Salad Mi Ramen
This is the crunchy, sweet-tangy cabbage salad that disappears first at every potluck: crisp slaw tossed with toasted ramen, almonds, and sunflower seeds in a glossy rice vinegar dressing. Toasting the crushed noodles and nuts in the oven — instead of stirring them in raw — deepens their flavor and helps them stay snappy longer once dressed. Because the noodles go in at the last minute, every forkful keeps that addictive crackle against the cool, juicy cabbage.
Crush 2 blocks of instant ramen (seasoning packets removed), spread on a rimmed baking sheet with 1/2 cup sliced almonds and 1/2 cup sunflower seeds, and toast at 350°F (175°C) for 8-10 minutes, stirring once, until golden; cool completely. Meanwhile shake together 1/3 cup neutral oil, 1/4 cup rice vinegar, 1/4 cup sugar, 1 tablespoon soy sauce, 1 teaspoon toasted sesame oil, and 1/4 teaspoon black pepper until the sugar dissolves. Toss a 14-ounce bag of coleslaw mix and 4 sliced green onions with the dressing, let it sit 10 minutes to lightly soften, then fold in the toasted crunch just before serving.
- Toast the crushed ramen, almonds, and seeds until golden — raw noodles taste flat and go stale-soft faster once dressed.
- Discard the seasoning packets and season the dressing yourself with soy sauce; the packets make the salad harsh and overly salty.
- Keep the crunch separate until the last minute — dress the cabbage ahead if you like, but add the noodles at the table.
Equipment
- Rimmed baking sheet
- Large mixing bowl
- Jar with a tight lid (or small bowl and whisk)
- Chef's knife and cutting board
- Measuring cups and spoons
Bahan
Salad
- 400 g coleslaw mix (shredded cabbage and carrot), or 1 small green cabbage, finely shredded, plus 1 grated carrot
- green onions, thinly sliced, white and green parts
Toasted Crunch
- 170 g instant ramen noodle blocks, seasoning packets discarded; any plain wheat variety
- 55 g sliced almonds
- 70 g roasted sunflower seeds, unsalted if possible
Dressing
- 80 ml neutral oil (canola or avocado)
- 60 ml unseasoned rice vinegar, apple cider vinegar also works
- 50 g granulated sugar
- 15 ml soy sauce, replaces the salty seasoning packet
- 5 ml toasted sesame oil
- freshly ground black pepper
Cara membuat
- LANGKAH01
Heat the oven to 350°F (175°C). While the noodles are still in their wrappers, press down firmly with the heel of your hand to break each block into small, bite-size shards — aim for pieces the size of a fingernail, not powder. Discard the seasoning packets or save them for another use.
- LANGKAH02
Spread the crushed noodles, sliced almonds, and sunflower seeds in an even layer on a rimmed baking sheet. Toast for 8-10 minutes, stirring halfway through, until the noodles and almonds are golden and smell nutty. Watch closely after the 7-minute mark — the almonds tip from golden to burnt quickly.
- LANGKAH03
Combine the neutral oil, rice vinegar, sugar, soy sauce, sesame oil, and black pepper in a jar with a tight lid. Shake hard for 30 seconds, until the sugar fully dissolves and the dressing looks slightly thickened. (No jar? Whisk everything in a small bowl until you no longer feel grit at the bottom.)
- LANGKAH04
Add the coleslaw mix to a large serving bowl, breaking up any clumps, and scatter the sliced green onions over the top. If shredding your own cabbage, slice it as thinly as you can — fine shreds catch more dressing and are easier to eat.
- LANGKAH05
Let the noodle mixture cool on the baking sheet for about 10 minutes, until fully room temperature. Warm noodles will steam against the cabbage and lose their snap, so do not rush this step.
- LANGKAH06
Shake the dressing once more, pour it over the cabbage and green onions, and toss until every shred is glossy. Let the salad sit for about 10 minutes at room temperature — the cabbage softens just slightly and drinks in the sweet-tangy dressing while staying crisp.
- LANGKAH07
Just before serving, fold in the toasted ramen, almonds, and sunflower seeds, reserving a small handful to scatter over the top. Taste and adjust with a splash more vinegar or a pinch of salt if needed, then serve right away while the noodles are at their crunchiest.
Make ahead
This salad is built for making ahead in parts: toast the noodle-nut mixture up to 1 week in advance and store airtight at room temperature, shake the dressing up to 5 days ahead and refrigerate, and toss the cabbage with dressing up to 4 hours before serving. Combine everything within 15 minutes of sitting down to eat.
Storage
Once fully assembled, the salad is best within 2 hours; the noodles soften as they sit. Leftovers keep in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 2 days — still tasty, but expect a chewier, slaw-like texture rather than a crunchy one. Store any un-mixed toasted crunch at room temperature in an airtight container for up to 1 week.
Variations
Gluten-free ramen salad
Swap the wheat ramen for rice ramen blocks (sold in natural-foods aisles) and toast them the same way, and use tamari or coconut aminos in place of soy sauce. Double-check that your sunflower seeds are certified gluten-free if serving someone with celiac disease.
Mandarin and cranberry
Fold in 1 drained 11-ounce (310 g) can of mandarin orange segments and 1/2 cup (60 g) dried cranberries with the cabbage. Cut the sugar in the dressing to 3 tablespoons since the fruit brings its own sweetness.
Main-dish protein version
Turn it into dinner by adding 3 cups (about 400 g) shredded rotisserie chicken or, to keep it meatless, 1 1/2 cups (225 g) cooked shelled edamame. Increase the dressing by half so the extra volume stays well coated.
Serve with
Nutrition per serving
Nutrition values are estimates based on the metric measurements. Adjust as needed.
Pertanyaan umum
Do I use the ramen seasoning packet in the dressing?
No — this ramen noodle salad skips the packets entirely. They are extremely salty and most are chicken-flavored, which would also make the salad non-vegetarian. A tablespoon of soy sauce in the dressing gives you the same savory depth with far better control over the salt level.
How do I keep ramen noodle salad from getting soggy?
Two things: toast the crushed noodles until golden, and keep them out of the bowl until the last minute. Toasting drives off surface moisture and firms the noodles, and adding them just before serving means they spend minutes, not hours, in contact with the dressing. If you are transporting the salad, carry the crunch in a zip-top bag and mix at your destination.
Can I make this salad the night before a potluck?
Make the components the night before, but do not combine them. The dressed cabbage actually improves with a few hours in the fridge, and the toasted noodle mixture keeps for a week in an airtight container. Assembled overnight, though, the noodles absorb dressing and turn chewy, so save the final toss for party time.
Do the noodles need to be cooked first?
No. Instant ramen blocks are already cooked — they are steamed and then fried or air-dried at the factory — so they are perfectly safe and pleasant to eat straight from the package. Toasting them in the oven simply adds color and a deeper, nuttier flavor; there is no boiling anywhere in this recipe.
What can I substitute for the almonds?
Extra sunflower seeds, chopped roasted cashews, or crushed peanuts all work in the same 1/2-cup amount. For a nut-free ramen noodle salad, use all sunflower seeds or swap in roasted pepitas, and confirm your noodle brand is made in a nut-free facility if allergies are severe.
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