Homemade Chinese Potato Starch Noodles (Gluten-Free Noodles)
Course: Noodles
Cuisine: Chinese
Prep Time: 30 minutesminutes
Cook Time: 3 minutesminutes
Total Time: 33 minutesminutes
Servings: 3servings (about 550-600 grams total)
Calories: 286kcal
Author: Marvellina
This tutorial is to show you how to make Chinese potato starch/sweet potato starch noodles from scratch with only 2 ingredients. The noodles are naturally gluten-free.
Mix the 50 grams of potato starch with 50 grams of water. It's kinda difficult to stir at first, but it will happen. Use a whisk may work better too.
Gelatinize the starch:
Bring about 120 grams of water to a boil to account for some evaporation during boiling. Bring it to a rolling boil. I can't stress enough the importance of the water to be really at a boiling point. Once it comes to a boil, let it boil for another minute. If you have an instant-read thermometer, it should be at least 212 F (100 C)
Then pour this really hot boiling water into the potato starch solution you prepared earlier. You will instantly see some gelatinization when the hot boiling water comes into contact with the starch. Whisk to combine thoroughly to form a gelatinous mixture.
Final mixing:
Add in the rest of 50 grams of water and the rest of the 190 grams of potato starch and whisk to combine. You will get a thick gooey paste consistency. When you lift the batter up with a spatula, it will flow down slowly and steadily and you can see the trail doesn't disappear immediately. The consistency shouldn't be too thick that you can't pipe the batter in one continuous motion, but not too runny that the noodles will disintegrate when you boil it
Cook the noodles:
It's not recommended to pour all the batter into a piping bag. It's harder to pipe and messier. Transfer 1/2 of the batter into a very sturdy large piping bag or double bag a plastic bag and snip off the tip to create a hole about probably 5 mm in diameter to get thick noodles that are suitable for stir-frying. If you want thinner, about 3 mm, this is not so suitable for stir-frying, more for soup or for tossing in sauce. If you use a small piping bag, transfer only 1/3 of the batter. Cover the rest of the batter in a bowl with a cling wrap while you cook the first batch
Bring a large bowl of cold water near you. This is to stop the cooking process and also to prevent them from sticking to each other
When the water is boiling, lower the heat to medium so it's just steadily simmering and start piping the batter in one continuous circular motion. You don't want the water to boil vigorously as it may break the noodles. Cook for about 30 seconds or until it floats.
Then transfer to a bowl of cold water and let them sit in there while you are cooking the second batch. Transfer the next 1/3 of the batter and continue with the same process
When you are done cooking all the noodles, discard the soaking water and transfer the noodles to a colander and gently rinse the noodles with some cold running water to get rid of excess starch
The noodles may not seem as translucent when you just made them. When you cook them again in other recipes they will turn more translucent
If you don't use the noodles immediately, keep them soaking in fresh water until you are ready to use them. If they stick to each other, rinse with some fresh water and they will loosen up. It is best to use the noodles on the same day, but if you do have leftovers, transfer them to an air-tight container and soaked in water. Keep them in the fridge for 1-2 days in the fridge. I don't recommend any longer as the texture can get mushy
You can't freeze the noodles as it changes the texture. So don't make a big batch