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Cold Noodles: Mason Jar Meal Prep!

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If you’re looking for an easy lunch or dinner, look no further than these mason jar meal prep cold noodles.

You layer the ingredients—sauce on the bottom, followed by noodles, protein, veggies, and aromatics. When you’re ready to eat, simply shake and enjoy. No need to heat anything up or take out another bowl or plate.

Make as many jars as you need for the week or multiple jars for various family members! I also have 3 different versions and ideas for customizations based on what you like or what you have on hand.

The Perfect On-the-Go Lunch

When I was studying abroad in China one summer, a favorite student lunch involved heading to the cold noodle cart outside one of the dorms and getting a paper bowl filled with noodles, veggies, and tasty sauce.

The lady running the cart had various ingredients that you could choose from and several sauces, so you could customize your bowl of noodles to your liking.

When I moved to Beijing with my parents a few years later, I saw this same concept replicated not just by other street vendors, but also in grocery stores, where you could pick up a bowl of cold noodles from a stand right in the store while you were shopping.

All this is to say that cold noodles are the ultimate convenience food. Not only are they filling and satisfying, they’re inexpensive, quick to mix up, infinitely customizable, and—as it’s now 90°F outside in our neck of the woods—refreshing on a hot day!

This meal prep idea is based on all those quick cold noodle lunches I enjoyed both as a student in Qingdao and as a just-out-of-school-intern-who-worked-for-free-and-had-no-money in Beijing.

The idea is simple. Layer the components in a jar—much like those mason jar salads you may have seen knocking around Pinterest. When you’re ready to eat, shake the jar and enjoy.

Cold Noodles in a Jar
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A pair of chopsticks and a refreshing beverage is all you need for a midday pick-me-up, whether you’re at your desk at work, on the go, or in need of something fast in between Zoom meetings at home.

Cold Noodles for kids!

If you want to pack this for your kids’ school lunches, just use a thermos or similar container that you can put into their lunch bag. If you’d rather not use a glass container, you can do the same!

The Case for Thin Spaghetti

You may have noticed that rather than Chinese noodles, I used spaghetti. Thin spaghetti, to be more specific!

Before you ‘authenticity’-folks start an uproar, let me explain. In our house, thin spaghetti has long been the noodle of choice for a bowl of cold noodles.

Why?

Not only is it easily accessible and always in our pantry, it actually holds up better to longer storage, and the noodles are much less likely to stubbornly stick together after cooking, making them easy to mix.

Just toss the noodles in a bit of neutral oil after cooking, and they will stay loose and separated in your jars rather than clumping together into a ball that even the best chopstick skills can’t pry apart.

In short, dried spaghetti is more robust and less prone to sogginess than other types of dried wheat noodles, making them the optimal choice for this type of meal prep.

In fact, if given the choice between a fresh Chinese noodle and a box of Barilla thin spaghetti to make these cold noodle jars, I’d take the spaghetti every time.

Fun Fact!

When I first learned how to make cold noodles from my mom, she used spaghetti! We have also been known to mix penne and bow-ties with soy sauce and sesame oil when said spaghetti ran out.

Save your fresh noodles for noodle soups and other recipes where you can eat your noodles right away, rather than prepping something in advance.

Three Sauce Versions

In this recipe, I include three different sauce variations:

  1. Basic Cold Noodles: based on the mix of soy sauce and sesame oil that my mom taught us before we could reach the top of the stove. This is the most simple of the three, and perhaps the most nostalgic if you’re me, my sister, or my mom! (My dad Bill has never really been a cold noodle guy.)
  2. Cold Sesame Noodles: this is a more robust and rich sauce, which uses nutty Chinese sesame paste. A little rice vinegar gives it tang, and it’s balanced by a small amount of sugar.
  3. Cold Peanut Noodles: Can’t find Chinese sesame paste? Pull out a jar of peanut butter and try this peanut version instead. Based on my sister’s peanut noodle recipea bit of lime and fish sauce gives this sauce extra oomph.

All the sauces are loose enough to mix evenly with the noodles after a few shakes of the jar.

Spice fiend?

If you want your cold noodles spicy, you can add chili oil or your favorite chili sauce to any of the above sauce mixes!

Build Your Meal Prep Cold Noodle Jar!

So here is the basic formula for building your meal prep cold noodles:

  1. Sauce on bottom
  2. Noodles
  3. Protein
  4. Veg
  5. Aromatics/herbs

Leave a little space!

It’s good to leave a little space in the jar—about an inch at the top—to give you enough room to mix up the noodles when you shake the jar. Keep that in mind as you load it up!

Okay, we already went over the sauce. Let’s talk toppings—the protein, vegetables, aromatics and herbs you can add.

In the version photographed here, we used ground pork, julienned carrots and cucumbers, cilantro, and scallions. Here is a full list of options:

Protein:

  • Poached shredded chicken (see my mom’s recipe for poached chicken breast or use shredded leftover grilled or rotisserie chicken)
    Cooked ground pork, chicken, turkey, or beef
  • Any leftover cooked meat
    Steamed wheat gluten
  • Blanched shredded tofu skin
cooked ground pork in pan
Cold Noodles: Mason Jar Meal Prep! 45

Vegetables:

  • Cooked baby spinach or other greens
  • Julienned raw cucumber
  • Julienned raw carrot
  • Julienned raw bell pepper
  • Blanched bean sprouts
  • Cooked shelled edamame
  • Finely shredded raw cabbage

Herbs & Crunch:

  • Chopped scallions
  • Chopped cilantro
  • Chopped Peanuts
  • Roasted or fried soybeans
  • Toasted sesame seeds
cold noodle toppings, julienned carrots, cucumbers and chopped cilantro and scallion
Cold Noodles: Mason Jar Meal Prep! 46

HOW FAR IN ADVANCE CAN I MAKE THESE?

Your mason jar cold noodles will stay good in the fridge for about 4 days. So if you assemble them on Sunday night, you can enjoy them Monday-Thursday!

Recipe Instructions

Bring a pot of water to a boil for the noodles, and cook according to package instructions. Drain the noodles, and toss them in a couple teaspoons of neutral oil to keep them from sticking to each other.

To build your jar, combine all the ingredients for your sauce of choice in a small bowl, and pour in the the bottom of the jar.

cold noodle sauce in bottom of mason jar
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Layer the noodles on top.

thin spaghetti noodles in mason jar
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Follow with the protein, vegetables, and herbs of choice.

Refrigerate until ready to eat.

cold noodles meal prep
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Shake to combine all the ingredients just before enjoying.

Cold Noodle Mason Jar Meal Prep
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Cold noodles in a jar
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Mason Jar Cold Noodles (Meal Prep!)

For an easy meal prep lunch or dinner, look no further than these mason jar meal prep cold noodles. Layer sauce on the bottom, followed by noodles, protein, veggies, and aromatics. When ready to eat, just shake and enjoy!

Cold Noodles in a Jar for Meal Prep

serves: 1

Instructions

  • Bring a pot of water to a boil for the noodles, and cook according to package instructions. Drain the noodles, and toss them in a couple teaspoons of neutral oil to keep them from sticking to each other.

  • To build your jar, combine all the ingredients for your sauce of choice in a small bowl, and pour in the the bottom of the jar. Layer the noodles on top, followed by the protein, vegetables, and herbs of choice.

  • Refrigerate until ready to eat. Shake to combine all the ingredients just before enjoying.

Tips & Notes:

Each noodle sauce makes enough for 5 ounces of dried noodles. To scale the recipe up, click on the number of servings and use the slider.
To make your noodles spicy, you may add chili oil or your favorite chili sauce to taste—to any of the above sauces.

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