More than a side: 5 Asian salads bursting with flavour, fibre and texture
There’s something deeply satisfying about perfectly prepped and dressed vegetables that makes you forget you’re even eating something healthy. Asian salads have mastered this art, transforming simple ingredients into dishes that sing with umami, texture and brightness.
These aren’t the wilted lettuce affairs that leave you hungry an hour later. Each one delivers serious fibre content wrapped in layers of complex flavour that make you actually crave your vegetables.
From fermented tea leaves to smashed cucumbers, these fresh Asian salad ideas celebrate texture as much as taste, proving that the best nutrition often comes in the most delicious packages.
Read more: 5 refreshing summer salad recipes to beat the heat
Som tum: Thailand’s green papaya salad
Shredded unripe papaya provides the backbone for Thailand’s invigorating salad. In a mortar and pestle, the papaya is pounded with garlic, chillies, peanuts, dried shrimp, green beans, tomatoes, palm sugar, fish sauce and lime juice. The result tickles every sense—spicy heat, sour lime, sweet palm sugar and the satisfying crunch of fresh vegetables.
Som tum is said to have originated in neighbouring Laos, but Thailand’s version leans heavily on fish sauce rather than Laos’s fermented fish sauce or fermented crab paste. A staple of healthy Asian food culture, it’s a prime example of how easy Asian salads can pack serious flavour.
Read more: How to make green papaya salad
Gado-gado: Indonesia’s mixed vegetable salad
A classic among Asian salads, Indonesia’s gado-gado combines a rainbow of vegetables and ingredients with rich peanut sauce. (Photo: Dovinda RD / Pexels)
One of Indonesia’s national dishes earns its “mix-mix” name due to its sheer variety. Bean sprouts, cabbage, carrots, cucumbers, tofu, potatoes, boiled egg and green beans create a rainbow of textures, all united by a peanut sauce that elevates vegetables from supporting cast to leading role. The sauce itself balances roasted peanuts with chilli peppers, garlic, palm sugar, soy sauce and tamarind paste.
This Indonesian icon is a standout among vegetarian Asian salads, proving that great salad recipes don’t need meat to be satisfying.
Read more: Find delicious gado-gado in these 5 restaurants in Jakarta
Lahpet thoke: Myanmar’s tea leaf salad
Myanmar transforms tea leaves into something entirely unexpected. The fermented tea leaves provide a funky depth that transforms familiar vegetables into something remarkable. Young tea buds ferment slowly in their juices, creating an earthy, umami-rich base that pairs with cabbage, tomato, peanuts, shrimp floss, sesame seeds and chillies. This dish shows how Asian salad dressing concepts extend far beyond oil and vinegar.
Historically served by Burmese royalty as a symbol of good faith in settling disputes, lahpet thoke carries both cultural significance and nutritional benefits. Today, it’s a symbol of hospitality in Myanmar, served everywhere from traditional ceremonies to school cafeterias.
Read more: The art of every part: 6 traditional Asian ingredients that reduce food waste
Pai huang gua: China’s smashed cucumber salad
Chinese cucumber salad proves that technique matters as much as ingredients. Cucumbers aren’t sliced but smashed with cleavers or rolling pins (or even the bottom of a skillet), creating jagged edges that grip dressing better than neat cuts ever could. Dressings vary—some versions embrace bold Sichuan heat while others favour a milder approach with rice vinegar, soy sauce, oil, sugar and sesame seeds.
Served chilled, this Chinese-style cucumber salad provides instant relief from summer heat while delivering satisfying crunch and subtle sweetness.
Hiyashi wakame: Japan’s seaweed salad
Rehydrated wakame (seaweed) brings the sea to your salad bowl. Rice vinegar, soy sauce, sesame oil and mirin dress the slippery, satiny seaweed in an umami-rich mixture that balances brine with brightness. Sesame seeds and cucumber may join the wakame for textural contrast.
One of the easiest Asian salads, hiyashi wakame challenges typical salad conventions while providing minerals and fibre from an unexpected source.
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