Asian Recipes
131 recipes

One-Pot Gochujang Chicken Stir-Fry Noodles

Keto Teriyaki Chicken Skewers with Sugar-Free Glaze

Keto Shrimp and Broccoli Stir-Fry with Ginger Garlic Sauce

Crispy Sweet Chilli Tofu and Aubergine Rice Bowls

10-Minute Tahini Noodle Salad with Roasted Garlic

Quick Ramen Vegetable Stir Fry with Savory Soy Maple Sauce

Korean Bulgogi with Pear Marinade and Caramelized Beef

Pan-Seared Mongolian Beef with Soy-Brown Sugar Glaze

Crispy Homemade Egg Rolls with Pork and Vegetables

Pan-Seared Enoki Mushrooms with Miso and Sesame

20-Minute Pineapple Fried Rice with Sweet and Savory Sauce

Sticky Asian Glazed Chicken Wings with Sesame Seeds

Coconut Peanut Butter Chicken Skillet

Copycat Panda Express Orange Chicken with Crispy Batter

Panda Express Mushroom Chicken Copycat Stir-Fry Recipe

Panda Express Copycat Fried Rice with Eggs and Vegetables

Air Fryer Salmon Bites with Sesame Garlic Marinade

Asian Air Fryer Chicken Bites with Maple Sesame Marinade

Crispy Jalapeño Chicken with Sweet Soy Glaze

Quick Homemade Sweet and Sour Sauce

Crispy Miso Ginger Fried Chicken with Miso Mayo

Japanese Beef Teriyaki with Sesame Cucumber Salad

Green Tea-Smoked Duck Breasts with Aromatic Spices

Instant Pot Pepper Steak with Tender Beef and Bell Peppers
Asian cooking spans thousands of miles and dozens of countries, but the basics stay consistent. Soy sauce, sesame oil, and rice vinegar form the foundation. Most recipes balance salt, sweet, sour, and umami in every bite.
Stir-frying remains the workhorse technique. Heat your wok until it smokes at 500F. Add oil only after the metal gets hot. Toss ingredients constantly for 2-3 minutes max. Everything cooks fast.
Soy sauce comes in light and dark varieties. Light soy sauce adds salt without changing color. Dark soy sauce brings sweetness and turns dishes mahogany brown. Most home cooks need only light soy sauce to start. Buy Kikkoman or Pearl River Bridge brands for consistent quality.
Fish sauce smells terrible in the bottle but transforms dishes. One tablespoon replaces salt in most recipes. Thai, Vietnamese, and Filipino dishes rely on it heavily. Red Boat and Three Crabs brands work best.
Rice forms the base for 80% of Asian meals. Short-grain rice sticks together for sushi and Korean dishes. Long-grain jasmine rice stays fluffy for Thai curries. Medium-grain rice works for everything else. Cook rice with a 1:1.5 ratio of rice to water for perfect results.
Marinades need time. Soy sauce, garlic, and ginger penetrate meat in 30 minutes minimum. Overnight works better. Add 1 tablespoon cornstarch per pound of meat to create the velvety texture you find in restaurants.
Fresh ginger beats powdered every time. Peel it with a spoon edge. Freeze whole roots for up to 6 months. Grate frozen ginger directly into dishes.
Asian cooking suits busy weeknights perfectly. Prep takes longer than cooking. Chop everything before you turn on heat. Most stir-fries finish in under 5 minutes once you start. Keep sesame oil for finishing dishes, not cooking. Its smoke point of 350F means it burns easily.
Start with fried rice, lo mein, or simple stir-fries. Master the wok hei (breath of the wok) flavor that comes from proper high-heat cooking. Build your pantry slowly. Good soy sauce, sesame oil, and rice vinegar handle 90% of recipes.
Essential Ingredients
Key Techniques
FAQ
What type of rice should I buy?
Jasmine rice works for 80% of Asian recipes. Buy 20-pound bags for best value at $1.50 per pound. Short-grain sushi rice costs more at $3 per pound but sticks properly for Japanese and Korean dishes. Medium-grain CalRose handles everything adequately. Skip instant rice completely. Store rice in airtight containers to prevent bugs.
Do I really need a wok?
A 14-inch carbon steel wok costs $30 and improves stir-fries dramatically. Season it like cast iron. Heat distribution beats any Western pan. However, a 12-inch skillet works for beginners. Just cook in smaller batches and crank heat to maximum. Gas stoves reach 15,000 BTUs, while electric tops at 2,400 watts. Woks perform better on gas.
How do I stop everything from sticking?
Heat your pan until water droplets dance and evaporate in 2 seconds. Add oil only after this point. Use 2-3 tablespoons oil per stir-fry, not 1 teaspoon. Keep ingredients moving constantly. Crowding drops temperature below 400F and causes sticking. Cook proteins separately from vegetables. Most sticking happens in the first 30 seconds.
Which soy sauce brand should I buy?
Kikkoman costs $3.50 per bottle and works for Japanese dishes. Pearl River Bridge Superior Light at $2 handles Chinese cooking better. San-J tamari works for gluten-free needs at $5. Avoid La Choy completely. Dark soy sauce from any brand adds color and sweetness. Start with one good light soy sauce. Add others as you specialize.