
Recipe by
Chef Gordonbot
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Chatea con Chef Gordonbot — nuestro Chef IA gratis — y obtén recetas personalizadas para cualquier dieta o cocina.
Prueba Chef IA GratisPrep everything: slice ginger, shallot, halve greens, cube tofu. Get noodles ready per package (undercook slightly if boiling in soup).
Toast the shredded coconut in a dry pan over medium heat until golden and fragrant — watch it, it burns quick. Set aside.
In a large pot over medium-high heat add a tablespoon of neutral oil. Sweat the shallots, garlic and ginger until soft and aromatic, about 2–3 minutes — do not brown aggressively.
Add the bruised lemongrass and pour in stock and water. Bring to a gentle simmer. Add kecap manis, light soy sauce, fish sauce and palm sugar. Simmer 8 minutes to marry flavors.
While the broth simmers, make the sambal lime oil: warm 2 tbsp oil in a small pan, remove from heat, stir in sambal, lime zest and lime juice, pinch of salt. Set aside to bloom.
Remove pot from heat. Strain out the solids (optional for a cleaner broth) or leave them if you like texture. Stir miso into a ladle of hot broth first to dissolve, then whisk back into the pot — never boil miso hard or you’ll kill the nuance.
Taste aggressively — adjust with more soy/fish sauce for saltiness, palm sugar for balance, or a splash of lime for brightness.
Bring broth back to a gentle simmer. Add bok choy and simmer 1–2 minutes until bright and tender. Add noodles to warm through if not pre-cooked.
Build the bowls: divide noodles, tofu (or protein), bean sprouts and pour the hot broth over them. Scatter toasted coconut, scallions, cilantro and basil.
Finish each bowl with a generous drizzle of sambal lime oil and a lime wedge. Serve immediately — hot, layered, alive.