The Woks of Life
My Saved Recipes
  • Recipes
    • 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 ❯ Tofu ❯ Chinese Tofu Salad

Chinese Tofu Salad

Judy

by:

Judy

48 Comments
Jump to Recipe
Updated: 7/18/2025
Chinese Tofu Salad, by thewoksoflife.com
In the summer, I’m always looking for quick and easy dishes like this Chinese tofu salad, that rely on great summer vegetables and light proteins.

About Five Spiced Tofu

One of the ingredients I love in the summertime is five-spiced tofu. It’s a light and tasty protein that’s already cooked and ready to use. Rather than using the tofu in a stir-fry this time, I combined it with a bunch of crunchy julienned vegetables to create a refreshing Chinese Tofu Salad. For this summery salad, we are using five-spiced tofu noodles (五香豆腐丝, wu xiang doufu si). You can also use the plain blocks of five-spiced tofu (五香豆腐干, wu xiang doufu gan), which can be julienned just as easily. Chinese Tofu Salad, by thewoksoflife.com

Based on a Chinese Supermarket Salad?

The inspiration for this dish came from our days living in Beijing. In the summertime, almost all local Beijing supermarkets have a salad bar. That is, an Asian salad bar! So besides the more common salad ingredients like lettuce, cucumber, and carrots, you can also find blanched seaweed and bitter melon, glass noodles, tofu noodles, and even chilled and pre-sliced braised meats like beef and pig’s ears. It’s not self-serve like a regular salad bar in the US. Instead, you tell the person behind the large glass case your choices and how much you’d like, and then they add your preferred sauce (with the perfunctory question of whether or not you want it spicy—i.e., with chili oil). Chinese Tofu Salad, by thewoksoflife.com Finally, everything is tossed together and weighed on a scale in a container. The container is placed in a plastic bag, tied off with the price tag, and off you go. In Beijing, people may eat this alone, with rice, with mantou (a kind of bread), or with porridge (Side note: believe it or not, hot porridge is a top choice for summer meals in Beijing, because it’s hydrating, and considered a light meal!)

Make This Recipe Your Own

However you serve it, this Chinese tofu salad is versatile! I used a selection of simple vegetables, but you can change things up with the addition of beets, asparagus, sweet peas, or zucchini noodles. They’re all great choices for this salad, as long as they can be consumed raw. If not, you can easily blanch vegetables and rinse them in an ice bath before adding them into the mix. This Chinese tofu salad is a satisfying mid-week meal or side dish. When it’s hot and humid out, it’ll get you in and out of the kitchen in a flash. Ok, here’s how to make it:

Chinese Tofu Salad: Recipe Instructions

Chinese Tofu Salad, by thewoksoflife.com Wash the vegetables and dry off any excess water. Julienne the vegetables, and toss everything in a large mixing bowl, along with the shredded five-spiced tofu. In a small bowl, combine the olive oil, minced garlic, sugar, white pepper, light soy sauce, black vinegar, sesame oil, and toasted sesame seeds. Mix everything together until the sugar is completely dissolved. Add the sauce mixture to the vegetables and tofu, and top with chopped cilantro. Toss and serve either cold or at room temperature. Chinese Tofu Salad, by thewoksoflife.com Chinese Tofu Salad, by thewoksoflife.com

Recipe

Print
4.93 from 13 votes

Chinese Tofu Salad

Chinese tofu salad is a light and tasty summertime dish. Five-spiced tofu noodles and summer vegetables are all you need for an authentic Chinese tofu salad
by: Judy
Serves: 4
Prep: 20 minutes mins
Total: 20 minutes mins

Ingredients

  • 1 cup red bell pepper (julienned)
  • 1 cup red onion (thinly sliced)
  • 1 cup carrot (julienned)
  • 1 cup cucumber (julienned)
  • 1 cup celery (julienned)
  • 8 ounces shredded spiced tofu (tofu "noodles")
  • 1 tablespoon light olive oil
  • 1 teaspoon garlic (minced)
  • 1½ teaspoons sugar
  • ¼ teaspoon ground white pepper
  • 2 tablespoons light soy sauce
  • 1 tablespoon Chinese black vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon sesame oil
  • 1 tablespoon toasted sesame seeds
  • 1/4 cup cilantro (chopped)

Instructions

  • Wash the vegetables and dry off any excess water. Julienne the vegetables, and toss everything in a large mixing bowl, along with the tofu.
  • In a small bowl, combine the olive oil, minced garlic, sugar, white pepper, light soy sauce, black vinegar, sesame oil, and toasted sesame seeds. Mix everything together until the sugar is completely dissolved.
  • Add the sauce mixture to the vegetables and tofu, and top with chopped cilantro. Toss and serve either cold or at room temperature.

Nutrition Facts

Calories: 145kcal (7%) Carbohydrates: 14g (5%) Protein: 7g (14%) Fat: 7g (11%) Saturated Fat: 1g (5%) Sodium: 585mg (24%) Potassium: 466mg (13%) Fiber: 3g (12%) Sugar: 8g (9%) Vitamin A: 6715IU (134%) Vitamin C: 54.8mg (66%) Calcium: 74mg (7%) Iron: 1.6mg (9%)
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…

  • cold tofu salad
    Cold Tofu Salad
  • Tofu Avocado Salad, thewoksoflife.com
    Tofu Avocado Salad
  • Chinese Cucumber Salad, thewoksoflife.com
    Chinese Cucumber Salad
  • Hakka Style Chinese Stuffed Tofu by thewoksoflife.com
    Hakka Style Chinese Stuffed Tofu
Judy

About

Judy
Judy Leung is the matriarch of The Woks of Life family, working on the blog alongside husband Bill and daughters Sarah and Kaitlin. Born in Shanghai, China, she immigrated to the United States at sixteen. Fluent in both English and three Chinese dialects, she also plays the important role of researcher and menu translator! Drawing from over four decades of cooking experience and travel, Judy aims to bring Chinese culinary traditions to readers and preserve recipes that might otherwise be lost to time. Her expertise spans from Shanghainese cooking and everyday homestyle dishes to a variety of regional foodways, showcasing the depth and breadth of Chinese cuisine for a global audience. Over the last decade, she’s helped transform The Woks of Life into what Saveur Magazine has deemed “the internet’s most popular Chinese cooking blog,” co-written a New York Times bestselling cookbook, and become convinced that we will never run out of recipes to share!
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
Rate this recipe:




guest
Rate this recipe:




48 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