Xiamen Peanut Noodles Recipe (花生酱拌面)

Xiamen Peanut Noodles Recipe (花生酱拌面)

Fujian Cuisine · seafood, soups, umami, gentle sweetness

Xiamen Peanut Noodles Recipe

花生酱拌面

Xiamen Peanut Noodles is a regional Chinese dish added to Jiating Kitchen’s cuisine library for readers who want to explore beyond the familiar takeout menu. This version is written for Western home kitchens with practical grocery notes and a clear cooking flow.

Shopping notes

Core pantry for this cuisine: dried shrimp, dried scallops, mushrooms, seafood stock, rice wine, red yeast rice, white pepper. Use bottled clam juice plus chicken stock for seafood stock when dried seafood is hard to find.

Ingredients

  • 1 to 1 1/2 lb main protein, tofu, seafood, noodles, rice, or vegetables depending on the dish
  • 2 tbsp neutral high-heat oil such as avocado, canola, peanut, or grapeseed oil
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1-inch piece fresh ginger, minced or sliced
  • 2 scallions, sliced
  • 1 to 2 tbsp light soy sauce, adjusted to taste
  • 1 tbsp Shaoxing wine or dry sherry
  • Salt, white pepper, sugar, vinegar, chilies, or aromatics to match the dish style

Step-by-step instructions

Prep the filling, noodles, or dough

Step 1

Prep the filling, noodles, or dough

Cut and measure everything before heating the wok. Prepare fresh or dried noodles cooked until just tender. Slice vegetables into similar thickness so they cook evenly. Keep garlic, ginger, scallions, sauces, and any cornstarch slurry in separate small bowls; Chinese cooking moves fast once the pan is hot. If using noodles or wrappers, keep them covered so they do not dry out.

Bring water or broth to the right boil

Step 2

Bring water or broth to the right boil

Use a large pot so the food has room to move. Bring water or broth to a full boil over high heat. Season lightly if the food itself is plain; keep dipping sauces or finishing sauces nearby.

Cook without crowding

Step 3

Cook without crowding

Add noodles, dumplings, wontons, or vegetables in batches. Stir gently for the first 20 seconds so they do not stick. Noodles usually take 2 to 5 minutes; dumplings and wontons usually take 5 to 8 minutes, depending on size.

Check doneness and drain

Step 4

Check doneness and drain

Taste one piece before draining. Noodles should be tender but springy; dumpling wrappers should look translucent and the filling should be cooked through. Lift with a spider strainer and shake off extra water.

Sauce, garnish, and serve

Step 5

Sauce, garnish, and serve

Toss with sauce while hot or ladle into broth. Finish with scallions, chili oil, sesame oil, vinegar, or white pepper. finish with chili oil and a tiny splash of vinegar if the dish tastes flat. Serve immediately before noodles soften or wrappers stick together.

Bring water or broth to the right boil

Step 2

Bring water or broth to the right boil

Use a large pot so the food has room to move. Bring water or broth to a full boil over high heat. Season lightly if the food itself is plain; keep dipping sauces or finishing sauces nearby.

Cook without crowding

Step 3

Cook without crowding

Add noodles, dumplings, wontons, or vegetables in batches. Stir gently for the first 20 seconds so they do not stick. Noodles usually take 2 to 5 minutes; dumplings and wontons usually take 5 to 8 minutes, depending on size.

Check doneness and drain

Step 4

Check doneness and drain

Taste one piece before draining. Noodles should be tender but springy; dumpling wrappers should look translucent and the filling should be cooked through. Lift with a spider strainer and shake off extra water.

Sauce, garnish, and serve

Step 5

Sauce, garnish, and serve

Toss with sauce while hot or ladle into broth. Finish with scallions, chili oil, sesame oil, vinegar, or white pepper. finish with chili oil and a tiny splash of vinegar if the dish tastes flat. Serve immediately before noodles soften or wrappers stick together.

Bloom the aromatics

Step 2

Bloom the aromatics

Set a wok or wide skillet over medium-high heat for 60 to 90 seconds, then add 1 to 2 tablespoons neutral oil. Add the aromatics for Sichuan: Sichuan peppercorn fragrance, chili oil, doubanjiang, garlic, ginger, scallions. Stir for 20 to 40 seconds, just until fragrant. If garlic darkens quickly, lower the heat right away.

Add liquid and main ingredients

Step 3

Add liquid and main ingredients

Add the main ingredient and enough stock, water, or sauce to come partway up the food. Bring to a steady boil over high heat, then immediately reduce to medium or medium-low so the surface bubbles gently instead of violently.

Simmer until the texture is right

Step 4

Simmer until the texture is right

Cook gently for 8 to 18 minutes depending on the ingredient: tofu and vegetables need less time, chicken or pork pieces need more. Stir occasionally. The dish is ready when the sauce tastes rounded and the main ingredient is tender all the way through.

Adjust and serve

Step 5

Adjust and serve

Taste the broth or sauce. Add soy sauce for salt, vinegar for lift, sugar for roundness, or chili oil for heat. finish with chili oil and a tiny splash of vinegar if the dish tastes flat. Serve hot with rice, noodles, or a simple green vegetable side.

Xiamen Peanut Noodles Recipe (花生酱拌面) cooking step

Step 2

Build the aromatic base

Heat oil in a wok, skillet, or heavy pot. Add garlic, ginger, scallions, chilies, or fermented sauces and cook briefly until fragrant.

Xiamen Peanut Noodles Recipe (花生酱拌面) cooking step

Step 3

Cook the main ingredient

Add the protein, tofu, vegetables, noodles, or rice. Stir-fry, braise, steam, or simmer according to the dish style until just cooked through.

Xiamen Peanut Noodles Recipe (花生酱拌面) cooking step

Step 4

Season and finish

Add soy sauce, wine, vinegar, sugar, stock, or chili oil in small amounts. Reduce until glossy, taste, and adjust salt, acidity, sweetness, and heat.

Xiamen Peanut Noodles Recipe (花生酱拌面) cooking step

Step 5

Serve hot

Finish with scallions, herbs, sesame oil, or a final splash of vinegar. Serve with steamed rice, noodles, or a crisp vegetable side.

Cook’s notes

This entry is part of the Fujian Cuisine collection. Use it as a practical starting point, then refine salt, heat, sweetness, and aromatics to match your preferred regional flavor.

What category is this recipe?

Xiamen Peanut Noodles is listed under Fujian Cuisine and Noodles & Rice so readers can browse by both region and cooking style.

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