I
adore slow-cooker recipes that come together in about a minute and start to
smell good almost immediately. This recipe uses mostly pantry ingredients and
if you’re like us and grow your own peppers in the summer, you always have Thai
chiles in the freezer. Whip this up on the weekend or a day you sneak out of
work a little early.
We
had never eaten bean thread noodles before making this dish - my husband literally grunted, "BEAN thread noodles? Gross!" Turns out, they’re a big pile of tasty, stretchy, slurpy fun that literally
entertained my family for an hour. I highly recommend them as an alternative to
typical rice noodles. And make any condescending, doubting family members clean up the mess.
Thai Peanut
Chicken with Bean Thread Noodles
Adapted from Skinny Slow Cooker
Serves
6
4
chicken breasts, boneless, skinless
1
can light coconut milk
1
tbsp fresh ground lemongrass (We like
Gourmet Garden’s Lemon Grass paste.)
2
Thai chiles, minced
2 tbsp all-natural peanut butter
1
lime, zested and juiced
2
tbsp chopped peanuts
8-12
ounces dried bean thread noodles
In
a medium bowl, whisk the peanut butter into the coconut milk until dissolved.
Add to slow cooker and stir in the lemongrass, chiles, lime juice and zest. Place
the chicken breasts in the slow cooker and cook on low for 4 hours. Using two
forks, shred the chicken and stir in the peanuts. (My brilliant friend Christine recently informed me that using a KitchenAid
stand mixer with a paddle attachment shreds chicken in record time. And it
sounds like a lot more fun to us than two forks.)
Cook
the bean thread noodles according to package directions right before serving.
Spoon the chicken over the noodles and serve immediately.
Editor’s
Note:
If the package says to soften in very hot
tap water, we recommend bringing water to a simmer on the stove top, removing from
heat and then adding the noodles until softened. “Very hot tap water,” at least
in our little kitchen, was not hot enough to soften the threads sufficiently ... even after soaking ... for ... ever.
For
a printable version of this recipe, please click here.
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