Okay, so let me tell you about this whole thing with the Lone Tree Thai Cuisine menu. It wasn’t like I set out to become some master Thai chef or anything. It all started because my youngest, out of nowhere, decided their Pad See Ew was the only thing worth eating on planet Earth. Seriously, obsession level.
We used to order from there, like, maybe twice a month. Good stuff, you know? Consistent. But then we had that crazy month where everything cost double, and I thought, “Right, I gotta tighten the belt.” Plus, driving over there just for noodles started feeling a bit much. So, I figured, how hard can it be? Famous last words, right?

First step, I pulled up their menu online. I remembered seeing it – Pad See Ew: Stir-fried wide rice noodles with egg, broccoli, carrot, and your choice of protein in a sweet soy sauce. Sounded simple enough. Protein, veggies, noodles, sauce. Easy peasy.
Getting the Goods
Finding the stuff was the first adventure. Regular grocery store? Forget about wide rice noodles. They had thin ones, sure, but not those big, floppy ones that make Pad See Ew what it is. Had to go to that specialty Asian market way across town. Found the noodles, finally. Then the sauce game. Sweet soy sauce? Is that kecap manis? Is it just dark soy sauce with sugar? The menu doesn’t exactly give you a recipe card. I grabbed a few different bottles, hoping one would be right.
The Kitchen Battle
Okay, got home, feeling all confident. Washed the broccoli, chopped the carrots, sliced up some chicken. Got the eggs ready. Then the noodles. The package instructions were… sparse. Soaked ’em like it said. They felt okay.
Fired up the stove. Tried to get the wok super hot, like they do in restaurants. My stove just doesn’t have that kind of firepower, you know? Anyway, threw in the chicken, then the garlic. So far, so good. Added the veggies, then the egg, scrambled it quick. Now the noodles.
This is where things went sideways. The noodles hit the wok and just… clumped. A big, sticky blob. Tried to break ’em up. Added the sauce concoction I’d mixed up (a bit of this, a bit of that). The color looked kinda right? But the noodles were either breaking into tiny pieces or sticking together like glue. And forget about that smoky ‘wok hei’ flavor. My kitchen just smelled like slightly burnt soy sauce.
The Verdict
End result? Well, it was edible. Kinda. My kid looked at it, poked it, and asked, “Can we just order the real one next time?” Sigh. It tasted okay-ish, but the texture was all wrong. It wasn’t that Pad See Ew from the menu.
- Noodles: Clumpy and broken.
- Sauce: A bit too salty, not quite the right sweetness.
- Veggies: Actually, those were fine. Hard to mess up broccoli.
- Overall: A pale imitation.
So, yeah. That was my big adventure trying to replicate something off the Lone Tree Thai Cuisine menu. It made me appreciate just how much goes into making even a seemingly simple dish taste right. It’s not just the ingredients list; it’s the heat, the technique, probably some secret sauce ingredient they’re not telling us about on the menu description. Next time? I’m just ordering it. Way less cleanup, too.
