The Bihun Goreng Recipe That Brings Amma's Kitchen Back to Life

Spicy Malaysian bihun goreng with fried prawns and Amma's Malaysian Sambal

There is a specific kind of hunger that has nothing to do with your stomach.

It is the kind that shows up on a Tuesday evening when the day has been long and your kitchen feels too quiet. It is the hunger for something that tastes like home, like someone who loves you made it just for you, without measuring anything, without a recipe, without even thinking about it.

That is the hunger my mother, Amma, fed before I even knew how to name it.

Her bihun goreng was never a production. It was Tuesday. It was leftovers from the night before, a handful of prawns from the freezer, and that jar of sambal she kept on the counter like most people keep salt. Within twenty minutes, the whole apartment smelled like garlic hitting hot oil, like ginger softening into something warm and sweet, like the kind of food that makes you pull up a chair before it is even done.

I have been chasing that smell ever since.

What Is Bihun Goreng?

Bihun goreng is a Malaysian fried vermicelli noodle dish: quick-cooked rice noodles tossed in a wok with aromatics, protein, and chili-based sauce. The name literally means "fried vermicelli" in Malay, with bihun referring to the thin rice noodles and goreng meaning fried. It is a staple of Malaysian home cooking and hawker stall culture, known for being fast, flexible, and deeply satisfying.

What makes bihun goreng spicy is the sambal, a rich, complex chili paste made from dried chilies, lemongrass, garlic, and shrimp paste. It is the flavour backbone of the dish. Without it, you have noodles. With it, you have a meal that tells a story.

This easy Malaysian bihun goreng recipe uses Amma's Malaysian Sambal, the same sambal I grew up watching my mother make, now bottled so you can bring that story into your own kitchen.

Watch: spicy bihun goreng, start to finish

Why This Recipe Works

Most bihun goreng recipes ask you to build a sambal from scratch, which is beautiful, but it is not a Tuesday. What Amma actually did was keep a good sambal on hand and let the fresh aromatics do the supporting work. Shallots, garlic, ginger, those three together in a hot pan are already something. Add sambal and noodles, and you have Southeast Asian comfort food that comes together in under 20 minutes.

The fried prawns on top are not optional, in my opinion. The cornstarch coating gives them a light crisp that holds up against the saucy noodles. And the scrambled eggs? That is pure Amma: protein, texture, and a little richness that ties it all together.

Tips Before You Start

  • Do not overcook the bihun. Thirty seconds in boiling water, then straight into cold water. They will finish cooking in the wok. Overcooked vermicelli turns mushy fast, so rinse and set aside as soon as they are pliable.
  • High heat is your friend. To get that wok hei, that slightly smoky, charred quality of great stir-fry, your pan needs to be hot before anything goes in.
  • Sambal is adjustable. Two tablespoons gives you a warm, flavourful heat. Go up to three if you want it to bite back. Go down to one if you are cooking for people who think black pepper is spicy.
  • Prep everything first. This is a fast stir-fry. Once you start, you will not have time to chop.

How to Make Spicy Bihun Goreng with Fried Prawns

Once you have your mise en place ready, noodles soaked, prawns prepped, eggs beaten, aromatics chopped, this comes together in minutes. The sequence matters: prawns first, then eggs, then aromatics, then noodles. Each component gets its moment in the pan before coming back together on the plate.

This is exactly how Amma did it. Not because of culinary theory, but because that is how it worked in a small kitchen with one good pan and no time to waste.

Make It Your Own

Bihun goreng is a weeknight dinner blueprint, not a rigid recipe. Amma swapped proteins based on what was in the fridge. Here is how to riff on it:

  • No prawns? Use chicken strips, tofu, or just double the eggs.
  • Add vegetables: Bean sprouts, bok choy, or thinly sliced cabbage all work beautifully.
  • More heat: Add a spoonful of extra Amma's Malaysian Sambal right at the end for a fresh hit of chili.
  • Make it a full spread: Serve alongside our Sambal Prawns or pair it with a fried egg on top for a simple solo meal.

The Part That Matters Most

I started Lost in the Sauce because I kept getting the same kind of hunger, the kind that only certain flavours can fix. When I finally put Amma's sambal into a bottle, it was not about building a product. It was about making that Tuesday feeling available to anyone who needed it.

This bihun goreng recipe is one of the first places I would send you to understand what that means.

Try it. Adjust it. Make it yours. And if you share it, tag us at @litssauce so we can see what your kitchen looks like with a little sambal in it.

Shop Amma's Malaysian Sambal →


Recipe Card: Spicy Bihun Goreng with Fried Prawns

Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Total Time 25 minutes
Servings 2 to 3
Difficulty Easy

Ingredients

Bihun Goreng

  • 600g bihun (vermicelli noodles)
  • 1 shallot, finely chopped
  • 3 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 thumb-sized piece of ginger, grated
  • 1/2 carrot, julienned
  • 1 tbsp soy sauce
  • 2 tbsp Amma's Malaysian Sambal (adjust to taste)
  • Cooking oil

Fried Prawns

  • 250g fresh prawns, cleaned and deveined
  • 1 tsp cornstarch
  • 1 pinch salt

Garnish

  • 3 eggs, beaten
  • 1 stalk spring onion, finely chopped

Instructions

  1. Cook the bihun. Boil for 30 seconds, rinse with cold water, set aside.
  2. Prep the prawns. Toss with cornstarch and salt. Fry in hot oil 2 minutes per side until pink. Remove and set aside.
  3. Scramble the eggs. Cook in a separate pan until just set. Remove and set aside.
  4. Saute the aromatics. In a hot pan or wok, fry shallots, garlic, ginger, and carrot until fragrant, about 2 to 3 minutes.
  5. Add the sambal. Stir in Amma's Malaysian Sambal and mix to coat the aromatics.
  6. Toss the noodles. Add bihun and toss to coat evenly. Drizzle in soy sauce and mix well.
  7. Plate and top. Dish onto a plate and top with scrambled eggs, fried prawns, and spring onions. Serve immediately.

Lost in the Sauce is a Toronto-based flavour brand making Malaysian condiments rooted in memory. Shop our sauces at lostinthesauce.ca.


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