This family comfort dish of Chinese cabbage is rich tasting and easy to make. The napa cabbage is braised with thick glass noodles that soak up the savory sauce. A perfect side or even as a main dish all on its own! {Vegan Adaptable}
My Chinese Napa Cabbage with Glass Noodles is something I’m excited to share with you. Chinese cabbage is a comfort food dish that reminds me of home. Napa cabbage is a staple in northern China during the winter and my mom cooks it every week. We often eat it with rice. It’s hearty, healthy, and satisfying.
Napa cabbage, which we often call Chinese cabbage, is very healthy and full of fiber. It turns a tender texture and tastes slightly sweet when braised. With the rich sauce and the addition of glass noodles, it can really fill you up while satisfying your craving for Chinese food. The best part is, it’s incredibly simple to make.
In less than 30 minutes, you can create the true flavors of China in a healthy way. The sauce ingredients are very simple to find and you probably already have most of them in your pantry.
What type of glass noodles to use
I highly recommend the wide type of dried potato noodles or sweet potato noodles in this dish. Because they can stand the braising time, absorb flavor better, and have a meaty and chewy texture (very different from rice noodles). You can find them in most Asian markets or on Amazon.
Prepare the glass noodles
NOTE: Depending on the brand and the thickness of the noodles, the preparation method can vary a lot. If the noodles have instructions on the package, you should follow that method.
If the package doesn’t come with instructions, I usually soak the dried noodles in hot water for 10 minutes. They will turn an al dente texture – soft, but not ready to eat. They will continue to cook and become much more tender after you add them to the pan with the napa cabbage.
PS: You don’t have to include the noodles if you don’t want to. But I find they soak up the flavors and give the dish a heartier feel which makes it ideal for a main dish.
Magic ingredient – Sichuan peppercorns
Sichuan peppercorn (花椒, Huā Jiāo) is also known as Szechuan pepper. You can’t really call it spicy. Instead, it has slight lemony overtones and creates a tingly numbness in the mouth – which can almost be described as electric – that sets the stage for hot spices. It is a key ingredient in Sichuan cuisine, but we use it daily in northern cooking as well.
Infusing the hot oil with Sichuan peppercorns will add a nutty fragrance and numbing tingling essence to the dish. It creates another dimension of flavor and makes the dish very fragrant. My mom taught me this method and I use it to make all kinds of veggie dishes taste better. For example, Chinese 4-Ingredient Fried Cabbage.
You can find Sichuan peppercorns in most Asian markets, but I highly recommend the premium Sichuan peppercorns from The Mala Market. They are directly sourced from Sichuan and very fresh.
How to cut napa cabbage
Here is a quick way to cut napa cabbage.
- Halve the napa cabbage
- Further cut the napa cabbage into quarters
- Split each quarter into two even pieces
- Chop each eighth into bite-size pieces
Ingredients
When you’re done prepping, your table should have:
NOTE: I combined the green onions and ginger in one small bowl, because you will add them in the same step.
Cooking process
Cooking Chinese napa cabbage with glass noodles is super easy:
- Cook the Sichuan peppercorns in hot oil to infuse the flavor
- Saute the aromatics
- Add the napa cabbage and let it cook down
- Pour in the braising liquid
- Add the soaked glass noodles
- Braise covered for 2 to 3 minutes
NOTE: It will look like a lot of napa cabbage at first, but the leaves will shrink a lot once they are done cooking. When you add them to the pan, let them cook for 1 minute before tossing them. If you have trouble keeping them in the pan, try using a pair of tongs to toss them instead of a spatula.
With my Chinese Napa Cabbage with Glass Noodles, you won’t worry about leftovers. It’s a dish best served piping hot, with the glass noodles and cabbage steaming as you pluck them from the sauce with your chopsticks. Try it as a side with one of my other dishes or enjoy it as a meatless meal on any night of the week!
More delicious veggie recipes
- Tofu and Broccoli Stir Fry
- Choy Sum with Garlic Sauce
- 4-Ingredient Baby Bok Choy Stir Fry
- Chinese Cauliflower Stir Fry
- The Best Chinese Coleslaw
If you give this recipe a try, let us know! Leave a comment, rate it (once you’ve tried it), and take a picture and tag it @omnivorescookbook on Instagram! I’d love to see what you come up with.
Chinese Napa Cabbage with Glass Noodles
Ingredients
- 4 oz. (100 g) potato noodles
- 1 1/2 lbs (700 g) napa cabbage (about 6 cups chopped)
Sauce
- 2 tablespoons soy sauce
- 1/2 tablespoon dark soy sauce
- 1 tablespoon oyster sauce (or Chee Hou Sauce)
- 1 teaspoon sugar
Stir-fry
- 1 1/2 tablespoons peanut oil (or vegetable oil)
- 2 teaspoons Sichuan peppercorns
- 2 green onions , chopped
- 1 tablespoon ginger , minced
Instructions
- Add the potato noodles into a big bowl and add hot water to cover. Let sit for 10 minutes, or until the noodles turn al dente. Drain the hot water, rinse the noodles with running tap water, drain again, and set aside.
- To chop the napa cabbage, halve the head of napa cabbage, then cut it into quarters. Tilt your knife to split the quarters in half again. Then cut the napa cabbage into bite-size pieces (see the step-by-step photos in the blog post).
- Mix the sauce ingredients together in a small bowl.
- Heat the peanut oil in a large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Add the Sichuan peppercorns. Cook and stir until the Sichuan peppercorns turn dark, but are not burned. Remove the Sichuan peppercorns and discard them.
- Add the green onions and ginger. Stir for 30 seconds to release the fragrance.
- Add the napa cabbage. Let it cook, stirring occasionally, until it’s withered but not soft, 5 minutes or so.
- Turn to medium heat. Pour the sauce over the skillet and stir to mix well.
- Add the soaked noodles. Stir again. Cover the skillet and let it cook until the napa cabbage turns soft, 2 to 3 minutes.
- Uncover the pan. Toss everything again. If there’s too much residual liquid, you can turn to medium-high heat again and cook for another 1 to 2 minutes, to thicken the sauce.
- Transfer everything to a plate and serve hot as a side dish.
Nutrition
Lilja Walter is a part of the Omnivore’s Cookbook team and worked closely with Maggie to develop and test this recipe.
Made this as written with a Taiwanese flat cabbage. Absolutely delicious! Easy too!
I loved this recipe… the first I’ve tried from the site. Will be doing more!
Really delicious. I may have had a big cabbage, but I needed more sauce to my taste.
Got a napa cabbage in my veg box from farmer’s harvest share. Haven’t ever cooked with cabbage. Only associated it with stuffed cabbage and gas. Made the noodles and cabbage (though used vermicelli noodles) and didn’t have sichuan peppers – used a red chilli pepper and a bit of red pepper flakes – very very good and would happily have this regularly as would my husband.
I made this last night, and we ate it with soft boiled tea eggs. I never had sweet potato noodles before, and I love them! The texture is delightful, and they soak up so much flavor. It’s not like a lot of other noodles, where the sauce just sticks to the outside, the noodles really soak it up! We’ll be making this again soon. It was very inexpensive, it was delicious, it was filling, and it came together so quickly it didn’t even heat my kitchen up. It’s a perfect thing to eat on a hot summer night when you need something light but filling.
Loved this — we are big fans of cabbage and this falls into our comfort food list!
So happy to hear it! It’s one of my favorites winter comfort food 🙂
I LOVE this recipe! It is very easy and yummy. If I am tired and not in the mood for preparing something complicated, then this is a great option. The ingredient list is short and simple. So far I have only used rice noodles because I have not been able to get local delivery of potato noodles due to the pandemic. I bet it would be even better with the correct noodles!
This was so comforting and delicious! The flavors and textures really balance and harmonize perfectly. I accidentally used ground szechuan peppercorn at the beginning and it was still amazing.
This was surprisingly good! I did use thinner glass noodles so I only soaked them for 5 minutes. I was thinking there wouldn’t be enough sauce, but it was actually the perfect amount to soak into the noodles. It was great with a soft-boiled egg!
This sounds AMAZING, I’m definitely going to make this over the weekend, but I wonder if it’s okay to use mung bean noodles? That’s the only glass noodles I have at the moment 🙁 Thank you in advance xx
It changes the texture but mung bean noodles will work totally fine! Happy cooking 🙂
It was a nice recipe. I did feel like there was something missing flavour-wise though, but I’m not sure what.
My mom always use a bit leftover pork stew to enrich the sauce. I think that might help a lot.
Also, the flavor might be slightly different depending on the brand of the oyster sauce you use.
I make this dish often. Last night it paired well with spicy pork with red pepper and zucchini. Thank you!
Great recipe, very easy and delicious! Thankst
Wonderful find. Love it hot or cold. Great for keeping to a veg diet
Great, simple and straightforward recipe. Loved the toasting of Sichuan peppercorns in oil. Never thought to add. I ended up removing the actual peppercorns after frying since I have young kids who can’t handle malaaa but the oil was infused! I also added some soaked and sliced dried shiitake just to be extra. Thank you.
I love this recipe and make it regularly! I enjoy adding a few extra veggies or some protein to bulk it up occasionally, but as as written is lovely!
Excellent recipe! I followed it exactly. Absolutely delicious!
Congratulations for so kind, didatic and poetry description of how to do it and understand the culture. This receipe is a great option to enjoy at night. Unfortunatly I have to addapt to a kind of brazilian version because it is not easy to find potatoes noddles in the northeast, but I have the rice one here. Thanks a lot!
Another fantastically addicting cabbage recipe! I finally got my hands on glass noodles after lusting after this dish since I love the four ingredient cabbage stir fry so much and it did not disappoint. Tender cabbage + chewy noodles = love! Thank you for all the tasty veg recipes!
Thank you Maggie for the quick response. I am using this website for the first time, and I am impressed!
I would love to make this dish, but I need to make it mild rather than spicy. How should I adapt the recipe?
Hi Moon, this dish is actually not spicy. The Sichuan peppercorns would give it a numbing tingling sensation, a bit different from what peppers do. However, you can totally skip it too to make the dish mild without losing too much flavor (the sauce, green onion and ginger would be plenty flavorful). Happy cooking!