Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe (2024)

You are here: Home / / Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe

Jump to Recipe

One of my favorite weeknight mealsis a Thai ginger lime ground pork recipe called Nam Sod. Not only is it easy to make, but it’s light, healthy, and has that big multi-layered “pow” of flavor that Thai food is known for.

While visiting Thailand, I loved how fresh the food looked and tasted and it seemed that witheach dish, there was a mountain of fragrant herbs like cilantro,mint,lime wedges, and green onions.

Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe (1)

Rachelle and Pete at the market in Phitsanulok, Thailand. Photo by Gerald Wallace.

This dish is pretty versatile and while it’s a ground pork recipe, you could also use chicken. It can be served warm with rice, or chilled like a salad. In fact, I love having it for left overs for lunch! Though, if you decide to chill it overnight, I recommend keeping the peanuts separate and mix them in before serving or share them on the side so they don’t loose their crunch.

Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe (2)

My “lunch” leftovers of Thai nam sod.

You can also serve Thai nom sod in lettuce wraps. And we’ve even done “Thai tacos” and had them in corn tortillas before with a little sriracha or hot sauce on the side. If you’re having friends over, having all the ingredients out on a plate makes lettuce wraps or tacos a fun shareable meal.

Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe (3)

Cooking the ginger lime pork is quick and easy. It’s essentially browning the meat in a large pan along with chopped green onions. Then, adding more of the flavorful ingredients like ginger and lime juice toward the end of cooking. The only thing that takes a little time in making nam sod is prepping all the fresh ingredients to serve on the side. But it is SO worth the effort.

Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe (4)

Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe

In Thailand, Nam Sodcommonly served in one big bowl family-style as an appetizer as pictured here. I hope you enjoy all the fresh flavors of ginger, lime,and cilantro in this ground pork recipe for Thai Nam Sod. It’s one of our favorites!

Looking to make it into a meal? You can serve nam sod with Thai cucumber salad. And for dessert, mango sticky rice.

Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe (5)

Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe (6)

Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe

Yield: 4

Prep Time: 10 minutes

Cook Time: 10 minutes

Total Time: 20 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 cup fresh cilantro
  • 1/4 cup fresh mint
  • 1 cup fresh lime juice (3-4 limes)
  • 3-4 purple shallots, sliced
  • 3-4 green onions, sliced
  • 1/2 cup roasted peanuts
  • 1/4 cup of finely sliced ginger
  • 1/2 cup minced ginger
  • 1.5 pounds ground pork or chicken
  • 2 garlic cloves, minced
  • 2 Tbsp fish sauce
  • 2 Tbsp cooking oil

Instructions

  1. Start by prepping all of your fresh ingredients -- removing the stems from the cilantro, juicing the limes, and slicing the green onions, shallots, and ginger. For the green onions, you're going to use the whole onion - the white bulb will be sliced and sautéed while the green part will be sliced and served as garnish. For the ginger, it's easiest to peel with a carot peeler, then slice into smaller pieces to add to a food processor to mince and/or slice thinly for the garnish. I have some great tips about ginger in the video below. Once you're ingredients are prepped, the recipe comes together really fast.
  2. Heat the oil in a medium sized sauté pan, then add the sliced white bulbs from the green onions, garlic, and minced ginger and sauté until translucent.
  3. Next, add the pork or chicken and cook thoroughly. When it's about half way done cooking, add the fish sauce and half the lime juice. Save the other half cup.
  4. Once the pork is done cooking, add it to a large mixing bowl, pour the remaining lime juice on top and stir together.
  5. Top with mint, cilantro, shallots, sliced ginger, sliced green onion, and peanuts and mix together. Serve with a side of Thai jasmine rice to complete the meal.
  6. Tip: If you're chilling the salad to serve later, or think you might have some left overs, I'd serve all the garnishes listed above on the side to keep them crisp and fresh.

Did you make this recipe?

Follow us on Pinterest for more recipes!

Want to share this recipe? Tweet it:

Want to save this Thai Ginger Pork recipe? Pin it!

Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe (7)

Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe (8)

Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe (9)

About Rachelle Lucas

Rachelle is the founder of TheTravelBite.com and was named one of USA Today's 10Best Food and Travel Bloggers. She believes the best way to learn about a destination is through its flavors and collects recipes from her trips to recreate them here on The Travel Bite. In her spare time she enjoys running and yoga to balance out her food obsession.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe (10)Hua says

    I just tried this out followed everything but added thinly sliced cucumbers , grated carrots and Thai chili since my husband and I like it spicy….and it was amazing. This is a keeper!!! Thanks for sharing!!!

    Reply

  2. Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe (11)Laura says

    This recipe makes a ton, so consider halving the recipe unless you plan on having a lot of friends over. Never had mint in my nam sod, nor did I ever experience it without some heat. I had to do some doctoring to this recipe to make it the way I’ve enjoyed it before.

    Reply

  3. Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe (12)MARK says

    Thank you for this recipe. I added about 2 tsp sambal just before it finished cooking because I like a little kick, but otherwise made it just as you described. Delicious!

    Reply

  4. Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe (13)Team Mrida says

    Hey all, just try these recipes in Earthen pots made by Mrida Earthen Cookware. you may visit at mridacookware.com

    Reply

  5. Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe (14)Meghan says

    This recipe was amazing. I added red onion into mine that I saw from another recipe and it hit the spot. My family loved it. Super tasty, light, and refreshing. Making again tonight!

    Reply

  6. Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe (15)ashok says

    My Family Loved it. I am definitely sharing Guys, Thanks For sharing this Great Recipe. this recipe and this website with my friend. Hope they also love it. Thank you again for sharing such a great recipe.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Thai Nam Sod: Ginger Lime Ground Pork Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between NAM sod and LARB? ›

Larb is made using the main ingredients of beef, chicken, or pork that is mixed in with toasted rice powder, lime, and fresh herbs whereas nam sod excludes the toasted rice powder adds a mixture of minced garlic, ginger, carrots, and topped with roasted peanuts on a bed of lettuce.

What to use to make ground pork? ›

Ground pork is usually made from pork shoulder, also known as pork butt or Boston butt, and sometimes includes trimmed ends of the loin. When sold at the supermarket pre-ground and packaged, ground pork is not often labeled with fat and lean percentages (the way ground beef is).

What does larb mean in Thai? ›

Larb means that the dish is chopped. Chopped to the max. And how you add flavor to these chopped creations varies vastly from region to region. The larb spice mix that we have just received comes from Northern Thailand. Laap Muang.

What does larb mean in English? ›

Meaning of larb in English

a meat salad often made with ground pork (= the meat from a pig) and common in southeast Asian cooking: I was served larb, a spicy minced pork salad, with mint and cilantro on radicchio lettuce leaves. In certain parts of Thailand the leaf is eaten with raw beef larb.

What does baking soda do to ground pork? ›

Baking soda works its magic on meat mainly on the surface, so it works well with ground beef, but it will work just as well on other ground or thinly sliced meats both working to tenderize them and encourage browning. Try it on thinly sliced chicken breast or thighs, pork, or steak.

Why is ground pork so cheap? ›

Pigs reproduce quickly and have large litters of piglets. Since they eat like pigs they gain weight fast. So once the profit is taken from the bacon and other prime pork cuts, the ground pork also needs to be sold so the price is lowered.

Are laap and larb the same? ›

Laab / Larb (Lao: ລາບ; Thai: ลาบ, RTGS: lap, pronounced [lâːp], also spelled laap, larp, or lahb) is a type of Lao meat salad that is the national dish of Laos, along with green papaya salad and sticky rice. Laab in the Lao language is a noun that refers to meat or other flesh that has been finely chopped and pounded.

What does larb style mean? ›

Larb originates from Lao cuisine, and it's the general name to describe an entree of Lao minced meat that is mixed in a salad with herbs, lime juice, fish sauce, shallots, padaek and toasted ground sticky rice. The most common meats that are added include fish, chicken, beef, and pork.

What kind of food is larb? ›

Larb, for anyone who hasn't had it, is a minced meat dish popular in Thailand and Laos. In its simplest form, it's comprised of cooked ground meat (or sometimes just veg) that is mixed with zippy chiles, ground toasted rice, fish sauce, lime juice, and fresh mint.

What is larb usually made of? ›

In essence, Larb is a refreshing Thai salad, usually made with ground meat (typically ground chicken, beef, lamb or pork), lots of fresh herbs (mint, Thai basil or cilantro), lemongrass, garlic, fresh chilies, red onions, lime juice, green onions.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Sen. Ignacio Ratke

Last Updated:

Views: 6318

Rating: 4.6 / 5 (56 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Sen. Ignacio Ratke

Birthday: 1999-05-27

Address: Apt. 171 8116 Bailey Via, Roberthaven, GA 58289

Phone: +2585395768220

Job: Lead Liaison

Hobby: Lockpicking, LARPing, Lego building, Lapidary, Macrame, Book restoration, Bodybuilding

Introduction: My name is Sen. Ignacio Ratke, I am a adventurous, zealous, outstanding, agreeable, precious, excited, gifted person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.