We’ll discuss recipes and ingredients that are already gluten-free, as well as GF substitutions for key Chinese ingredients. 

An Easy Cuisine to Adapt to a Gluten-Free Diet

I think that Chinese food—and Asian cuisine in general—is actually easy to enjoy on a gluten-free diet.  We’ve found that unlike Western diets, which generally do use a lot of wheat flour, the Asian diet places a greater emphasis on rice and other starches. In recent years, we’ve also seen the arrival of gluten-free equivalents for some of those sauces that do use a small amount of wheat flour in the fermentation or production process. Furthermore, while you may shy away from Chinese food for fear of soy sauce and other “mysterious” ingredients that may or may not include gluten, many Chinese dishes are actually naturally gluten-free!  If you have more than a sensitivity to gluten and must avoid it at all costs, making your own Chinese food at home is the ticket. We have the recipes and adaptation tips you need to start enjoying Chinese food without the gluten! 

Our 10 Essential Chinese Pantry Ingredients: Gluten-free Edition

For anyone new to Chinese cooking, we have a suggested 10 Essential Chinese Pantry  Ingredients to start with. You may be surprised to learn that 6 out of the 10 ingredients on the list are already gluten-free:  For the remaining 4 ingredients, we have gluten-free substitutions!  With these 10 ingredients, you will be able to make hundreds of the recipes on our site—we’d say the majority, even!  That said, you may encounter a few other Chinese ingredients in these recipes and be unsure whether or not they’re gluten-free. If not, you may be wondering what to use as a substitute. Let’s get into that next. 

Other Gluten-free Chinese Ingredients & Ingredients Needing GF Substitutes

Okay, now that we have those main items out of the way, let’s move on to some lesser known Chinese ingredients. We’ll provide a list of ingredients that ARE naturally gluten-free, as well as a list of ones that need GF substitutions.  To learn more about a particular ingredient, click on the links provided, which will lead you to our ingredients glossary, where you can read more about it! 

Chinese Ingredients That Normally Do Not Contain Gluten:

Shrimp Paste/Sauce (such as Barrio Fiesta, Pantai brands) Shacha (Chinese BBQ) Sauce (such as Bullhead brand) Chili Garlic Sauce (such as Lee Kum Kee brand) Rice Vinegar (such as Marukan brand) Sesame Paste Plum Sauce Sesame Oil Chili Oil Caiziyou (Rapeseed Oil) Sichuan Peppercorn Oil Maltose Pickled Plum Tamarind Paste Thai Curry Paste (such as Thai Kitchen and Maesri red curry pastes) Coconut Milk Potassium Carbonate

Any dried mushrooms (such as shiitake, wood ears, etc.) Dried lily flowers  Dried goji berries, dates, and longan Dried lotus seeds Dried fox nut barley Dried Chinese yam  Black moss Any dried seaweed  Any dried bean, such as adzuki bean, mung bean, etc. Any dried seafood (just make sure it’s only the seafood, without seasonings) Salted duck eggs/yolks Century eggs/Thousand-year-old eggs Pickled Sour Mustard Greens (to be sure, make your own Sour Mustard with my great grandma’s recipe!) Sui Mi Ya Cai (Sichuan preserved mustard stem; check ingredients, as brands may contain seasoning!) Xue Cai (preserved potherb mustard; check ingredients, as brands may contain seasoning!)

Rice Noodles (including rice vermicelli, pad Thai noodles, wide rice noodles/ho fun) Mung bean noodles Sweet potato starch noodles  Rice cakes Buckwheat/soba noodles (great substitute for wheat noodles in noodle soups) Corn noodles: This is a bit obscure, but we’ve seen these “corn noodles” in some Chinese grocery stores, which behave somewhat like wheat noodles and are great for noodle soups and sauced noodled dishes. Alternative dumpling wrappers, such as our crystal dumpling wrappers Vietnamese rice paper wrappers (for fresh summer rolls as well as fried spring rolls) Millet  Rice (jasmine, brown, black rice, sweet/sticky rice, black sticky rice—long and short grains) Rice flour Glutinous rice flour  Cornstarch Mung bean starch Potato starch Sweet potato starch Tapioca starch (and tapioca pearls/boba) Sago Wheat starch (this one is tricky, as it is made from wheat flour, but has had the gluten-removed. Look for “codex wheat starch,” which is certified gluten-free, as it contains less than 20ppm of gluten.

In addition to the above, dried spices, most tofu products (the exceptions being fermented bean curd and seitan/fried gluten, which can sometimes be confused with tofu), vegetables & fungi, and fresh herbs/aromatics are all naturally gluten-free ingredients that you have in your arsenal.  That’s a lot of Chinese ingredients that are already gluten-free! Let’s talk about ingredients that are more of a gray area.

Ingredients That May Need GF Substitutions

Fish Sauce: (some fish sauces are gluten-free, while others are not. Try Red Boat Fish Sauce, our favorite brand that also happens to be gluten-free!) Hoisin Sauce: Find a gluten-free equivalent such as Lee Kum Kee GF Hoisin. Sweet Bean Sauce, Chee Hou Sauce, Ground Bean Sauce: Substitute a gluten-free hoisin sauce such as Lee Kum Kee GF Hoisin. Note that you may have to adjust the sweetness level of the recipe, as hoisin is quite sweet.  Fermented Black Beans: Not always gluten-free, so be sure to check the label. Ingredients should only be soybeans, water, salt, and maybe ginger!  Spicy Bean Sauce: This one is tricky, as it is usually imported from China, and usually fermented with wheat. However, it is essential to many spicy dishes, particularly Sichuan recipes. You could try making a substitute using homemade chili oil and gluten-free hoisin for umami. Again, you may have to eliminate any sugar in the recipe, as hoisin is quite sweet. Duo Jiao: These salted chilies hailing from Hunan cuisine may not be gluten-free, as they may contain cooking wine. However, you can make your own with our Duo Jiao recipe!  Chiu Chow Chili Sauce: May not be gluten-free, as it may contain soy sauce. However, you can make your own with our recipe and gluten-free soy sauce!  XO Sauce: Make your own using our XO Sauce Recipe and gluten-free ingredients. Black Vinegar: Check the labeling to make sure that your black vinegar is gluten-free, as some contain wheat bran. You can also substitute a certified GF seasoned rice vinegar in a pinch! Lop Cheung (Chinese Sausage)/Cured Meats: Chinese sausages and other cured meats often contain soy sauces and wines that contain gluten. Instead, try making your own homemade cured pork belly (lap yuk) with gluten-free soy sauces and wines. This cured pork belly can be substituted for Chinese sausage in most recipes. For Chinese cured ham, some are gluten-free—check to make sure—or substitute a gluten-free American country ham. 

Making Recipes Gluten-free Adaptable

We have an entire collection of gluten-free and gluten-free adaptable recipes on our site. It’s pretty safe to say that rice noodle dishes, rice dishes, or vegetable, tofu, and meat stir-fries are going to be pretty easily gluten-free adaptable with the GF or GF versions of the ingredients listed above. Just make sure to remember to make those adjustments for ingredients like oyster sauce, soy sauce, Shaoxing wine, etc.  Here are some great recipes to start with! 

Rice Cakes with Mixed Vegetables Chicken Mei Fun  Fujian Fried Rice Zucchini Stir-fry with Chicken Harmony Stir-fry Cabbage with Glass Noodles Crystal Dumplings (pictured in the featured photo of this post), made with wheat starch

Gluten-free Chinese Desserts

I wanted to end this article with a word on Gluten-free Chinese desserts, because dessert is one of those areas where gluten seems to rear its head most often in Western cooking and baking! How do you make desserts without wheat flour?  The answer? MANY CHINESE DESSERTS ALREADY DON’T CONTAIN WHEAT FLOUR! YAY!  Yes, many Chinese desserts are tapioca-based, rice-based, or just don’t contain much starch. Try some of these recipes: 

Mango Sago Mango Pudding Red Bean Mochi Taro Sago Dessert Soup Tang Yuan (Sweet Rice Balls with Black Sesame) Nian Gao (Chinese New Year Sweet Rice Cake) Fried Sesame Balls Snow Skin Mooncakes White Sugar Sponge Cake (Baak Tong Goh) Snow Fungus Soup with Pears Grass Jelly Dessert Baobing Chinese Shave Ice Black Sticky Rice Mango Dessert Cantonese Steamed Milk Egg Pudding Coconut Peanut Mochi Mango Coconut Ices Sweet Red Bean Soup

We hope this post has given you the information you need to start your gluten-free Chinese food journey, and shown you that you don’t have to give up Asian food if you’re on a gluten-free diet. The key is cooking it yourself!  Any questions? Let us know in the comments below! 

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