San Diego Union-Tribune

NOODLE DISH KICKS UP COMFORT FOOD

Sesame paste, chile oil bring complex flavors to easy-to-make meal

- BY JOE YONAN

When I interviewe­d Stephanie and Mike Le about their new book, “That Noodle Life,” the first thing I wanted to know was this: What is it about noodles? That is, why are noodles what they, I and so many other people want to eat all the time?

Stephanie didn’t miss a beat: “I know this isn’t going to sound right, but I think they just feel good in your mouth. There’s something about the physicalit­y of eating noodles that’s really appealing.”

Mike had another idea: “Noodles are the only food where you can eat more than a mouthful at a time.”

Ultimately, wife and husband agreed, it’s also because of the universali­ty of noodles as a comfort food. “Everybody’s eaten a bowl of noodles at some point in their lives,” Stephanie said. “They just taste good, and they’re a great vehicle for all sorts of flavors.”

To call the Les’ new book a love letter to noodles is to sell short its passion and quirky

charm. It includes references to rap lyrics (“We love big noodles and we cannot lie”) and “Star Trek” (“Live long and lasagna”), a March Madness-style bracketed recipe competitio­n, even a noodle glossary written in haikus. And then there are the recipes, for Philly cheesestea­k noodles, yaki udon al pastor and Chinese Bolognese pappardell­e.

The book honors the traditions of Asian noodles and Italian pasta while showing how they can come together and play. The couple dive into the Southeaste­rn Asian soup laksa, offer instructio­ns for making spaghetti alla chitarra from scratch the traditiona­l way, and feature plenty of recipes that come together in mere minutes.

It’s the latter that drew my immediate attention, particular­ly this recipe for Spicy Sesame Chile Oil Noodles that employs a mere handful of ingredient­s and simple steps to make something that tastes wonderfull­y complex.

The recipe calls for any favorite noodle, but I couldn’t take my eyes off the ones in the photo, ruffleedge­d dried Chinese knife-cut numbers called Shangxi planed noodles. I didn’t find them on a trip to my closest Asian supermarke­t, but they reminded me of a pasta I love, mafaldine, that’s shaped like a stretched-out lasagna noodle, complete with ruffles, so that’s what I used. When we photograph­ed the recipe, our food stylist could not find either, so I suggested long fusilli, a curly noodle that looks like an old-fashioned telephone cord.

“That’s exactly what we want people to do,” Stephanie said. “Those are perfect substituti­ons.”

The couple does try to stick to general guidelines about swaps: “We try to sub long for long and short for short, and if it’s like a curly shape or a smooth shape, then we’ll match that, too, because a lot of sauces are meant to be picked up by noodles and their crevices,” Mike added. “Other than that, we’re not too picky about substituti­ons. The shape is the most important thing.”

The recipe includes one of my favorite ingredient­s, Chinese black vinegar, and introduced me to another, Chinese sesame paste, but offers stand-ins for both: balsamic for the former and tahini for the latter.

I’m a longtime tahini devotee, but the Chinese sesame paste is wonderfull­y dark and nutty and altogether something I now can’t imagine living without. In a similar spirit, while they include a recipe for a homemade (and wonderful) Sichuan-style chile oil, they also allow for store-bought chile oil, which turns this recipe into one of those pantry champions I can’t get enough of.

It was so easy, so tasty and so fun to eat that when I watched over Zoom as our visuals team made it, right around lunchtime, my stomach rumbled and I stepped out of the frame and into the kitchen, whipping up another batch in minutes for my husband and me.

The recipe makes the perfect amount for two, but be forewarned: Anyone you serve it to might have the same reaction my husband did: “Is there more?”

Next time, there will be.

 ?? ?? “That Noodle Life”
by Mike Le & Stephanie Le Published by Workman Publishing Company; 272 pages; $30
“That Noodle Life” by Mike Le & Stephanie Le Published by Workman Publishing Company; 272 pages; $30
 ?? TOM MCCORKLE FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ??
TOM MCCORKLE FOR THE WASHINGTON POST

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States