21 Asian Recipes That Beat Ordering Takeout
Ordering takeout sounds easy until the delivery fee, wait time, and soggy containers show up. These 21 recipes cover the takeout-style dishes people usually crave most, from noodles and fried rice to ramen, skewers, shrimp, burgers, and crunchy sides. The mix stays practical for real nights because many of the dishes use short cook times, pantry sauces, or familiar grocery store ingredients. It gives you options for a full dinner, a quick side, or a snack board without depending on the delivery app.

Korean Corn Dogs

With a 40-minute total time and 16 servings, Korean Corn Dogs bring a street-food snack home without waiting in line. The batter uses all-purpose flour, instant yeast, water, sugar, and salt, then each hot dog gets rolled in panko breadcrumbs before frying. A light dusting of sugar plus ketchup and mustard gives the sweet and salty finish people expect from the takeout version. Make these for movie night, party trays, or a weekend snack board.
Get the Recipe: Korean Corn Dogs
Grilled Thai Chicken Skewers

Marinated in ginger, garlic, lemongrass, red curry paste, lime, sesame oil, and fish sauce, Grilled Thai Chicken Skewers give you four servings in 1 hour and 5 minutes. The peanut sauce blends creamy peanut butter, soy sauce, Sriracha, lime juice, honey, and hot water. That sauce makes the dish feel more complete than a plain grilled chicken dinner. Serve the skewers over jasmine rice when you want takeout-style flavor from the grill.
Get the Recipe: Grilled Thai Chicken Skewers
Panda Express Chow Mein

For the copycat craving, Panda Express Chow Mein turns chow mein noodles, cabbage, celery, onion, and garlic into four servings in 25 minutes. The sauce uses vegetable oil, soy sauce, oyster sauce, sesame oil, sugar, chicken broth, and cornstarch so it clings to the noodles. It covers the same noodle-and-sauce fix you would usually order as a side. Add orange chicken, shrimp, or egg rolls if you want a larger takeout-style plate.
Get the Recipe: Panda Express Chow Mein
Kung Pao Chicken

Ready in 30 minutes, Kung Pao Chicken gives four servings with chicken breast, red bell pepper, sugar snap peas, garlic, ginger, and a soy-based sauce. The chicken is tossed with soy sauce, rice wine, sugar, and cornstarch before it hits the wok. That quick coating helps the pieces cook fast while the sauce thickens around them. Serve it with rice when the usual takeout box sounds good but dinner needs to stay under control.
Get the Recipe: Kung Pao Chicken
Pineapple Fried Rice

Sweet pineapple, shredded chicken, cashews, eggs, and cooked basmati rice make Pineapple Fried Rice a 25-minute dinner with six servings. The vegetables include green onions, garlic, ginger, red bell pepper, carrots, and peas, all finished with low-sodium soy sauce. It handles the sweet and salty fried rice craving without a takeout carton. Use cooled rice for the best texture, then serve it as a main dish or alongside grilled chicken.
Get the Recipe: Pineapple Fried Rice
Tonkotsu Ramen

Shortcut broth keeps Tonkotsu Ramen doable at home with a 1 hour and 15 minute total time for four servings. The recipe uses pork tenderloin, hoisin sauce, pork bones, garlic, onion, bok choy, eggs, cinnamon sticks, star anise, soy sauce, mushrooms, ramen noodles, and green onions. It gives you a ramen-shop bowl without simmering broth all day. Keep the noodles separate until serving so each bowl stays springy instead of swollen.
Get the Recipe: Tonkotsu Ramen
Sweet Asian Style Pork Chops

A soy, garlic, ginger, sesame oil, honey, olive oil, and black pepper marinade gives Sweet Asian Style Pork Chops four servings with deep flavor after the fridge time. The full recipe runs 4 hours and 18 minutes, including marinating and resting, while the actual cook time is 8 minutes. That makes it a smart choice when you can start early but need dinner fast later. Serve with rice and cucumber salad to round out the plate.
Get the Recipe: Sweet Asian Style Pork Chops
Beef Bulgogi

Thinly sliced sirloin or ribeye makes Beef Bulgogi tender enough for a Korean BBQ-style dinner in 1 hour and 10 minutes. The marinade uses soy sauce, brown sugar, garlic, onion, sesame oil, and black pepper, then green onions and sesame seeds finish the pan. Four servings make it easier than ordering several trays of beef. Serve it over rice or tuck it into lettuce leaves with extra sauce on the side.
Get the Recipe: Beef Bulgogi
Chow Mein

Done in 20 minutes, Chow Mein uses chow mein noodles, cabbage, celery, red onion, carrots, green onions, and sesame seeds for four servings. The sauce combines soy sauce, oyster sauce, toasted sesame oil, garlic, beef broth, and cornstarch so the noodles get coated instead of watery. It answers the takeout noodle craving with one wok or skillet. Add chicken, beef, or shrimp if you want it to carry the whole meal.
Get the Recipe: Chow Mein
Thai Red Curry Paste

In just 10 minutes, Thai Red Curry Paste gives you six servings of a sauce base built from dried red chilies, salt, lemongrass, cilantro, lemon zest, shallots, and cumin seeds. Everything goes into a blender with water added only as needed for texture. Keeping this paste ready turns curry, noodle soup, or stir-fry into a faster home option than ordering delivery. Make it when you want the flavor base handled before the rest of dinner starts.
Get the Recipe: Thai Red Curry Paste
Elevated Ramen Noodles

Instant noodles get a stronger dinner setup in Elevated Ramen Noodles, a 25-minute recipe that makes two servings. Eggs, sesame oil, garlic, ginger, soy sauce, chicken broth, instant ramen, baby bok choy, carrot, black sesame seeds, and green onions turn the packet into a fuller bowl. It keeps the speed of convenience food while adding broth, greens, and eggs. Use it for solo dinners, late nights, or a quick lunch that still feels like ramen shop food.
Get the Recipe: Elevated Ramen Noodles
Miso Soup

Built from dashi, nori, red miso paste, green chard, green onions, and firm tofu, Miso Soup makes four servings in 25 minutes. The soup starts with warmed dashi, then the greens and tofu cook briefly before the miso mixture goes in off the heat. That keeps the flavor clean and avoids the flat taste that can come from boiling miso. Serve it before fried rice, tempura, or ramen for a lighter takeout-style starter.
Get the Recipe: Miso Soup
Thai Jasmine Rice

Rinsing is the key step in Thai Jasmine Rice, an 18-minute side dish that makes two servings from jasmine rice and water. The recipe uses 1 cup of rice with 1 1/4 cups of water, then cooks covered and finishes with a rest off the heat. This is the base that makes saucy curries, bulgogi, pork chops, and stir-fries feel like a full plate at home. Make it when the main dish needs something reliable underneath.
Get the Recipe: Thai Jasmine Rice
Black Bean Noodles

For a Korean noodle night, Black Bean Noodles coat fresh udon in a glossy sauce made with chunjang, pork belly, cabbage, onion, garlic, ginger, soy sauce, oyster sauce, sugar, and cornstarch. The recipe makes three servings in 35 minutes. Cucumber and scallions finish each bowl so the rich sauce has a fresh edge. It is the kind of filling noodle dinner that makes the delivery menu easier to skip.
Get the Recipe: Black Bean Noodles
Egg Fried Rice

Simple pantry ingredients make Egg Fried Rice a 25-minute recipe with four servings. Jasmine rice, eggs, vegetable oil, green onions, soy sauce, and sesame oil do the work, with the rice cooked first and the eggs scrambled quickly in a hot wok. It fills the same role as a takeout side but can become dinner with vegetables or extra protein mixed in. Serve it next to shrimp, egg rolls, or stir-fry.
Get the Recipe: Egg Fried Rice
Chinese Salt & Pepper Shrimp

Crisp fried shrimp makes Chinese Salt & Pepper Shrimp a 35-minute dinner or appetizer with four servings. The shrimp marinates in fish sauce, then gets coated with flour and cornstarch before frying. Garlic, ginger, red Thai chilies, scallions, coarse salt, peppercorns, and cilantro bring the final seasoning. It covers the spicy seafood takeout craving without needing a full restaurant order, especially with egg fried rice or cucumber salad nearby.
Get the Recipe: Chinese Salt & Pepper Shrimp
Egg Roll

Ground pork, ginger, garlic powder, soy sauce, green onions, coleslaw mix, and wrappers make Egg Roll a 30-minute recipe with 12 servings. The filling cooks first, then each wrapper gets sealed with a simple flour-and-water paste before frying. That gives you the crunchy side people usually add to a takeout order. Serve them with sweet chili sauce, fried rice, or soup when you want a snackable plate at home.
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Shrimp Tempura

A cold batter keeps Shrimp Tempura light while the 25-minute recipe stays realistic for a home kitchen. Four servings use medium shrimp, flour, cornstarch, iced water, egg whites, and vegetable oil, plus a dipping sauce made with water, soy sauce, mirin, and sugar. It gives you a crisp restaurant-style appetizer without ordering a tray. Serve immediately with miso soup, rice, or a cucumber salad so the coating stays crisp.
Get the Recipe: Shrimp Tempura
Vegetable Stir Fry

A hot wok turns Vegetable Stir Fry into a 27-minute main or side with four servings. The sauce uses soy sauce, rice vinegar, honey or maple syrup, sesame oil, and cornstarch, while the pan holds broccolini, red, green, and yellow bell peppers, mushrooms, green onion, and sesame seeds. It gives the table a fast vegetable-heavy option next to noodles, rice, or shrimp. Add tofu, tempeh, or beans if it needs to stand alone.
Get the Recipe: Vegetable Stir Fry
Korean Burgers

Ground beef mixed with garlic, ginger powder, soy sauce, and black pepper makes Korean Burgers a 20-minute main with three servings. Honey BBQ sauce, mayonnaise, chili garlic sauce, scallions, and sesame seed buns finish the build. It shifts the usual burger night toward Korean-inspired takeout flavors without needing extra sides from a restaurant. Serve with Asian slaw, fries, or rice bowls when the table wants something casual but not plain.
Get the Recipe: Korean Burgers
Asian Slaw

Crunchy cabbage and carrots make Asian Slaw a 10-minute side with 10 servings. The dressing uses rice wine vinegar, honey, toasted sesame oil, soy sauce, and ground ginger, then cilantro, toasted sesame seeds, peanuts, green onions, and chives finish the bowl. It brings the fresh side that takeout orders often lack, especially next to fried shrimp, burgers, or skewers. Keep the dressing separate if making it ahead for lunches or cookouts.
Get the Recipe: Asian Slaw
