is good. Stir until everything is incorporated. Throw in the raisins. These go in last because you don't want them getting soggy. Scoop out the rice and set aside.

4) Grease up your egg ring mold with cooking spray or oil. Crack an egg into the mold on a completely flat oiled pan over low-medium heat. If any egg leaks from the bottom of the mold, just trim the unruly strands that form. You want this egg to look like it was made in a factory. Remove the egg along with any excess oil, then heat the two slices of ham in the same pan over medium heat just until warm.

5) Using a small dome-shaped mold or small bowl, plate the rice. Place the egg over the fried rice dome and garnish with a few shakes of finely-ground white pepper. Roll the two slices of ham into cones and place beside the rice. Place the 3 wiener blossoms next to the ham, and the fried chicken wings wherever there's room. Feel free to get creative with the plating here. Sky's the limit. Serve with a bit of ketchup, and if available, a soggy leaf of lettuce and a few shitty tomato slices.

Chef's Tips: - Wiener blossoms can be made with any type of hot dog, but the recipe really works best with crappy pork and chicken or pork and turkey blend wieners. You want to taste the sodium and nitrates. Beefy dogs don't taste as good in this context. - "Sauce Prik" is a pretty generic term for any sauce that's kind of spicy, bottled and sold next to ketchup in a Thai supermarket. It will range from something like sweet sriracha to what you might think is watered-down orange marmalade with garlic and chiles chopped into it. That's the kind you want for this recipe. Some stores will sell it under the name "BBQ chicken sauce."

From Chef's Night Out: Night + Market Song