You're standing in your kitchen at 5:30 PM, wondering what to cook that's fast, uses what's in the fridge, and won't get complaints from the kids. Asian-inspired cooking might be the answer — stir-fries that come together in roughly 15–20 minutes, curries that simmer while you set the table, and noodle dishes built around whatever protein and vegetables you have on hand.
This guide covers ten family dinners from across Asia that work on busy weeknights. It also includes a complete teriyaki chicken recipe with a shopping list, plus the seven pantry ingredients that unlock most of these dishes.
Why Asian Cooking Works for Families
15-20
Minute stir-fries
From prep to plate
7
Core pantry items
Soy sauce, sesame oil, rice vinegar, oyster sauce, fish sauce, coconut milk, chili sauce
10
Recipes below
Across 5 Asian cuisines
1
Pan for most dishes
A wok or large skillet
The techniques behind these dinners — stir-frying, simmering curry, pan-frying dumplings — share a few things that make them especially practical for families.
- Stir-frying cooks fast. Once your pan is hot, proteins cook in 4–6 minutes, vegetables in 2–3. Total time from first chop to serving is usually under 20 minutes. That's roughly half the time it takes to brown ground beef and boil pasta.
- The flavor base repeats. Soy sauce, garlic, and ginger show up in Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Thai, and Vietnamese cooking. Once you buy them, you're set for dozens of different meals.
- Mild versions work fine. Teriyaki chicken, egg fried rice, and coconut curry are naturally mild. You can dial heat up at the table instead of cooking it into the dish.
- Leftovers reheat well. Stir-fries, fried rice, and curry all keep for 2–3 days in the fridge, and many taste better the next day as the flavors settle.
Why Asian cooking works for families
- Stir-fries in 15–20 minutes — faster than most pasta dinners
- Naturally mild dishes kids accept (teriyaki, fried rice, noodle bowls)
- Built around affordable proteins: eggs, chicken thighs, tofu
- Heavy on vegetables and rice — balanced without trying
Challenges to watch for
- Initial pantry run costs more than you'd expect — you need 5–7 sauces
- High-heat stir-frying takes a few attempts to get comfortable with
- Some dishes (bibimbap, pho) need more prep than a typical weeknight allows
- Certain ingredients like lemongrass or gochujang aren't at every grocery store
Ten Asian-Inspired Family Dinners
Teriyaki Chicken
Chicken thighs marinated in soy sauce, honey, and garlic, pan-cooked until glazed. Serve over rice with steamed broccoli. The gateway dish for families new to Asian cooking.
Beef and Broccoli
Thin-sliced flank steak stir-fried with broccoli in a soy-oyster sauce. A quick baking soda tenderizer works on the beef in 15 minutes while you prep everything else.
Pad Thai
Rice noodles stir-fried with shrimp or chicken, scrambled eggs, and a sweet-savory tamarind sauce. Top with crushed peanuts, fresh bean sprouts, and lime wedges.
Coconut Chicken Curry
Chicken thighs simmered in coconut milk with a mild curry paste. Creamy, naturally mild, and forgiving if you need to keep it warm while the rest of the family trickles in.
Egg Fried Rice
Day-old rice, scrambled eggs, frozen peas, soy sauce, and sesame oil. The 15-minute dinner that clears out the fridge. Best with leftover rice from takeout the night before.
Miso Soup with Rice and Salmon
Miso broth with silken tofu and wakame seaweed, served alongside pan-seared salmon and steamed rice. A weeknight staple in Japanese homes for good reason.
Korean Bibimbap
Rice bowls topped with sautéed vegetables, seasoned ground beef, and a fried egg. Serve gochujang (chili paste) on the side so everyone can spice their own bowl.
Vietnamese Pho (Simplified)
Star anise-spiced broth with rice noodles and paper-thin beef that cooks in the hot broth at the table. A shortcut version that skips the 4-hour bone simmer.
Pan-Fried Dumplings
Store-bought frozen dumplings pan-fried and steamed to crispy-golden on the bottom, tender on top. Serve with soy-vinegar dipping sauce. Hard to beat for effort-to-reward ratio.
Noodle Stir-Fry
Any noodle (lo mein, udon, rice noodles), any protein, any vegetable — tossed with soy sauce, oyster sauce, and sesame oil. The formula you'll come back to on exhausted nights.
The Asian Pantry: What You Actually Need
Building a full Asian pantry is a project. But you can cook most of the recipes above with these seven core ingredients. Buy these first, then add specialty items as specific recipes demand them.
Ingredients
Sauces and condiments
- Soy sauce (or tamari for gluten-free) — the backbone of most recipes
- Sesame oil — for finishing, not high-heat cooking; it burns quickly
- Rice vinegar — mild acidity for sauces and dipping
- Oyster sauce — adds depth and umami to stir-fries
- Fish sauce — potent, essential for Thai and Vietnamese dishes; a teaspoon goes far
- Coconut milk — full-fat for curries; light coconut milk makes sauces thinner
- Chili garlic sauce or sriracha — for the adults at the table
Dry goods
- Jasmine rice (for Thai and Vietnamese dishes) and short-grain rice (for Japanese and Korean dishes)
- Rice noodles (medium width for pad thai, thin for pho)
- Ramen noodles (fresh or dried, not instant seasoning packets)
- Cornstarch — for velveting meat and thickening sauces
Aromatics that keep well
- Garlic — buy pre-minced in a jar if fresh garlic goes bad before you use it
- Fresh ginger (or frozen ginger cubes from the freezer aisle)
- Green onions
- Lemongrass — frozen paste tubes are just as good as fresh and last months
Teriyaki chicken and egg fried rice only need soy sauce, garlic, and rice — ingredients many kitchens already have. Cook those a few times before investing in the rest of the pantry. If you enjoy the results, add oyster sauce next, then build from there.
Full Recipe: Teriyaki Chicken
This is the recipe that wins over skeptical kids and adults alike. The sauce — soy sauce, honey, garlic, and mirin — reduces to a glossy glaze that coats each slice of chicken. Serve it with steamed rice and broccoli, and it's a complete dinner in about half an hour.
Teriyaki Chicken
Ingredients
For the sauce
- 1/3 cupsoy sauce
- 3 tbsphoney
- 3garlic cloves(minced)
- 2 tbspmirin or rice vinegar
- 1 tspsesame oil
For the chicken
- 1.5 lbsboneless skinless chicken thighs
- 1 tbspvegetable oil
For serving
- Steamed jasmine rice
- Steamed broccoli or sautéed bok choy
- Sesame seeds and sliced green onions for garnish
Steps
- 1
Make the sauce
Whisk together soy sauce, honey, minced garlic, mirin (or rice vinegar), and sesame oil in a small bowl until the honey dissolves completely. Set aside.
- 2
Marinate the chicken
Place chicken thighs in a shallow dish. Pour half the sauce over the chicken and turn to coat. Let it sit at room temperature for 30 minutes, or refrigerate up to 8 hours. Reserve the remaining sauce separately — it hasn't touched raw chicken and will go into the pan later.
- 3
Sear the chicken
Heat vegetable oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat until shimmering. Remove chicken from marinade — discard the used marinade — and lay pieces in the hot pan. Cook 5 minutes without moving them. The chicken should release easily when it's ready to flip. Flip and cook 4 minutes more.
- 4
Glaze
Pour the reserved sauce into the pan around the chicken. Reduce heat to medium and let it simmer for 2–3 minutes, turning the chicken to coat as the sauce thickens into a glaze that clings to each piece.
- 5
Rest and slice
Transfer chicken to a cutting board and let rest 3 minutes. Slice across the grain into strips about 1/2-inch thick. Serve over steamed rice with broccoli on the side. Spoon any pan glaze left in the skillet over the top. Garnish with sesame seeds and sliced green onions.
Notes
- Mirin is traditional but rice vinegar plus a pinch of sugar works as a substitute.
- Chicken thighs stay moist where breasts dry out — use breasts only if you prefer lean meat.
- Double the sauce recipe if your family likes extra for drizzling over rice.
- Leftovers keep 3 days in the fridge. Reheat in a skillet with a splash of water to loosen the glaze.
- The same sauce works on salmon or tofu — adjust cooking time for each protein.
A Note on Technique
Stir-frying looks simple on video but takes a bit of practice. The common mistake is overcrowding the pan — if you add too much at once, the temperature drops and the food steams instead of searing. Cook in batches if you're making a stir-fry with multiple components. Let the pan come back up to temperature between batches.
A meat thermometer removes the guesswork from proteins: chicken thighs are done at 175°F, shrimp at 120°F (they keep cooking after you pull them), and beef for stir-fry at 130°F for medium-rare. Most Asian dishes cook fast enough that a 2-minute over or under makes a real difference.
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