Takeout-Style Sesame Noodles
Updated February 16, 2026
- Total Time
- 10 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
1 pound noodles, frozen or (preferably) fresh
2 tablespoons sesame oil, plus a splash
3 ½ tablespoons soy sauce
2 tablespoons rice vinegar
2 tablespoons sesame paste (preferably Chinese)
1 tablespoon smooth peanut butter
1 tablespoon granulated sugar
1 tablespoon finely grated ginger
2 teaspoons minced garlic
2 teaspoons chile-garlic paste, chile crisp or chile oil, or to taste
Half a cucumber, peeled, seeded and cut into ⅛-inch by ⅛-inch by 2-inch sticks
¼ cup chopped roasted peanuts
Preparation
- Step 1
Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Add noodles and cook until barely tender, about 5 minutes. They should retain a hint of chewiness.
- Step 2
Drain noodles, rinse with cold water, drain again and toss with a splash of sesame oil.
- Step 3
In a medium bowl, whisk together the remaining 2 tablespoons sesame oil, the soy sauce, rice vinegar, sesame paste, peanut butter, sugar, ginger, garlic and chile-garlic paste.
- Step 4
Pour the sauce over the noodles and toss.
- Step 5
Transfer to a serving bowl, and garnish with cucumber and peanuts.
The Chinese sesame paste called for here is made of toasted sesame seeds; it is not the same as tahini, the Middle Eastern paste made of plain, untoasted sesame. But you could use tahini in a pinch. You need only add a little toasted sesame oil to compensate for flavor, and perhaps some peanut butter to keep the sauce emulsified.
Private Notes
Comments
I learned how to make a version of this from a Chinese native years ago before Chinese ingredients were widely available. You can get a similar "feel" by substituting thick (or standard) spaghetti for Chinese noodles, substituting toasted sesame oil for the paste (but don't omit the p'nut butter, smooth or crunchy), adding cayenne pepper if you don't have chili-garlic paste, and using any thin, crunchy vegetables to garnish, including beansprouts, fresh cilantro, etc.
I have made this recipe scores of times over the years, often for a crowd. I usually multiply the sauce recipe many times (I use a stick blender), and add a fairly minimal amount of the sauce to the noodles when they're still warm (I like DeCecco linguine -- I don't have a favorite Asian brand, and Italian pasta can always be reliably cooked to the proper tooth). Chill the undersauced noodles until you are ready to serve, and then mix in as much extra sauce as you need -- no dryness!
This is tasty, but note that it's not 1 lb dried noodles - the recipe says fresh or frozen, but those are hard to find where I am, so just a note for those of us working from dry. I used 1 lb dried noodles and wound up with enough noodles to feed an army.
I made this with chunky peanut butter and added some hoisin sauce. It was fabulous!
What type of noodles? There are dozens of types of noodles. On the instacart list it shows packages of ramen noodles. Also I was wondering what sesame paste is? Tahini? That's what's on the instacart list. The recipe needs to be more specific, please
I've never made something like this and decided to try it. The comments about not combining noodles and sauce until serving was very helpful because we were having a lot of people and I was doing a lot ahead. I added half a bag of coleslaw mix and bean sprouts in addition to the cucumber. I also couldn't find the toasted sesame paste so I used tahini and add some toasted sesame seeds. Everyone raved about it!


