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Home ❯ Recipes ❯ Recipe Roundups ❯ The Woks of Life’s Top 50 Most Underrated Recipes 

The Woks of Life’s Top 50 Most Underrated Recipes 

Kaitlin

by:

Kaitlin

33 Comments
Posted: 12/6/2022

Today we turn to 50 underrated recipes that have simply flown under the radar. Under-loved and sometimes almost completely unknown (unless you counted yourself as an original reader back in the early 2010s), these recipes deserve more!

These recipes are our hidden gems, unsung heroes, long-lost loves. Heck, sometimes we’ve even forgotten about them.

If your repertoire is in need of a little shaking up, this list is the perfect way to find something new and exciting!

Don’t judge a recipe by its cover

Some recipes just don’t get any love. There will always be the popular kids on the block—Char Siu, Mapo Tofu, Egg Drop Soup, Chili Oil.

Their reign is omnipresent and unceasing. No one ever says no to these recipes!

Everyone hunts them down! They try multiple versions!

So we’re raising a glass to our underrated recipes today. They may not have the tastiest sounding or easiest to say names. They may be cursed with our poor early days photography. Or they may have unfairly vilified ingredients like lard or *gasp* gluten.

But not every recipe can boast a sexy piece of shining pork belly. So we encourage you to give these a chance!

giddyup, round ’em up

Kaitlin here, breaking the fourth wall even more than I usually do. Sometimes these roundups can become, dare I say, tedious to write. And when you round up a bunch of already unloved, underrated recipes? Well…

As I wrote this, I thought to myself, how can I possibly make these dishes sound as alluring and tantalizing as humanly possible?! How can I make them sound so thrilling—so thrilling indeed, that the descriptions might make you feel they have the power to reaffirm not only your belief in yourself in the kitchen, but the very state of your existence!

Well, when I find myself carried away by a particularly indulgent description, I imagine that I’m none other than Nigella Lawson. Or Nigella, as she is powerfully known (no last name clarification necessary).

So, if at various points you think, “hey Kaitlin, maybe you’re getting carried away here on how this chicken salad is going to change my life,” just remember that I’m here, typing away whilst pretending I’m Nigella—utterly, completely, and totally ensconced…in an attempt to stave off boredom for both your sake and mine.

RICE AND NOODLES

Chengdu-style Sichuan Fried Rice 

Chengdu-Style Sichuan Fried Rice, by thewoksoflife.com

Ever heard of a little preserved veg called sui mi ya cai? If you love Dan Dan Noodles, chances are you know how tasty these little bits of very un-special looking preserved veg are. This fried rice has a liberal amount PLUS bits of fried ham for a salty hit with every bite. Yummm.

Beef Kimchi Fried Rice

Beef & Kimchi Fried Rice, by thewoksoflife.com

This is an old recipe, but kimchi fried rice is always easy and totally satisfying thanks to the fermented deliciousness of the kimchi, the beef, and the egg on top.

Fried Brown Rice 

Fried Brown Rice with Beef, thewoksoflife.com
Spoonful of fried brown rice, thewoksoflife.com

For a more health-conscious choice, this completely humble fried brown rice is surprisingly delicious! It makes a satisfying meal indeed, when one is harried or perhaps coming off of one too many indulgences. We made this with beef, but you can substitute virtually any proteins and vegetables you have on hand.

Shaanxi Saozi Mian (陕西臊子面)

Eating saozi mian with Chinese soup spoon and chopsticks
Shaanxi Saozi Mian

Saozi Mian is a noodle soup from Shaanxi province made with a variety of colorful ingredients. The soup itself is spicy, fragrant, and slightly sour. It looks a bit like the kitchen sink, with noodles, pork, mushrooms, potato, carrots, and bright green chives and scallions, but the broth is the secret to its magic. Mmm…

Roast Pork Lo Mein

Pulling up strands of lo mein noodles with chopsticks
Adding snow peas and scallions to lo mein

A classic lo mein combination that doesn’t get enough love compared to beef lo mein! This is the perfect thing to make if you’ve got some char siu squirreled away in the freezer. And if you’re not freezing leftover char siu…well, I encourage you to start!

Yang Chun Noodle Soup (Yang Chun Mian)

Yang Chun Noodle Soup, by thewoksoflife.com
Yang Chun Noodle Soup, by thewoksoflife.com

The secret to this bowl of noodle soup is a small spoonful of pork lard. I know that this must be eliciting some gasps of horror from at least some of you, but it’s a convenient, traditional, and cost-effective way to get the flavor of a long-simmered soup! You have to taste it to believe it.

Vegetable Chow Fun

Vegetable Chow Fun, by thewoksoflife.com
Vegetable Chow Fun, by thewoksoflife.com

If this were a 90s rom com, Beef Chow Fun would be the Cool Kid that you think you want to date, and Vegetable Chow Fun would be the Nerd Waiting to Turn into a Butterfly that you end up with. Okay so maybe that’s a little strong, but the vegetable version is really tasty!

Chinese Rice Cake Soup

Chinese Rice Cake Soup, thewoksoflife.com
Adding rice cakes and scallions to the soup, thewoksoflife.com

This is an easy and comforting soup that we gobbled down bowlful after bowlful until this entire wok was totally gone! Nuff said.

Pasta with Breadcrumbs & Anchovies

Spaghetti with Breadcrumbs & Anchovies, by thewoksoflife.com
Spaghetti with Breadcrumbs & Anchovies, by thewoksoflife.com

This is a recipe that my hard-to-impress-mother has requested time and again in the years since we’ve blogged it. The golden breadcrumbs, ample amount of luscious anchovies coating the noodles, the parsley, and the liberal sprinkling of grated parm at the end makes it a sensation and cherished dish in my pasta repertoire.

VEGetarian/TOFU

Chinese Tea Eggs

tea egg cut in half with orange yolk
Chinese Tea Eggs, by thewoksoflife.com

These tea eggs may seem fussy, but you won’t be complaining when the next day you have a fragrantly delicious breakfast or snack. Bonus if you chow down with Shanghai scallion pancakes, a Shanghai scallion qiangbing (flatbread), or you tiao. Breakfast. Of. CHAMPIONS.

Seitan Puffs with Pea Tips

Pea Tips with Seitan Puffs
Pea Tips with Seitan Puffs

Seitan puffs are one of our favorite ways to enjoy this protein. It’s impossibly delicious when combined with verdant pea tips. This is a one wok meal that my mother (once again, hard to impress) happily makes again and again.

Sichuan napa cabbage stir fry (suan la bai cai)

Sichuan Napa Cabbage Stir-fry (Suan La Bai Cai), by thewoksoflife.com
Sichuan Hot and Sour Cabbage Stir-fry, by thewoksoflife.com

A sweet and mild napa cabbage plus Chinese black vinegar is a flavor match made in heaven. A few dried chilies tossed into the wok gives it a very mild warm burn. You could eat this with a bowl of rice and some scrambled eggs for dinner and be a very happy camper.

stir-fried lettuce

Stir Fried Lettuce, by thewoksoflife.com

This recipe can be made with just about any variety of crunchy lettuce. Forget your regular rotation salad for a moment and try the dynamic combination of oyster sauce + cooked lettuce. Remember when I said that some of these wouldn’t sound good but that they taste good? Click! Cook!

Lotus Root Stir-fry

Stir-fried Lotus Root, thewoksoflife.com
Stir-frying lotus root, thewoksoflife.com

When lotus roots are in season, you may be at a loss for how to prepare them without whipping out a complicated Chinese New Year dish or a long simmered soup. This stir-fry is the perfect solution for getting a healthy and diverse mix of veggies into your rotation.

10-Minute Broccoli Tofu Bowls

10-Minute Broccoli Tofu Bowls, by thewoksoflife.com

10 minutes. TEN MINUTES.

Quick Carrot Daikon Stir Fry

Chinese Daikon Stir-fry, thewoksoflife.com
Daikon Stir-fry, thewoksoflife.com

When daikon is in season it’s one of my parents favorite foods to eat. Paired with sweet carrots, this makes for a healthy and tasty side dish.

Stir-fried Cucumber with Bean Threads and Wood Ears

Stir-fried Cucumbers with Wood Ears and Bean Threads
Stir-frying cucumbers with wood ears and yuba

Stir fried cucumbers sounds like it wouldn’t be good, but it is astoundingly satisfying, especially when paired with wood ear mushrooms. This vegetarian version uses bean threads, but you can also make our traditional Moo Shu Pork recipe, which is similar and also totally under-loved.

Vegetable Moo Shu

Vegetable Moo Shu, by thewoksoflife.com
Vegetable Moo Shu, by thewoksoflife.com

Vegetarians and vegans out there looking for an excitingly interactive dish, this vegetable moo shu is perfect!

Spicy Tofu “Noodles” with Chicken

tofu noodle stir-fry with green peppers and chicken

A prime example of a dish cursed by early days photos! This easy tofu noodle stir fry is a dish we grew up eating and loved as kids. It was always satisfying and tasty.

CHICKEN & DUCK

Chicken and Mushroom Claypot Rice

Chinese Chicken and Mushroom Clay Pot Rice
Chinese Chicken and Mushroom Clay Pot Rice

A comforting claypot meal where everything goes in and comes out silky, earthy, and lusciously delicious. Add some veg, and it’s a taste of Chinese home-cooked comfort.

Sha Cha Chicken

Sha Cha Chicken, by thewoksoflife.com
Sha Cha Chicken, by thewoksoflife.com

A can of sha cha is a secret weapon. It’s bursting with umami and just a scoop makes a boring old chicken stir-fry explosively flavorful!

Nanjing salted duck

Nanjing Salted Duck, by thewoksoflife.com
Nanjing Salted Duck, by thewoksoflife.com

This duck does not look like much—no it does not look like much at all. However, the brilliantly simple combination of salt and Sichuan peppercorns nearly cures the meat and gives it soul you wouldn’t have thought possible.

Sour Plum Duck, a Hakka Chinese Classic

Sour Plum Duck, by thewoksoflife.com
Sour Plum Duck, A Hakka Chinese Classic, by thewoksoflife.com

When this sour plum duck comes up in conversation (as it is wont to do more than one would think—even when you’re in our line of work), my mom’s eyes go misty, and she can’t help but gush at how tasty it is. My dad doesn’t make it nearly enough, but if you need an unorthodox special occasion meal, this is the ticket. Make sure to buy a plump duck so there’s plenty of meat for your labors.

Asian Chicken Salad with Lemon

Chinese Chicken Salad with Lemon
Asian Chicken Salad with Lemon

Wouldn’t it be nice if THIS were what we thought of when we heard the words, “Asian Chicken Salad?” And not the other one with the crispy noodles and mandarin oranges?

Thinly, thinly sliced lemon like this is best achieved with a Chinese cleaver. This combination is a refreshing wonder to taste. It’s just plain old delicious lemon, utterly transformed by spice and fresh herbs.

Fried Chicken with Xinjiang Spices

A spicy, crispy, and heady fried chicken inspired by the cumin-tinged flavors of Xinjiang. Don’t let the questionable food styling and blurry photos deter you!

Chinese Braised Duck Legs

Chinese Braised Duck Legs, thewoksoflife.com
Duck legs in pot with aromatics and braising liquid, thewoksoflife.com

A simple one-pot braise that yields a stickily delicious and impressive dinner. A side of rice and veg is all you need.

Three Ingredient Grilled Chicken Wings

Three-Ingredient Grilled Chicken Wings, by thewoksoflife.com
Three-Ingredient Grilled Chicken Wings, by thewoksoflife.com

When salt, pepper, and ample chicken skin surface area meet over a hot flame, the results are transformative and much more than the sum of their parts. Just read through some of the comments—the few people who’ve tried this recipe are blown away by how much flavor just salt, pepper, and fire can impart. We make this recipe regularly every summer.

2-Part Recipe: Roast Chicken & Stock

A 2-Part Recipe: Roast Chicken & Stock, by thewoksoflife.com
A 2-Part Recipe: Roast Chicken & Stock, by thewoksoflife.com

In general, people should be making better use of their chicken bones. Not to break character, but Nigella gave us the great tip of freezing cooked chicken carcasses and chicken bones (from large cuts like leg quarters, deboned chicken thighs, etc.) until you have a critical mass to make a stock.

BEEF & PORK 

Northern Sour Cabbage Stew with Glass Noodles

Northern Chinese Sour Cabbage Stew with Pork and Glass Noodles
Northern Chinese Sour Cabbage Stew

This stew doesn’t look like much, and the names of the ingredients don’t inspire much confidence for the uninitiated (“sour…cabbage…”), but the the strong flavors are so delicious, and the recipe is so simple that we make this during the week as a matter of routine.

When you dip the pork belly into little bowls of soy sauce and minced raw garlic, you’ll find yourself gobbling up piece after piece, punctuating each bite with sour cabbage (sauerkraut is a shockingly credible substitute) and rice.

Sichuan ThrEE Pepper PORK BELLY

Sichuan Three Pepper Pork Belly Stir-fry, by thewoksoflife.com
Sichuan Three Pepper Pork Belly Stir-fry, by thewoksoflife.com

Three pepper chicken is a delicious dish thanks to the crispiness of the deep fried bits of chicken. This version takes that principle and multiplies it x10 with pork belly, which crisps effortlessly.

Sliced Pork with Spicy Garlic Peanut Sauce (Suan Ni Bai Rou)

Suan Ni Bai Rou (Sliced Pork with Garlic Sauce), by thewoksoflife.com
Suan Ni Bai Rou (Sliced Pork with Garlic Sauce), by thewoksoflife.com

Another opportunity to use boiled pork belly as a blank canvas. Spicy. Garlicky. Peanutty. Totally delicious.

Five Spice Tofu with Shredded Pork (香干肉丝)

Shredded Pork with Five Spice Tofu, by thewoksoflife.com
Shredded Pork with Five Spice Tofu, by thewoksoflife.com

A packet of pressed tofu has long been a champion in our kitchen. It’s the stuff of rapid weeknight stir-fries that are more satisfying than they ought to be, based on the time they take to prepare. This recipe is one crystallized iteration of a stir-fry that my mother has whipped up countless times with whatever vegetables we happen to have on hand.

Chinese boneless Spare Ribs

Boneless Spare Ribs
Chinese Takeout Boneless Ribs

“The rib” in a Chinese takeout joint can take a few forms—there’s the rib tip, the bone-in spare rib, and then these, a cost-effective workaround referred to as “boneless spare ribs” that really uses pork butt. Any of these are delicious—but you’ve gotta make sure to nail the fried rice too for maximum enjoyment.

StUFFED CHINESE Fried Gluten Balls

Chinese stuffed fried gluten balls, thewoksoflife.com
Picking up a braised stuffed gluten ball with chopsticks, thewoksoflife.com

The comments section for this recipe is filled with people who thought they would rue the day they decided to make this admittedly slightly fussy recipe and then realized that their labors were entirely and completely worth the trouble. It does have the much derided GLUTEN—unsophisticatedly referred to as “gluten balls” no less—but if you haven’t turned your back on gluten, give this recipe a try when you want to lay something that feels festive and special onto the dinner table!

Easy Pork Belly and Mushroom Rice Bowls

Easy Pork Belly & Mushroom Rice Bowl, by thewoksoflife.com
Easy Pork Belly & Mushroom Rice Bowl, by thewoksoflife.com

A recipe like this is simply delicious. It doesn’t have a clear provenance. It exists to showcase the versatility of pork belly and to help you take on even your most finicky eaters.

The RPG (roast pork on garlic bread sandwich)

Adding sliced pork to sandwich, thewoksoflife.com
Chinese Roast Pork on Garlic Bread, thewoksoflife.com

Slice upon slice of juicy char siu with its bright red glaze soaks into a crunchy roll, coated in a potent mixed garlic oil that is so garlicky it becomes ever so slightly spicy. Add in even more heat with Chinese hot mustard, and then mellow it out with a slicked on layer of duck sauce for a magical sandwich that has origins in the storied resort years of the Catskills.

Chinese Pineapple Buns with Roast Pork Filling 

Chinese Pineapple Buns with Roast Pork Filling, by thewoksoflife.com
Chinese Pineapple Buns with Roast Pork Filling, by thewoksoflife.com

This decadent treat lies in the grey zone between savory and dessert. It makes for the perfect breakfast item, afternoon—or anytime—snack. And, for anyone thinking it and doubting themselves: why not have a char siu-stuffed bun for dessert?

STEAMED PORK WITH RICE POWDER (FEN ZHENG ROU)

Steamed Pork with Rice Powder, by thewoksoflife.com

This rather ornate dish is more complicated-looking than it is. The result is something more luscious than eating braised pork belly with rice thanks to the ground rice that coats the pork when it’s uncooked and slowly expands and aborbs the pork juices during steaming, encasing each piece of pork in a cloud of comforting rice.

Carnitas Tacos with Slow-cooked Pork

Carnitas Tacos, by thewoksoflife.com
Carnitas Tacos, by thewoksoflife.com
Carnitas Tacos, by thewoksoflife.com

Sarah’s carnitas recipe is firmly engraved in the family archives. We’ve made this recipe so many times over the years (she used it to feed the family at her wedding weekend!) that if you didn’t ever make it, we simply wouldn’t care because it’s mostly here for us. But we’ll be thrilled when you love it just as much as we do.

Grilled Skirt Steak with Chimichurri

Grilled Skirt Steak with Chimichurri, by thewoksoflife.com
Grilled Skirt Steak with Chimichurri, by thewoksoflife.com

Skirt steak is an underrated cut that we love to eat with rice, beans, and chimichurri. Rest assured that this chimichurri has been through the internet gauntlet. Horrified Argentineans thoroughly scolded me for living in the dark, omitting oregano and red wine vinegar. The two are quintessential chimichurri ingredients which definitively makes the sauce much, much better.

SEAFOOD

Crispy Fried Flounder, Chinese-Style

Crispy Fried Flounder, by thewoksoflife.com
Crispy Fried Flounder, by thewoksoflife.com

This crispy fried flounder is the stuff of Chinese banquets, but it’s not so hard to pull off at home when you can cook it with a smaller flounder from the fishmonger. When we go out on fishing trips and bring back a fresh fluke, nothing beats a classic Cantonese preparation like this!

Shanghai Braised Fish (Hong Shao Yu)

Chinese Braised Fish (Hongshao Yu), by thewoksoflife.com
Chinese Braised Fish (Hongshao Yu), by thewoksoflife.com

This fish is probably not all that popular, because if you enjoy it or eat it with any regularity it’s likely that your Chinese mom or grandma is already there to prepare it for you. (Or in our case, grandpa—it was the one dish he was excellent at making, and the only dish he would nudge my grandma away from the stove to make.)

For those of you who have never tried it, it’s a revelation. Pork isn’t the only meat that’s transformed by the hong shao braising treatment. The fish is remarkably tasty, and the sauce is addictive spooned over rice.

Shrimp Étouffée

Shrimp Étouffée, by thewoksoflife.com
Shrimp Étouffée, by thewoksoflife.com

This is one of my dad’s personal favorites. It was inspired by a trip to New Orleans, where you can find the best shrimp étouffée.

Shanghai shrimp stir fry (you bao xia 油爆虾)

Shanghai Shrimp Stir-fry - You Bao Xia , by thewoksoflife.com
Shanghai Shrimp Stir-fry, by thewoksoflife.com

Whole shrimp is definitely intimidating, but if you love shrimp, this dish is a concentrated explosion of shrimp flavor that’s not at all fishy. It’s all in the technique, which calls for multiple rounds of flash frying the shrimp in oil. Nothing that gets added in is too strong or assertive. It’s all about amplifying the deep flavor of the shrimp.

SWEETS

Sarah’s Strawberry Cheesecake

Strawberry Cheesecake, by thewoksoflife.com
Strawberry Cheesecake, by thewoksoflife.com

A simple cheesecake that’s not too heavy and not too sweet is a thing of beauty, and this is our family’s version. Top it with an easy strawberry sauce—no need for fussy arrangements. We just let the strawberries tumble out of the saucepan onto the cake and cascade over each slice as we cut into it.

Tamarind Iced Tea

Stirring tamarind iced tea, thewoksoflife.com
Tamarind Iced Tea, thewoksoflife.com

Plain iced tea goes to new heights with the addition of tangy tamarind. You can either use the easy shortcut of tamarind concentrate or better yet, go the extra mile of reconstituting tamarind in hot water and straining out the seeds to make your own paste.

Cantonese Steamed Milk Egg Pudding (双皮奶)

Cantonese Steamed Milk Egg Pudding (双皮奶), by thewoksoflife.com
Cantonese Steamed Milk Egg Pudding (双皮奶), by thewoksoflife.com

This delicate and wobbly dessert is made with a brilliant elixir of milk and egg. Top it with fresh fruit or perhaps granola—even a drizzle of honey if you like extra sweetness. It’s a particularly good dessert for the very young and the very old, as there’s not too much sugar, and it’s easy to eat.

Perfect yellow cake

Sheet cake slice, thewoksoflife.com
Perfect Yellow Cake, thewoksoflife.com

Sarah’s yellow cake is the result of years of careful study and unfulfilled yellow cake hopes and dreams. This is *the* yellow cake that you want. Fluffy, cakey but not too dense, and cheerfully golden rather than wishy washily beige, this yellow cake never disappoints us.

Grilled Peach Crisps with Yogurt

Grilled Peach Crisps with Yogurt, by thewoksoflife.com
Grilled Peach Crisps with Yogurt, by thewoksoflife.com

Even we are guilty of not making this dessert nearly as often as we should. I will go ahead and blame this past year’s poor peach harvest (a late spring frost put a tragically sizable dent in the year’s yield here in Jersey). But there’s always next summer to dream of and wait for when we can once again grace our grills with drippy, fragrant peaches.

Black Sticky Rice Mango Dessert

Thai Black Sticky Rice, Mango, Vanilla Ice Cream, Coconut Milk, Sweetened Condensed Milk, and shaved ice, thewoksoflife.com
Thai Black Sticky Rice and Mango Dessert, thewoksoflife.com

Where is the love for the dessert soup, we ask? People will nosh on smoothie bowls with fruit, granola, and chewy chia seeds, so why not these lightly sweet bowls of coconut, fruit, and sticky rice? I implore you to open your minds—only for your own good and enjoyment.

Give these underrated recipes a chance, folks, and happy cooking!

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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.
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