Cold pasta soaked in sesame-ginger dressing is the kind of side dish that disappears fast because it hits every note at once: chewy noodles, crisp vegetables, salty-sweet dressing, and enough crunch from sesame seeds to keep every bite interesting. It holds up on a buffet, packs well for lunch, and tastes even better after the flavors have had time to settle into the pasta.
The key here is balancing the dressing so it clings without drowning the salad. Rice vinegar brings sharpness, sesame oil brings depth, and a touch of honey rounds everything out so the soy sauce doesn’t take over. Rinsing the pasta cold matters too; it stops the cooking fast and keeps the noodles from turning sticky while they chill.
Below, I’ve included the small things that make this salad work better than a basic noodle toss, plus a few smart swaps if you want to adjust the vegetables or make it fit what’s in your fridge.
The dressing soaked into the pasta just enough after chilling, and the cabbage stayed crisp for the next day’s lunch. I added extra sesame seeds and it tasted even better the second time around.
Love the crunchy cabbage and sesame-ginger dressing? Save this Asian Pasta Salad for the next potluck or easy make-ahead lunch.
The Part Most Pasta Salads Get Wrong: Letting the Noodles Go Soft
The mistake with a salad like this is treating the pasta like it can sit in warm water for a minute or two after draining. It can’t. Spaghetti or linguine that stays hot keeps absorbing moisture and turns limp once the dressing goes on, which leaves you with a heavy, gluey bowl instead of a bright, springy salad.
Rinsing the pasta under cold water does two jobs here. It stops the cooking immediately, and it rinses away enough surface starch to keep the strands from clumping before you add the vegetables and dressing. Break the pasta into thirds too; shorter noodles are easier to toss and easier to eat when they’re mixed with shredded cabbage and carrots.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing In This Salad

- Spaghetti or linguine — These noodles give the salad its backbone and carry the dressing better than short pasta in this style. Long noodles grab the sesame-ginger mixture in a way that makes every bite taste seasoned all the way through.
- Edamame — This adds protein and a soft, nutty bite that balances the crunch from the vegetables. Frozen shelled edamame is perfect here; just thaw it and drain it well so it doesn’t water down the bowl.
- Red cabbage and carrots — These are the crunch and color. Shredding them finely matters because thick chunks fight the pasta instead of mixing with it, and the salad eats cleaner when the vegetables are cut small.
- Sesame oil — This is the ingredient that makes the dressing taste unmistakably sesame. Use toasted sesame oil for the deepest flavor; a mild oil won’t give you the same finish.
- Rice vinegar — It keeps the dressing sharp enough to cut through the pasta. Lime juice can work in a pinch, but it changes the profile and makes the dressing taste brighter and less rounded.
- Fresh ginger and garlic — Fresh is worth using here because their bite wakes up the whole salad. Powdered versions blur into the background, while grated ginger and minced garlic keep the dressing lively.
Building the Dressing So It Clings Instead of Pooling
Whisk the Dressing Until It Tastes Balanced
Start with the soy sauce, rice vinegar, sesame oil, honey, ginger, garlic, salt, and pepper in a bowl and whisk until the honey disappears. The dressing should taste a little stronger than you want on the first taste because the cold pasta will mellow it once everything chills. If it tastes flat now, it will taste flat later, so adjust the balance before it touches the noodles.
Toss the Salad While the Pasta Is Completely Cool
Add the pasta, edamame, cabbage, carrots, and bell pepper to a large bowl, then pour the dressing over the top and toss until every strand looks coated. If the pasta is still warm, the vegetables lose their crunch and the dressing slides off instead of soaking in. The salad should look glossy and lightly coated, not soupy at the bottom of the bowl.
Chill Long Enough for the Flavor to Settle
Refrigerate the salad for at least an hour before serving. That rest time lets the noodles absorb the dressing and gives the ginger and garlic time to calm down and meld into the soy-sesame base. Right before serving, add the green onions and sesame seeds so they stay fresh and crisp on top.
How to Adapt This for Different Tables and Different Fridges
Make It Gluten-Free Without Losing the Shape
Use gluten-free spaghetti or linguine and cook it just to tender, not past it. Gluten-free pasta can get soft fast after chilling, so rinse it well, toss it with the dressing while it’s fully cool, and keep the rest time closer to the one-hour mark instead of leaving it overnight.
Dairy-Free and Vegetarian as Written
This salad already fits both diets without any changes, which is part of why it’s such an easy potluck dish. The only thing to watch is the soy sauce if you need strict gluten-free as well; use tamari or a certified gluten-free soy sauce and the flavor stays in the same lane.
Swap the Vegetables Based on What’s in the Crisper Drawer
Snap peas, cucumber, shredded napa cabbage, or thinly sliced snap carrots all work well here. Keep the total volume about the same and cut everything into small pieces so the salad still eats like a noodle salad, not a pile of vegetables with pasta underneath.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Keep in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The cabbage softens a little, but the flavor gets better on day two.
- Freezer: Don’t freeze this salad. The vegetables turn watery and the pasta loses its texture after thawing.
- Reheating: This salad is meant to be served cold or at cool room temperature. If it seems dry after chilling, stir in a spoonful of soy sauce and a few drops of sesame oil instead of trying to warm it up.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Asian Pasta Salad with Sesame-Ginger Dressing
Ingredients
Method
- Cook spaghetti or linguine according to package directions until tender, then drain and rinse under cold water so it stops cooking and stays springy.
- Whisk soy sauce, rice vinegar, sesame oil, honey, ginger, garlic, salt, and pepper until smooth and glossy, with the honey fully dissolved.
- Combine pasta, edamame, red cabbage, carrots, and red bell pepper in a large bowl for an even mix of colors.
- Pour dressing over the salad and toss until every strand and vegetable surface looks lightly coated.
- Refrigerate the salad for at least 1 hour so the flavors meld and the dressing thickens slightly as it chills.
- Top with green onions and sesame seeds right before serving for fresh crunch and visible sesame specks.


