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15 Minute Lo Mein

158 reviews / 4.5 average

15 Minute Lo Mein! Made with just soy sauce, sesame oil, a pinch of sugar, ramen noodles or spaghetti noodles, and any veggies or protein you like. SO YUMMY!

Hel-lo-lo-mein! This 15-minute wonder is absolutely my new go-to for a quick Asian noodle stir fry. Lo Mein FTW!

Why I Love This Easy Lo Mein

Lindsay Ostrom headshot.

Please tell me you guys eat, love, and are generally familiar with Lo Mein.

Maybe you are a Panda Buffet regular and you not only know Lo Mein, but the people at Panda know YOU when you walk in the door and they waste no time piling high your little plastic tray with scoop after scoop of those stir fried noodles while you watch a little protectively from the other side of the glass, because couldn’t they have given you a bigger scoop like they did last time? come on puhleeeease.

Or maybe you mostly know Lo Mein from your growing up days because good news, kids! Mom and dad are ordering Chinese takeout tonight (yasssss) and little pre-teen you is most definitely going to eat your weight in salty Asian noodles and then revisit it in the fridge, cold, right before bed, amiright?

Or maybe you’ve never had Lo Mein and you’re giving the rest of us all the look right now. I hear you, sitting high up there, saying that you would never eat cold takeout noodles right before bed. There is judgement in your heart. You think you’re not into this whole stir-fried noodles and vegetables thing. In which case:

It’s time for you to get Lo Mein in your life, friends. This is your big day. We’ve all been waiting for you. Welcome to your Lo Mein intervention!

Lindsay signature.

Watch This Recipe

Tongs grabbing Lo Mein noodles.

How To Make This Lo Mein

1

Shake Up Your Sauce

Soy sauce, oyster sauce, sesame oil, sugar, garlic. Simple ingredients that make for a perfectly salty/sweet lo mein sauce!

Lo Mein sauce ingredients.

2

Chop Your Veggies and Cook Your Noodles

My favorite veggies for Lo Mein are mushrooms, carrots, bell peppers, and bok choy, but you can really use just about any veggie you’d like. Broccoli and cabbage are good ones, too!

Chopped veggies in a bowl.

3

Toss It All Together

Your noodles are cooked, your veggies are chopped, and your sauce is ready to go. Now, you just need to sauté it all together in a hot wok or skillet and you’ve got easy, delicious Lo Mein – at home!

Pouring sauce into a pan with noodles and veggies.
Tossing Lo Mein together in a pan.

Lo Mein: Frequently Asked Questions

What kind of noodles do you recommend?

These ones here (affiliate link) are perfect!

Are lo mein noodles gluten-free?

Traditional lo mein noodles are made with wheat, so they are not gluten free. Feel free to sub in rice noodles or your favorite GF spaghetti noodles to make this gluten-free!

Why did you use two different types of soy sauce?

It adds more depth and flavor to the dish – especially the dark soy sauce (affiliate link). Highly recommend using both if you can find them. If not, regular soy sauce (affiliate link) can always work.

What is mirin?

Mirin is a type of rice wine. It adds a sweeter flavor, which is a really wonderful contrast to the saltiness from the soy sauce here.

How could I add chicken or beef to this recipe?

It would be super easy to add meat to this! Thinly slice your chicken or beef, toss it in a little bit of the lo mein sauce (just enough to coat it), then brown/sear it in the pan before adding your veggies, noodles, and sauce.

How is lo mein different from chow mein?

The main difference between the two is in how the noodles are cooked – chow mein noodles are fried, and lo mein noodles are cooked and tossed. I’d recommend this recipe from Recipe Tin Eats if you’re looking for Chow Mein!

What Goes In Lo Mein Sauce

You need a good soy sauce, and I HIGHLY recommend the 2-types-of-soy-sauce trick. It’s not really a trick as much as it is a tiny thing that makes a big difference. It’s probably more likely that you have light or low sodium soy sauce in your fridge, but tip alert: dark soy sauce is so rich in umami flavor and it takes this Lo Mein “sauce” situation to a whole new level.

Because the quality of soy sauce is important here (I mean, it’s one of literally THREE ingredients that will make the sauce for your stir fried noodles), I did not use soy sauce packets from leftover takeout.

I used this light soy sauce // dark soy sauce combo (affiliate links).

Shake that up in a jar with a quick hit of sesame oil and a pinch of sugar. annnnd DONE.

How To Make This A Chicken (Or Beef) Lo Mein

I love this recipe as a base for vegetable lo mein, but it would be easy enough to add some protein like chicken or beef (or maybe even shrimp!?).

Here’s what you’ll do:

  1. Thinly slice your chicken or beef.
  2. Toss it in a little bit of the lo mein sauce (just enough to coat it) and let it sit for a bit.
  3. Brown/sear it in the pan before adding your veggies, noodles, and sauce.

And that’s it!

What Noodles To Use For Lo Mein

You could use fresh Lo Mein noodles if you can find it fresh or frozen at your grocery store. I could not find it at any of my regular places, so in its place I have used either dry ramen if you can find it (as long as you’re hitting up Amazon for the soy sauce, grab a box of this ramen, too – affiliate link) and/or just regular spaghetti.

…Is that blasphemy to Lo Mein? to use spaghetti?

I don’t know, I’m thinking we both care more about practicality than total and complete authenticity.

Go on and do what you need to do.

If you’re gluten-free, you can use rice noodles or your favorite gluten-free spaghetti noodle.

And in a quick flash of the pan, with the sauce and the noodles and the veggies all partying it up in there, we’ve reached the tippy top of the Lo Mein journey. The part where you wind those silky noodles up on a fork with a few pieces of caramelized pan-fried veggies and treat yourself right.

Easy Homemade Lo Mein, comin in hot!

White hands holding a bowl of Lo Mein. Bowl has a fork in it.

I Hope You Love This Easy Lo Mein!

Until two weeks ago, I always just assumed that this was some kind of lengthy process involving mysteriously delicious ingredients that I wouldn’t have in my standard Midwestern kitchen, and plus, did you know that you can get a platter of Lo Mein large enough to feed the neighborhood for just $6.50 at the Panda Buffet? So why would we even do this at home? I’m serious – let’s go.

Except hold the phone for just a sec.

  1. Making Lo Mein is not a lengthy process – it’s going to come together in ONE PAN in something like 15 minutes, start to finish. JOY of JOYS. I seriously had no idea when I set out to learn about all things Lo Mein that it would be such a gem of a quick + easy recipe, and not in the way where you’re skimping on anything. Just by nature, it is that simple.
  2. Lo Mein doesn’t require fancy or unusual ingredients. Like, at all. A quality soy sauce and sesame oil combo is basically it. That’s your Lo Mein magic right there. For real – just one bottle of good soy sauce and you’re in Lo Mein business. I mean, almost everyone, no matter what their cooking level is, has a bottle of soy sauce in their fridge, right? or at the very least, a few PACKETS of soy sauce from leftover takeout? You know I see you out there.
  3. And finally, Lo Mein is awesome as takeout, but it’s more awesome as a mostly-healthy takeout at home dish that can simultaneously clean out the fridge by using up any and all veggies and proteins that a person could ever want in their silky stir-fried noodles. The happiness I feel for this concept… like wows. You do not even know. Recipe scrappiness fulfills a piece of my soul.

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Lo Mein in pan with tongs.

15 Minute Lo Mein


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4.5 from 158 reviews

Description

15 Minute Lo Mein! Made with just soy sauce, sesame oil, a pinch of sugar, ramen noodles or spaghetti noodles, and any veggies or protein you like. SO YUMMY!


Ingredients

Units Scale

Sauce:

  • 2 tablespoons dark soy sauce (sub regular soy sauce if needed) (Affiliate link)
  • 1 tablespoon light soy sauce (sub regular soy sauce if needed) (Affiliate link)
  • 3 tablespoons oyster sauce
  • 1 teaspoon sesame oil
  • 1 teaspoon sugar
  • 1 clove of garlic, grated (optional)

Lo Mein:

  • 46 ounces uncooked ramen noodles (Affiliate link)
  • 1 tablespoon sesame oil
  • 3 green onions, chopped (separate green parts from white parts – you’ll use both separately)
  • 23 cups julienne cut or chopped vegetables like carrots, red peppers, cabbage, bok choy, mushrooms, or broccoli
  • 12 tablespoons mirin

Instructions

  1. Sauce: Shake all the sauce ingredients together in a jar.
  2. Noodles: Cook the noodles according to package directions. Drain and set aside.
  3. Lo Mein: Heat the sesame oil in a large wok or skillet. Add the green onions (white parts) and vegetables to the hot pan. Stir fry until fork-tender, about 5 minutes. Add the mirin to loosen the browned bits up off the bottom of the pan. Add the cooked noodles and about half of the sauce – toss around in the hot pan to combine. Add more sauce if needed (I usually gauge the amount of sauce I want by the color of the noodles – you want a medium brown color, not too light, not too dark). Serve topped with remaining green onions!

Notes

If you want to add a protein, stir fry it first, before the vegetables, then remove from heat while you cook the vegetables. Add back into the pan at the end with the noodles.

  • Prep Time: 5 minutes
  • Cook Time: 15 minutes
  • Category: Dinner
  • Method: Stovetop
  • Cuisine: Asian

Keywords: lo mein, noodle stir fry, at-home takeout, vegetarian stir fry, vegan stir fry

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Time To Show You Off!

Bowls and pans of lo-mein made in fifteen minutes.

One More Thing!

This recipe is part of our simple slurpable noodles page. Check it out!

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375 Comments

  1. Pinch of Yum Logo

    Yes!! this is the kind of recipe I can get behind. I love lo mein and your tips for using 2 types of soy sauce are genius 🙂 great post!

    1. Pinch of Yum Logo

      Yup. Agree. The salt alone is take-out is quite appalling! Just gets this gym teacher down feeling bloated. Great recipe. Thanks for sharing.

    2. Pinch of Yum Logo

      Thank you Lindsay for that nice recipe. I had no different soy sauces so I took the one I have at home, I also exchanged sugar for vegan honey (synthetic produced without bees). I also added a few more veggies because in our household we love veggies. This is a keeper and will be made very soon again

  2. Pinch of Yum Logo

    Love how quickly this comes together. Looks to be easily reheatable too. I’m thinking the crispy tofu from a couple of recipes ago would be great here.
    Question, could I use rice noodles here? I bought some for pad thai (totally different cuisine, I know!) that I’d like to use. Also, would rice vinegar work instead of mirin?

    1. Pinch of Yum Logo

      Yes on the rice noodles, not sure on the rice vinegar. Mirin is a super sweet rice wine, not acidic like vinegar. But I’m all for just working with what you’ve got. 😉

      1. Pinch of Yum Logo

        Just made this with ricewine vinegar and agave nectar with rice ramen and its delicious! Also I didn’t have the dark sky but will purchase this next time.

  3. Pinch of Yum Logo

    Oh man. This reminds me of your vegetarian pad Thai which is almost a weekly thing for us so I have a feeling this is going to find its way into our permanent rotation

      1. Pinch of Yum Logo

        absolutely love everything about this recipe. delicious, decedent, i love the way the light and dark come together to create a beautiful array of flavours on my tongue. i cant believe that this is so easy!!! my kids love it

      2. Pinch of Yum Logo

        Great question! You could try tamari or coconut aminos. Balsamic vinegar may work, but the flavor would be altered. Any kind of soy based teriyaki sauce would work too!

  4. Pinch of Yum Logo

    I am currently doing the FODMAP diet because of digestion issues and this recipe was so perfect. It was simple to make and very flavourful!
    Definitely saving this one 🙂

      1. Pinch of Yum Logo

        I *love* this! I have made batches of the sauce recipe so I had it on hand for quick meals. But I wonder, is there a bottled sauce that would be similar? We have international stores with so many bottles sauces! Surely one of them is similar to this recipe! Does anyone know?

  5. Pinch of Yum Logo

    When it comes to the noodles, you said “grab a box of this ramen, too”, no link or list of what noodles you had in mind. No picture either. Which one did you mean to recommend?

        1. Pinch of Yum Logo

          That’s for 5lbs! 😁 Scroll to the bottom of the page and you can buy an individual package. 😉

    1. Pinch of Yum Logo

      Thanks Debs! We are excited to put together some tutorials soon for how we are doing these videos! It’s been a lot of fun and definitely a learning curve…

  6. Pinch of Yum Logo

    Yum!! One thing my kids can always agree on is anything noodles or Asian! This will be perfect for a busy night!

      1. Pinch of Yum Logo

        This was delicious, & so easy! I’ve made it for lunch twice now. The first time, I used leftover cooked chickpea linguine noodles, today I used Chinese stir-fry rice noodles. Both worked great! I subbed rice vinegar for the mirin, mushroom soy sauce for dark soy, & went extremely light on the sesame oil. I also added just a touch of cornstarch slurry at the end, to thicken.

        I used broccoli, carrots, red bell pepper, napa cabbage, green onions, snow peas, ginger & garlic. Topped with green onions, cilantro, lime juice & chopped peanuts.

        I’ll be making this often…thank you so much!!

  7. Pinch of Yum Logo

    What brand of noodles did you use? I can’t wait to make this for lunches this week!

      1. Pinch of Yum Logo

        I was literally at my local Asian food market and picked up those exact noodles but went back to a cheaper grocery store to get them because I thought they were the same brand but they’re not 🙁 I got an organic lol mein noodle. I hope it still works! And I went to 4 different stores trying to find the Pearl soy sauce but couldn’t find it anywhere! Not even the Asian market!

    1. Pinch of Yum Logo

      Love the 15 minute Lomein. Did a couple subs because on the fly but my husband liked it. Trying to eat primarily plant based and he begged me NOT to make any more beans!! Thx!

  8. Pinch of Yum Logo

    Hi! I just made this Lo Mein recipe, using some rotisserie chicken for a quicker weeknight meal. Also, since i luuuuv the spicy sesame dressing from your Korean BBQ bowls, I added grated ginger, garlic and Sambal oelek to the sauce. Yum.

  9. Pinch of Yum Logo

    This was good. I used soba noodles. I used 3 T. of dark low-sodium soy sauce b/c I didn’t have any light. I also didn’t have any mirin, so I used 2 T. of marsala wine with 1 T. of sugar. I also added cubed tofu. It took a few minutes more than 15 but not double that amount or anything like that.

  10. Pinch of Yum Logo

    I meant to say 2 T. of marsala wine with 1 t. of sugar as per Cooking Light’s Web site in place of the mirin. Mea culpa!

  11. Pinch of Yum Logo

    This looks amazing. We have a garden and are members of a CSA and could use an easy recipe like this to use up some of our veggies. Could you use any brand of light/dark soy sauce? Or is there any cheaper brand that you suggest?

  12. Pinch of Yum Logo

    Your recipes are always simple yet gorgeous! Recently this particular lo mein has become my favorite weeknight dinner.

  13. Pinch of Yum Logo

    How yummy! You could not have convinced me as a kid that Lo Mein could be made this easily. What a simple recipe, I am so excited to test this out.