Thai Drunken Noodles (also known as Pad Kee Mao) are a flavorful dish that is easy to make at home. Whip them up with ground turkey (or your favorite animal protein) for a unique show-stopping meal in. The dish takes no more than 40 minutes to prepare!
There is no denying the satisfaction that comes with a well-crafted noodle. If youโre like me and youโre crazy about Thai food, youโre going to LOVE making drunken noodles at home.
They are so easy to prepare. My guess is you already have the ingredients you need if you make Asian cuisine.
What Are Drunken Noodles?
Pad Kee Mao is translated literally as โdrunken noodlesโ It is a traditional Thai dish of wide rice noodles, fresh basil, chilis, and a sweet and salty sauce made of soy, oyster sauce, and sugar.
Yellow and green onion (and sometimes vegetables) and animal protein are often added. When everything is stir fried up together, you end up with a sweet, spicy, sticky noodle that hits all your palatary pleasures.
While it is customary to cook drunken noodles with chicken, beef or pork, I took the creative liberty to use ground turkey (because I love it!). I also choose to use liquid aminos instead of soy sauce, and coconut sugar instead of cane sugar.
Why are drunken noodles called drunken noodles?
A few theories are:
1.) The noodles are so spicy theyโll make your head spin (donโt worry, the heat level is customizable, and the recipe as written is mild)
2.) They go great alongside a cold beer (or other alcoholic beverage), and
3.) Drunken noodles are an epic hangover cure.
Like many tales, Iโm sure there is truth to all three.
The key to amazing drunken noodles is using fresh chilis and basil. You can use either Thai basil or regular (holy) basil. Because weโre going for those sweet and umami flavors, a combination of soy sauce, oyster sauce, fish sauce, and sugar (or other sweetener) is bangarang.
Letโs make these noodles already!
How to Make Drunken Noodles:
Cook noodles according to package instructions and set aside until ready to use.
Stir together the liquid aminos, water, fish sauce, coconut sugar, and red chili sauce in a small bowl and set aside.
Heat the avocado oil in a large skillet or wok and add the ground turkey. Allow it to brown without touching for 3 minutes. Flip and allow the other side to brown another 3 minutes. Use a spatula to break up the meat.
Add the Thai chilies, garlic and green onion and continue cooking about 3 minutes. Add the sauce and bring to a full boil before adding the noodles.
Continue cooking until most of the sauce has been absorbed and noodles begin to stick to the pan, about 8 to 15 minutes.
Stir in the fresh basil and serve.
Recipe Adaptations:
- Replace liquid aminos with soy sauce or coconut aminos.
- For mild noodles, replace the Thai chilies with 1 red bell pepper and omit the sriracha.
- Use ยฝ lb chicken breasts, chicken thighs, or steak instead of ground turkey.
- For a less meaty noodle, use only ยฝ lb of ground turkey instead of 1 lb…this recipe is protein-forward.
- Replace coconut sugar with cane sugar or brown sugar.
- Use only fish sauce or only oyster sauce if you just have one or the other on hand.
More Thai Recipes:
- Pressure Cooker Green Curry
- Thai Paleo Panang Curry
- Red Curry Chicken with Vegetables
- 30-Minute Thai Green Curry with Avocado
- 30-Minute Summer Vegetable Red Curry
- Chicken Pad Thai
- 30-Minute Thai Basil Chicken (Pad Krapow Gai)
- Thai Stir Fry Noodles (Pad See Ew)
- Homemade Spring Rolls with Peanut Sauce
- Pineapple Fried Rice
Go home, noodles, youโre drunk.
My cookbook, Paleo Power Bowls, is now available! CLICK HERE to check it out. Thank you for your support!
If you make this recipe, please feel free to share a photo and tag @The.Roasted.Root on Instagram!
Drunken Noodles (Pad Kee Mao) with Ground Turkey
Ingredients
- 8 ounces wide rice noodles
- 1/4 cup liquid aminos
- 3 Tbsp water
- 3 Tbsp oyster sauce
- 2 tsp fish sauce
- 1 Tbsp coconut sugar
- 1 tsp sriracha optional
- 3 Tbsp avocado oil
- 1 lb ground turkey
- 2 Thai chilis de-seeded and minced
- 4 cloves garlic
- 1 bunch green onion chopped
- 1/2 cup fresh basil chopped
Instructions
- Cook noodles according to package instructions and set aside until ready to use.
- Stir together the liquid aminos, water, oyster sauce, fish sauce, coconut sugar, and sriracha in a small bowl and set aside.
- Heat the avocado oil in a large skillet or wok and add the ground turkey. Allow it to brown without touching for 3 minutes. Flip and allow the other side to brown another 3 minutes. Use a spatula to break up the meat.
- Add the Thai chilies, garlic and green onion and continue cooking another 3 minutes. Add the sauce and bring to a full boil before adding the noodles.
- Continue cooking until most of the sauce has been absorbed and noodles begin to stick to the pan, about 8 to 15 minutes.
- Stir in the fresh basil and serve.
I googled ground turkey & noodles and this popped up! I probably had so many substitutions that my dish wasn’t yours anymore, but I had good reviews from my family!
My subs… teriyaki sauce for oyster & fish sauces, no hot sauces or sugar.
I used leftover elbow & spaghetti noodles, liquid aminos, basil, parsley, carrots, broccoli, onions, garlic, celery & ground turkey. Nice flavor! Thankyou.
All of that sounds so lovely! Thanks for swinging back around to share your changes – this is super helpful to anyone who wants to try the same things! xo
This recipe is excellent! I made it exactly as printed but did use sliced chicken breast for the protein. I doubled and we have been enjoying the leftovers. Thanks for another stellar, totally reliable recipe!
I’m so happy you like it, Nanette! Thanks so much for the sweet feedback! xo
Delicious! and so easy to prepare
So happy you like it, Rita!
We absolutely loved this! Used fresh Thai basil (from our nearby asian market) and coconut aminos in lieu of liquid aminos- it was delightful! Next- going to try out your 30min thai basil chicken recipe (pad krapow gai)?
I’m so happy you enjoyed it!! Hope you love the Pad Krapow Gai too!! xoxox
Awesome recipe! One I am looking forward to making asap.
It’s a great fusion recipe to keep weeknights interesting!! xoxo