Thai Recipe: Son In Law Eggs Appetizer - Eating Richly (2024)

Thai Recipe: Son In Law Eggs Appetizer - Eating Richly (1)

This Thai recipe for Son In Law Eggs is one of my favorite ways to use boiled eggs. It’s a pretty unique boiled egg recipe that most Americans don’t know about. The first time I made them for my husband he literally yelled “WOW!” at how good they are. Although this isn’t a completely authentic Thai recipe, it’s really close and easy enough for any home cook to make.

I first had Son In Law eggs in the 7th grade. One of my teachers was Japanese, and her fiance was Thai. Apparently they both liked to cook so she would often bring us different snacks they had made. On Boy’s Day she brought us Son In Law Eggs and told us the most popular theory for the origin of the name.

Thai Recipe: Son In Law Eggs Appetizer - Eating Richly (2)

There are a couple different stories on the history of Son In Law Eggs, but the most common is that if a man wasn’t being a good husband, his mother in law would come over and make this dish of deep fried boiled eggs. The dish was insinuating that if he didn’t shape up, his um, er… “egg shaped man parts” (is that family friendly enough?), would be substituted the next time she made it. We were completely scandalized!

Thai Recipe: Son In Law Eggs Appetizer - Eating Richly (3)

What makes this dish really amazing is the tamarind sauce spooned over the top of them. Tamarind is quite tangy and is used often in Malaysian, Thai, Indian, and African recipes. I didn’t have fresh tamarind or tamarind pulp on hand, and our car is dead so I can’t go to the store, so I used a tamarind soup base.

Thai Recipe: Son In Law Eggs Appetizer - Eating Richly (4)

You can buy this soup base at most grocery stores, and I often toss one in my cart to use a seasoning in different sauces, soups, or curries. You can also add a soup packet onto your next Amazon order for only 99 cents! (The price has gone up over the last 10 years. But you can currently get Tamarind Soup Base around $2 each on Amazon) Also, the recipe is normally made with fried shallots, but I had red onions at home which are a great substitute.

So when you’ve got some boiled eggs on hand (here’s my post on easy hard boiled eggs) give this recipe a try. It’s ready in about 15 minutes and super cheap to make. Plus it’s sure to impress anyone you serve it to, well unless it’s your son in law!

Thai Recipe: Son In Law Eggs Appetizer - Eating Richly (5)

Son In Law Eggs Recipe

makes 12

Ingredients

1 Tbs canola oil
3 cloves garlic finely chopped
1 TBS tamarind soup base
1/2 tsp sugar
1 tsp crunchy peanut butter
1/8 tsp red pepper flakes
1/2 TBS fish sauce
2 TBS water
6 hard boiled eggs, peeled
vegetable oil for deep frying
1/4 a red onion thinly sliced in 1 inch pieces
chopped scallions

Instructions

Heat a pot of vegetable oil (about 2 inches) on high.

In a sauce pan, heat TBS of canola oil on medium and add garlic, tamarind base, and sugar. Mix well. When mixture begins to bubbler add peanut butter, red pepper, fish sauce, and water. Mix again then turn heat to low.

Your pot of oil should now be hot enough. Use tongs to carefully lower peeled boiled eggs into oil. Fry until outside of eggs are crispy golden brown (use tongs to turn them if not completely submerged). Remove from oil with tongs to paper towel lined plate.

Separate slices of red onion. Use a slotted spoon or wire skimmer to lower onions into pot of oil. Fry until brown and crispy. Remove immediately with same spoon or skimmer to paper towels. Remove skillet with tamarind sauce from heat and stir it.

Slice eggs in half, arrange on a plate yolk up. Drizzle with tamarind sauce and top with fried onions and chopped scallions.

Approximate cost/serving: Six eggs are only $1-$1.50 depending on what farm or store we get them from. With the other ingredients it comes out to a little less than $2 but we’ll round up. That means if you serve this as an appetizer and everyone eats one egg, it’s only 33 cents a serving!

Vegetarian/Gluten Free: This does use fish sauce and eggs, so it’s not vegan, but if you eat fish and eggs it’s good to go. For gluten free you might want to use tamarind pulp rather than the soup base which contains MSG.

We'd love to keep in touch. Be sure to sign up for our newsletter and get your free download of our favorite healthy cute kid snacks.

Posts may contain affiliate links. If you purchase a product through an affiliate link, your costs will be the same but Eating Richly Even When You're Broke will receive a small commission.

This helps us to cover some of the costs for this site. Thank you so much for your support!

Nutritional and cost information is for estimating purposes only, and subject to variations due to region, seasonality, and product availability.

Thai Recipe: Son In Law Eggs Appetizer - Eating Richly (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Patricia Veum II

Last Updated:

Views: 6588

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (64 voted)

Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Patricia Veum II

Birthday: 1994-12-16

Address: 2064 Little Summit, Goldieton, MS 97651-0862

Phone: +6873952696715

Job: Principal Officer

Hobby: Rafting, Cabaret, Candle making, Jigsaw puzzles, Inline skating, Magic, Graffiti

Introduction: My name is Patricia Veum II, I am a vast, combative, smiling, famous, inexpensive, zealous, sparkling person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.