Sesame Ginger Dressing

$2.03 recipe / $0.20 serving
by Beth - Budget Bytes
4.93 from 14 votes
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This Sesame Ginger Dressing is probably one of the most addictive homemade dressings I’ve ever made. It’s sweet, salty, tangy, and has a super “zingy” fresh ginger bite. It’s one of those dressings that you’ll just want to keep dipping your spoon into. The type of dressing that will make you want to eat a salad just to serve as a vehicle for the delicious dressing (that’s not exactly a bad thing). But, if you’re like me, you’ll probably just end up drizzling it over everything!

Sesame ginger dressing in a wooden bowl, garnished with sesame seeds, a spoon in the middle of the bowl.

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What is Tahini?

Tahini is a paste made out of ground sesame seeds. Think of it like peanut butter, but made with sesame seeds instead of peanuts! It’s one of the base ingredients for this dressing and can not be substituted in this recipe. The tahini not only adds sesame flavor to the recipe, but it also helps thicken the dressing. You can usually find tahini in the grocery store either near the peanut butter, or near the middle-eastern ingredients in the international aisle. 

Can I Substitute the Rice Vinegar?

I don’t suggest substituting the rice vinegar in this recipe. Rice vinegar has a uniquely mild flavor and acidity compared to other vinegars, which keeps it from overpowering the other flavors. While you might be able to use another type of vinegar, you’d probably also need to adjust the amount or the ratio of other ingredients to compensate for the increased acidity. 

How Long Does This Sesame Ginger Dressing Last?

Because this dressing uses fresh ginger and garlic, I suggest keeping it stored in the refrigerator for up to 5 days. But it tastes so good that hopefully you’ll finish it off before then!

How to Use Sesame Ginger Dressing

This dressing goes great over crunchy salads, like my Crunchy Cabbage Salad, but it can also be poured over cold noodle salads, used to dip egg rolls or dumplings, or poured over rice bowls. The sky’s the limit and I’m sure once you’ll taste it you’ll want it on everything!

Sesame ginger dressing being poured over crunchy cabbage salad from a mason jar
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Sesame Ginger Dressing

4.93 from 14 votes
This homemade sesame ginger dressing will drench your favorite salad with a sweet, salty, and nutty flavor, and a fresh gingery bite!
A wooden bowl filled with sesame ginger dressing next to a knob of fresh ginger
Servings 10 2 Tbsp each
Prep 10 minutes
Total 10 minutes

Ingredients

  • 2 cloves garlic ($0.16)
  • 1 Tbsp grated fresh ginger ($0.30)
  • 1/2 cup neutral oil* ($0.32)
  • 1/4 cup rice vinegar ($0.53)
  • 2 Tbsp soy sauce ($0.12)
  • 3 Tbsp honey ($0.36)
  • 1 Tbsp tahini ($0.19)
  • 1/2 tsp toasted sesame oil ($0.05)
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Instructions 

  • Mince the garlic and grate the ginger (I use a small-holed cheese grater)
  • Add the minced garlic, grated ginger, oil, rice vinegar, soy sauce, honey, tahini, and toasted sesame oil to a blender. Blend until the mixture is smooth and creamy. Serve over salad or as a dipping sauce.

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Notes

*Any neutral-flavored salad oil, like peanut, canola, safflower, grapeseed, or sesame (untoasted) will work fine for this dressing.
If your dressing is too thick for pouring, simply stir in a tablespoon or two of water to loosen it up.

Nutrition

Serving: 2TbspCalories: 132.33kcalCarbohydrates: 5.98gProtein: 0.59gFat: 12.27gSodium: 177.95mgFiber: 0.2g
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How to Make Sesame Ginger Dressing – Step by Step Photos

garlic press with two cloves of garlic, and fresh ginger with a microplane

Begin by mincing two cloves of garlic and grating about 1 Tbsp of fresh ginger. I like to use my garlic press to easily mince the garlic and a small-holed cheese grater to easily grate the ginger. Ginger grates easier if it’s frozen (the little hairs don’t clog the grater). I don’t even bother peeling it, I just make sure the peel is very clean.

minced garlic and grated ginger

And that’s what it looks like once the garlic is minced and ginger grated (for everyone who is visual, like me).

Rice vinegar, toasted sesame oil, and tahini

Here are three of the most important ingredients in this dressing: rice vinegar, toasted sesame oil, and tahini. Toasted sesame oil has a much stronger nutty flavor than regular (or un-toasted) sesame oil. You can usually find it near other Asian ingredients in the international aisle. 

Dressing ingredients in the blender

Add the 2 cloves minced garlic, 1 Tbsp grated ginger, ½ cup neutral salad oil, ¼ cup rice vinegar, 2 Tbsp soy sauce, 3 Tbsp honey, 1 Tbsp tahini, and ½ tsp toasted sesame oil to a blender. Any neutral-flavored salad oil, like peanut, canola, grapeseed, sesame (un-toasted), or safflower will work fine.

Blended dressing on a spoon in the blender

Blend until the dressing is smooth and creamy. If your dressing ends up being really thick and you’d like it a little more pourable, simply stir in a tablespoon or two of water.

A wooden bowl filled with sesame ginger dressing next to a knob of fresh ginger

Enjoy the sesame ginger dressing poured over your favorite salad, or as a dipping sauce!

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  1. My dressing was delicious but came out thinner than typical salad dressing . I used a food processor rather than blender – could that account for the difference?

    1. This dressing will be quite thin when at room temperature. It will thicken a bit when refrigerated, though.

  2. So easy! I did the proportions just like the recipe says and it turned out exactly perfect.

  3. Try using somen noodles as a salad base cold please any Asian noodles work well make it with them cold they are also used fried in many Japanese home dishes

  4. This is the tastiest dressing ever! I never seem to have good luck with homemade dressings (which is silly because it seems like the easiest thing to do) but this came out over-the-top! I’m trying to think up an Asian-style pasta salad to toss with this. Or, really, as many ways to use this dressing as I can! Thanks Beth!

  5. I blended this up with a hand blender for quite a while and it was still pretty fiberous. I ended up filtering it through a strainer. I lost about 1/4 cup but the end result was much smoother. The taste was delicious.

  6. Love this dressing. I make it every week:) Instead of the tahini I used peanut butter instead. I’m a big fan of ginger so instead of grating the ginger I puree it with the vinegar, drain, then proceed with the recipe.
    p.s. we have several copies of your book in our library and whenever I put it our for display someone always checks it out.

  7. This is a very yummy dressing! I’m just not sure why mine congealed after mixing. I added some water to liquify it again, but it just stayed jelly. I followed the recipe exactly except I used sunflower oil instead of vegetable, but I can’t imagine that made a difference. Any ideas?

    1. I don’t know, that’s very strange! Tahini sometimes has that texture, but with only 1 Tbsp in the entire batch, it’s not enough to make the dressing congeal.

  8. This is amazing! I’ve made it twice now- once with fresh ginger and once with canned ginger. Fresh is definitely the way to go, but canned can work in a pinch. My lactose-intolerant husband was wary of this dressing because it looks so creamy, but there’s no dairy involved, which is neat. Thanks Beth!

  9. I added some leftover adobo pepper, that I bought for the sweet potato burgers, and WHOA. It was really good but man oh man it had a kick!! Love this!

  10. Is there a significant difference between rice vinegar and rice wine vinegar? I have the later, but lately I’ve come across many recipes that call for the former (probably on your site!). I just want to know if I should make the investment or if they are interchangeable.

    1. There isn’t a difference between rice vinegar and rice wine vinegar, but there IS a difference between rice wine vinegar and rice wine (mirin). Most vinegar is made from wine or another alcohol that has been further fermented, so “rice vinegar” is just the shortened name. Rice wine, on the other hand, has a much different flavor than rice wine vinegar.

  11. Well, I’m about a year late commenting on this, but I just made it the other day. It was delicious and reminded me of the dressing you get at Japanese restaurants.

    The only issue I had was that mine turned out too thick. I used olive oil instead of veg oil, and I think that’s what did it. I might add in some canola oil to thin it out a bit unless, Beth, you have another suggestion??? Regardless, both my husband and my 15yo daughter loved it.

    Also, I made my own tahini, which is *super* easy to do. If anyone is interested, there are instructions here: http://greek.food.com/recipe/homemade-tahini-73859?scaleto=.5&mode=null&st=true

    I scaled it down to 1/2 cup because I didn’t need much. Also, you can find bags of sesame seeds in the ethnic aisle of many grocery stores. I bought a 14-oz bag for $3.19. Otherwise, they’re so expensive to buy in the little jars in the spice aisle.

    Thanks, Beth! I use your site all the time to plan my weekly meals. This + the Crunchy Asian Salad went really well with your Easy Sesame Chicken.

    1. Ooh, I need to try to make my own tahini! Thanks for that link! :D The oil may have made a difference in the texture, but you can also just try adding a splash more oil in general to loosen it up.

  12. WOW! Awesome recipe! My daughter & UI have been looking for a way to make our own Chinese Chicken Salad but could never figure out the dressing. we usually end up buying the packages from Costco, which not only more expensive, but the chicken tastes “off” to me. This way we used all of our own ingredients.

  13. Seriously? SERIOUSLY? This is the most delicious salad I’ve ever put in my mouth. And I didn’t even add the tahini, because I live in South Dakota and apparently they don’t believe it in over here! LOVE THIS RECIPE.

    <3 Sarah