Laksa – the iconic Malaysian spicy coconut noodle soup! An incredibly rich, fragrant, complex flavoured broth loaded with all the essential classic toppings. This is an easy Laksa recipe because it’s made with a store bought Laksa paste which is spruced up to make a restaurant quality Laksa.
This is a reader-favourite recipe included by popular demand in my debut cookbook “Dinner”!
Laksa recipe
I am obsessed with Laksa.
My Japanese mother will disown me for saying this, but I am pretty sure that Laksa would be my Last Meal.
She will also be able to attest to my obsession with Laksa. Because approximately once a month, I trek wide and far as required to get my Laksa fix. I have been known to drive an hour to a place called Temasek in Parramatta which I think has one the best Laksas in Sydney
Let me put that another way. I drive a 2 hour round trip for a bowl of Laksa that takes 15 minutes to consume and I’m booted out of my seat the minute I finish slurping the soup. This place is in hot demand!
What is Laksa?
Laksa is a spicy noodle soup from Malaysia, also found in other South East Asian counties including Singapore and Indonesia.
Laksa as we know it here in Australia is made with a coconut broth that is spicy and fragrant. However, there are actually quite a few different types of Laksas and those who travel to Malaysia are often surprised to learn that the most popular Laksa has a much stronger curry flavour and is not made with a coconut broth.
So the coconut broth Laksa that is so wildly popular here in Australia is actually not widely available in Malaysia. Nevertheless – doesn’t it look ridiculously delicious??
If the jar instructions says to dump paste into coconut milk – ignore it. Follow my recipe!
Making a Laksa from scratch requires speciality ingredients such as dried shrimp, dried shrimp paste, candlenuts and galangal. I’ve only made it a handful of times. And it’s always a big occasion when I do – I make a big deal of it. “I made that from scratch”, I’ll say smugly, repeatedly.
How to make Laksa
Today, I’m sharing a Laksa recipe that starts with a store bought Laksa paste. If you’ve ever tried to make laksa at home using a store bought paste and just added that to coconut milk like it says to do on the jar, you’ve probably been sorely disappointed with the outcome.
That’s because like all curries (red curry, green curry), Laksa paste benefits greatly from some freshening up. Just a bit of garlic, ginger, lemongrass and chilli sautéed before adding the store bought paste will take this Laksa from meh to mind blowingly delicious!
Best Laksa paste
The best (Asian stores only) – Por Kwan Laksa Paste (A$2.80). At the time of writing, is still only sold at Asian grocery stores. It has more depth of flavour than other brands, the proper Malaysian “funk” that is so addictive about Laksa.
Very good (supermarkets) – Ayam Laksa Paste (Woolworths, Coles 🇦🇺). It’s actually quite good nowadays. I’d happily use it for a Laksa fix if I can’t get to an Asian store.
Avoid – Valcom, the other mainstream brand sold in supermarkets. Remains a no-go zone for me (way, WAY too sweet and westernised)
What’s in Laksa?
For me, the crowning glory of Laksa is the spicy coconut broth. I want it on tap. I could happily drink it every day for breakfast, lunch and dinner.
Here’s what you need for the Laksa broth. What we’re doing here is making a semi-homemade chicken broth by cooking drumsticks (or other bone in, skin on chicken) in chicken broth/stock to inject extra flavour and richness.
Laksa paste – see above for my recommended brands.
And here’s what goes ON and IN Laksa. Just a note on a couple of things:
Noodles – The common noodles found in Laksa is vermicelli noodles (thin white noodles). However, “serious” laksa joints serve laksa with both vermicelli and Hokkien Noodles. Hokkien Noodles are optional – I only use it when making laksa for company.
Fried Tofu Puffs – these are fried tofu pieces. They’re spongey, don’t taste of much and they look weird, but they’re an essential part of the Laksa eating experience!
It’s not the end of the world if you can’t find them….but you’ll miss that glorious moment when you bite into a tofu puff and the laksa soup squirts into your mouth ***and her knees go weak at the thought….***
Crispy Fried Shallots – crunchy, salty, oily bits of fried shallots, a common garnish in dishes across South East Asia.
Nowadays found in large supermarkets, but cheaper in Asian stores. It makes an appearance regularly around here eg Chinese Chicken Salad, Nasi Goreng, Chinese Ham Bone Rice Soup, Asian Slaw, Amazing Easy Thai Coconut Soup – to name a few!
And lastly, but certainly not least is the Chilli Paste that is always served on the side (at good Laksa joints!) so you can add more flavour and heat into your Laksa.
The Chilli Paste is made with more than just chilli and I’ve never come across a recipe for it so I made my own up. This stuff is gold, and a little dab of this added into the coconut broth is one of my secrets. 🙂
Phew! Who knew that I would be able to write almost 1,000 words about a humble noodle soup without pausing for a breath??
But honestly, if there is one soup to write an essay about, it’s got to be Laksa.
Big punchy flavours. Fragrant, rich and spicy.
This soup is me in a bowl. – Nagi x
More Asian Soups You’ll Love!
Ham Bone Congee (Chinese Rice Soup)
See all Asian Recipes
Watch How To Make It
This recipe features in my debut cookbook Dinner. The book is mostly new recipes, but this is a reader favourite included by popular demand!
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Laksa Noodle Soup
Ingredients
Chicken Stock
- 2 cups (500 ml) chicken stock / broth
- 1 cup (250 ml) water
- 3 chicken drumsticks (Note 1)
Laksa Broth
- 1 1/2 tbsp oil
- 2 garlic cloves , minced
- 2 cm / 4/5″ piece of ginger , finely grated
- 1 lemongrass , white part grated, (Note 2)
- 2 birds eye chillis , finely chopped (Note 3)
- 1/2 cup (175g) laksa paste (Note 4)
- 400g / 14 oz can coconut milk (Note 5)
- 2 tsp fish sauce (sub soy)
Noodles + Toppings
- 50g / 1.5 oz vermicelli noodles , dried
- 100g / 3.5oz hokkien noodles (optional, Note 6)
- 80g / 2.5 oz bean sprouts
- 80g / 2.5 oz tofu puffs , cut in half (Note 7)
Laksa Chilli Sauce (Note 8)
- 1/2 tsp sugar , white
- 1 1/2 tsp soy sauce , light or all purpose
- 1/2 garlic clove , minced
- 1 1/2 tsp Laksa paste (Note 4)
- 1 tbsp Sriracha sauce , or other chilli sauce
- 1 tbsp chilli paste from jar , or more Sriracha
- 1 tbsp vegetable oil (any plain oil)
Garnishes
- Fresh coriander / cilantro (recommended)
- Lime wedges (recommended)
- Crispy fried shallots , optional (Note 8)
- Finely sliced red chilli , optional
Instructions
Chicken Stock
- Place Chicken Stock ingredients in a medium saucepan over high heat. Bring to simmer, then reduce to medium high.
- Cook for 25 minutes or until chicken flesh is falling off the bone and liquid reduces by about 1/3.
- Discard skin, pull flesh off the bone and place in bowl, discard bone. Set broth aside.
Laksa Chilli Sauce
- Mix ingredients together in a small bowl. Set aside for 20 minutes.
Laksa Broth
- Heat oil in a large saucepan or small pot over medium low heat. Add garlic and ginger, sauté for 20 seconds, then add lemongrass and chillis. Cook for 1 minute.
- Add laksa paste. Turn heat up to medium and cook for 2 minutes, stirring constantly, or until fragrant.
- Add chicken stock, coconut milk, fish sauce and 2 tsp of Laksa Chilli Sauce. Place lid on and simmer on for 10 minutes.
- Adjust to taste using lime juice (for sour) and fish sauce (for saltiness). Add tofu puffs. Leave on turned off stove with lid on for 5 minutes.
Assemble Laksa
- Prepare noodles per packet directions.
- Divide noodles between 2 bowls. Top with shredded chicken.
- Pour broth over chicken. Top with beansprouts. Sprinkle with Garnishes you choose to use. Serve with Laksa Chilli Sauce on the side.
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
Originally published September 2016. Updated with new photos, new writing, brand new video. No change to recipe – I wouldn’t dare touch it!
Life of Dozer
I’m sure onlookers were thoroughly unimpressed at the sight of his dusty paws on the park bench that people sit on to watch the sun set over Pittwater…… (I think he jumped up so he could see over the shrubs to watch the pelicans frolicking on the sand flats!)
And from when I first published this Laksa recipe….
Spotted FOOD in the water….(i.e. fish!)
Helen Harrison says
After moving to a small town in NZ that has no Asian restaurants, let alone one that serves a Luksa I was so pleased to find this recipe = it is fantastic – thank you Nagi – it is a wonderful Luksa and not at all difficult!!!
Rebekah says
Love this soup, I have made it twice in the last month and will probably make it again at the weekend, I add a seafood mix along with the chicken and tofu puffs.
Bie says
Orgasmic! Just mind blowing flavours tantalising my plate every spoonful! Thank you Nagi 🥰
Nerys says
Outstanding!!! Soooo tasty and easy enough to make as a weeknight dinner. I added additional veggies (carrot, beans, and broccoli) which I cooked separately so I didn’t cloudy the broth. I also added some prawns as needed to be cooked. The result was absolutely delicious. Thanks Nagi x
Cindy says
I LOVE Dozer!!!!
BB says
I searched and searched to find you, who gave me this absolutely PERFECT recipe, to say Thank You!!! OMG! I’ve been reading the ingredients and instructions (and collecting the ingredients) since January and finally, last night, went for it, not knowing what it even should taste like!
Only substitute I made (and it WORKED!!) was to change out the coconut milk (which I find I don’t like most of the time) and used 1-1/2 C. heavy cream with 1/2 c. more chicken broth.
It was divine! My husband loved it too! A couple of questions: If you were to add more veges, which ones would you add? The only near the tofu puffs thing I could find was labeled “fried tofu” (not “puffs” and they didn’t seem to be right. Any alternate suggestions? Also, how about Prawns as a protein alternate? (I had plenty of leftover broth and thought why not use this miraculous dreamy stuff on something else! Thanks again!
Kate says
Favourite Laksa and now favourite meal ever. I cannot get enough. Cooked it for mad keen Laksa friends and they raved about it. Such depth of flavour and cannot be beaten by restaurants – I’ve tried many!
Ling says
Excellent recipe! I made this for 4 people last night and made it veg. Omitted the chicken and used veg stock instead. Bulked the veg part with extra champignons, Nagi’s baked eggplant recipe (delish to soak up allll the soup) and snow peas. I threw the snow peas in right at the end to still be crunchy and add texture.
My laksa was a tad bit salty but i just adjusted it to taste with more water and 2 teaspoons of sugar. Came out perfectly!
Chloe says
I made this recipe and fell in love! It’s a common dinner in my house now the perfect comfort food. Could not get any better!!
Monita Patel says
Have made this few times. Always a hit in our family. Used prawns and boiled eggs instead of chicken. Also used some vegetables.
Thank you for this great recipe 😍
Nemira says
The laksa is superb. The laksa chilli sauce!!! Can’t stop eating it. Just had a tablespoon mixed through noodles for lunch. Will always feature in our kitchen now!
Kristen says
AMAZING. Soo full of flavour, loved the mix of noodles. I had to run with what I had in the house as I was short on time so I used chicken thighs, lemongrass paste, and tinned bean sprouts. My husband didn’t add any chilli paste or chillies, as he thinks mild curry is too hot haha. It was still too hot for him but he LOVED the flavour and ate it through his running nose so that’s saying something! Thank you for sharing!
Peter Laing says
Hi Nagi – I make this regularly and SWMBO says it’s better than the street versions she’s tasted which is high praise indeed !
MARK MORTER says
This has been a house hold favourite and go to recipe when friends and family come to visit.
So easy, Delicious and full of flavour.. always a headliner on dinner nights and an unrivalled recipe compared to other laksas recipes we have followed
We use the por Kwan paste but I’m wondering if you have tried making the laksa paste yourself and if possible to post
Also I use palm sugar instead of white 👍🏽
Isabella says
Amazing recipe – adjusted it to triple the serving to feed an older family of 6 (was left with another serving for 4-6 people depending on serving sizes). With picky food critics amongst the lot – everyone was highly impressed. Not too heavy but full of flavour. Subbed the protein for just chicken breast and it was yum!
Thanks for the great recipe 🙂
Emma says
Loved this! Definitely would add more salt next time but its delicious and tastes as good as what they make in restaurants.
Jennifer Howard says
Excellent–thrilled with the results! Your Pad Thai recipe is equally awesome. Thanks for sharing your expertise!
Lee says
this is my go to recipe for laksa everytime! Love it!!
Carleen Thomson says
Fantastic!
Brett says
Was very good. Have made according to recipe a few times but have changed now. Adjusted the recipe as the quoted sodium is way under the actual content by about 50%. For 2 used 100 g paste (por Kwan) and 250 ml stock and 500 ml water. Taste is still superb.