The Woks of Life
My Saved Recipes
  • Recipes
    • Recipe Index
    • Recipe Filter
    • View all By Date
    • Our Cookbook: NOW AVAILABLE!
    • Videos
  • How-To
    • Cooking MethodsAll how-to cooking methods
    • Cooking ToolsAll Cooking tools including hand and electrics
    • Wok Guide
    • Garden/FarmWe share our learnings from our new Woks of Life HQ/farm (where we moved in Fall of 2021) on how to grow Chinese vegetables, fruits, and other produce, as well as farm updates: our chickens, ducks, goats, alpacas, and resident llama!
    • CultureCulture related posts
  • Ingredients
    • Chinese Ingredients Glossary
    • Sauces, Wines, Vinegars & Oils
    • Spices & Seasonings
    • Dried, Cured & Pickled Ingredients
    • Noodles & Wrappers
    • Rice, Grains, Flours & Starches
    • Tofu, Bean Curd & Seitan
    • Vegetables & Fungi
    • Fresh Herbs & Aromatics
  • Life & Travel
    • Life
    • Travel
  • Contact
    • Work with Us
    • Press
    • Send Us A Message
  • About Us
Home ❯ Recipes ❯ Vegetables ❯ Snap Pea Salad

Snap Pea Salad

Kaitlin

by:

Kaitlin

35 Comments
Jump to Recipe
Posted: 7/12/2023
Snap Pea Salad

This snap pea salad is easy, delicious, and refreshing. I made good use of our Asian pantry with go-to’s like sesame seeds, sesame oil, rice vinegar, coriander seeds, and a couple cloves of garlic for good measure, but this snap pea salad is versatile enough to serve with anything! 

A Spring/Summer Recipe for Sugar Snap Pea Salad

Sugar snap peas are one of the most rewarding vegetables of the late spring/summer harvest. Of course you can add them into stir-fries, but my personal favorite way to eat them is by making them into a salad. 

When you eat these peas raw, you can taste their natural sweetness in all its glory, and with a few additional ingredients, they really shine. 

I slice them thinly, giving the salad a nice texture and so the juiciness of the snap peas comes to the forefront. This also gives the peas more surface area for the salad dressing to cling to!

What Can I Serve This With? 

You can make this snap pea salad as a refreshing side alongside an array of Chinese stir-fries, or any grilled or seared protein of choice (e.g. chicken, steak, shrimp, or a piece of salmon or flaky white fish).

Because this salad is served at room temperature, and also uses a hardier vegetable than your average green salad, it’s also great for picnics, barbecues, and potlucks! It’s special and unique enough to serve to guests. 

On your average night, if I’m being totally honest, I’ll just drizzle over some olive oil, white wine vinegar, and salt, and call it a day, eating it with literally whatever I’ve got planned. But I’ll be adding this lightly Asian-influenced version into my rotation too! 

How to Trim Snap Peas

The most important part of this recipe is trimming the snap peas. They have tough ends and fibrous “strings” along the concave curve of the pea that must be removed. Luckily, it’s easy enough to do—all in a couple of motions. 

The way to do it is to grab the main stem (where the pea attaches to the plant). Snap it off, and tug downwards along the inner curve of the snap pea. The stem should remain attached to the stringy bit, which should come away easily. 

Trimming snap peas
De-stringing sugar snap pea

Then, you do the same thing from the other end. Trim the bottom tip of the pea to get the rest of the string—this time, pulling upwards. 

Removing tough string from sugar snap pea

If the snap pea doesn’t have an obvious stem, just use your fingernails to grab a little piece of the tip of the snap pea (so as not to excessively waste good snap pea during the trimming process), and follow the same steps. 

Don’t skip this step—those strings are very fibrous and chewy. Sometimes, when you get snap peas in restaurants (usually non-Asian restaurants, ahem), they forget to do this step, and you find yourself with a very unpleasant eating experience! 

Snap Pea Salad Recipe Instructions

First, trim the snap peas of the stems and strings, and rinse them of any dirt or debris. If they look a bit lackluster, let them soak in cold water for a few minutes to perk them up. (I use this trick with lots of different vegetables—especially kale and celery. Just trim the peas first.)

Bowl of trimmed sugar snap peas

We didn’t have any such issue, as we harvested these snap peas straight from our garden!

snap peas growing

Toast the sesame seeds in a dry pan over medium heat until they’re 1-2 shades darker and fragrant.

Remove the sesame seeds, and add the coriander seeds to the pan. Toast until fragrant. Grind the coriander seeds into a coarse powder using a mortar and pestle or spice grinder. (You can also cheat by toasting pre-ground coriander in a dry pan over low heat until fragrant.)

ground toasted coriander

Slice the snap peas lengthwise into thin strips—you can usually get 3-4 strips out of one snap pea.

julienned sugar snap peas

Add them to a mixing bowl. Also add the sesame seeds, ground coriander, rice vinegar, neutral oil, honey, sesame oil, salt, garlic, and almonds. Toss until everything is well-combined. 

chopping almonds
assembling snap pea salad recipe

Taste and adjust seasoning to your liking, if needed. My dad preferred his sweeter (more honey), and I preferred it more tart (more vinegar). Serve!

Spoonful of snap pea salad
Snap Pea Salad
Snap Pea Salad Recipe

Looking for more authentic recipes? Subscribe to our email list and be sure to follow us on Pinterest, Facebook, Instagram, and Youtube!

Recipe

Snap Pea Salad
Print
4.86 from 14 votes

Snap Pea Salad

This snap pea salad is easy, tasty, refreshing, and versatile enough to serve with anything! It's also great for picnics, BBQs, and potlucks.
by: Kaitlin
Serves: 4
Prep: 30 minutes mins
Total: 30 minutes mins

Ingredients

  • 1 pound sugar snap peas
  • 2 tablespoons sesame seeds
  • 2 teaspoons coriander seeds
  • 3 tablespoons rice vinegar
  • 2 tablespoons neutral oil
  • 2 teaspoons honey (or to taste)
  • 1/2 teaspoon sesame oil
  • 3/4 teaspoon salt
  • 2 cloves garlic (finely chopped)
  • 1/4 cup toasted almonds

Instructions

  • First, trim the snap peas of the stems and strings, and rinse them of any dirt or debris. If they look a bit lackluster, let them soak in cold water for a few minutes to perk them up (after trimming).
  • Toast the sesame seeds in a dry pan over medium heat until they’re 1-2 shades darker and fragrant. Remove the sesame seeds, and add the coriander seeds to the pan. Toast until fragrant. Grind the coriander seeds into a coarse powder using a mortar and pestle or spice grinder. (You can also cheat by toasting pre-ground coriander in a dry pan over low heat until fragrant.)
  • Slice the snap peas lengthwise into thin strips—you can usually get 3-4 strips out of one snap pea. Add them to a mixing bowl, along with the sesame seeds, ground coriander, rice vinegar, neutral oil, honey, sesame oil, salt, garlic, and almonds. Toss until everything is well-combined.
  • Taste and adjust seasoning to your liking, if needed. Serve!

Nutrition Facts

Calories: 154kcal (8%) Carbohydrates: 13g (4%) Protein: 4g (8%) Fat: 10g (15%) Saturated Fat: 1g (5%) Polyunsaturated Fat: 3g Monounsaturated Fat: 6g Trans Fat: 0.03g Sodium: 442mg (18%) Potassium: 266mg (8%) Fiber: 4g (16%) Sugar: 7g (8%) Vitamin A: 1233IU (25%) Vitamin C: 69mg (84%) Calcium: 98mg (10%) Iron: 3mg (17%)
Nutritional Info Disclaimer Hide Disclaimer
TheWoksofLife.com is written and produced for informational purposes only. While we do our best to provide nutritional information as a general guideline to our readers, we are not certified nutritionists, and the values provided should be considered estimates. Factors such as brands purchased, natural variations in fresh ingredients, etc. will change the nutritional information in any recipe. Various online calculators also provide different results, depending on their sources. To obtain accurate nutritional information for a recipe, use your preferred nutrition calculator to determine nutritional information with the actual ingredients and quantities used.
Did You Make This?Tag us on Instagram @thewoksoflife and be sure to follow us on social for more!
@thewoksoflife

You may also like…

  • Chinese Tofu Salad, by thewoksoflife.com
    Chinese Tofu Salad
  • Pea Tips Stir-fry, by thewoksoflife.com
    Pea Tips Stir-fry
  • Hawaiian Mac Salad, by thewoksoflife.com
    Hawaiian Mac Salad
  • Rainbow Noodle Salad, by thewoksoflife.com
    Rainbow Noodle Salad
Kaitlin

About

Kaitlin
Kaitlin Leung is the younger daughter in The Woks of Life family, working on the blog alongside older sister Sarah and parents Bill and Judy. While notoriously unable to follow a recipe (usually preferring to freestyle it), Kaitlin has a knack for devising creative recipes with new and familiar flavors and for reverse engineering recipes for all of her favorite foods. Alongside her family, Kaitlin is a New York Times Bestselling author with their cookbook The Woks of Life: Recipes to Know and Love from a Chinese American Family. She is also a Swiftie, former brand strategy consultant and New York working girl, and the “Director” of The Woks of Life Youtube channel.
guest
Rate this recipe:




guest
Rate this recipe:




This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

35 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Sarah, Kaitlin, Judy, and Bill cooking together

Welcome!

We’re Sarah, Kaitlin, Judy, and Bill– a family of four cooks sharing our home-cooked and restaurant-style recipes.

Our Story

sign up for our newsletter and receive:

our Top 25 recipes eBook

Our email newsletter delivers our new recipes and latest updates. It’s always free and you can unsubscribe any time.

Wok Guide
Ingredients 101
Cooking Tools
Kitchen Wisdom
* Surprise Me! *

Save Your Favorite Woks of Life Recipes!

Create an account to save your favorite dishes & get email udpates!

Sign Me Up

Sign Up For Email Updates & Receive Our

Top 25 Recipes Ebook!

“

“I am proud to say that your genealogy has been the sole tutorial for my Asian-inspired culinary adventures for years; probably since you began. Time and again, my worldwide web pursuits for solid recipes that I know my family will eat has landed me back here.”

Beth, Community Member Since 2013

Shanghai Scallion Flatbread Qiang Bing
Eggs with Soy Sauce and Scallions
Scallion Ginger Beef & Tofu
Bill with jar of haam choy
Soy Butter Glazed King Oyster Mushrooms
Taiwanese Rou Zao Fan
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • YouTube

All Rights Reserved © The Woks of Life

·

Privacy Policy

·

Disclaimer

·

Site Credits

·

Back to Top
wpDiscuz