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Sesame Ginger Dressing

July 29, 2025 by Kathryn Pauline Leave a Comment

sesame ginger sauce with spring rolls

Sesame ginger dressing just makes everything taste better. Salads, sandwiches, grain bowls—it’s always a hit. This version uses tahini as the base, which gives it a creamy texture and a rich, nutty flavor (and bonus, it’s vegan!). It’s great on crisp vegetables, perfect over soba noodles, and great with herbs like cilantro and basil.

Read on for my best tips for sesame ginger success + ways to use it, or jump to the recipe.

sesame ginger sauce
sesame ginger sauce

Sesame ginger dressing tips for success

1. Use frozen minced ginger and garlic as a shortcut.

Short of buying a bottle of (likely far inferior) store-bought dressing, frozen garlic and ginger are the fastest route to getting this one on the table. Powdered versions just don’t work the same. Grab a couple frozen blister packs of ginger and garlic and you’re halfway there! I’ll even allow bottled lime juice, since it’s such a small amount. The rest of the ingredients are just poured straight from their bottles—easy peasy.

2. Know your tahini.

Tahini is a little quirky—when you start to add water to it, it actually thickens up before it thins out as you add more water. Then as it sits, it thickens up a tad more. So if you’re eyeballing quantities, just know the texture goes from thin (plain tahini) → thick (tahini with a little water) → thin (tahini with a lot of water) → thicker again (tahini with a lot of water that’s rested). If you add too much water, it may truly thin out too much, but it takes a surprising amount.

Also, give your tahini a really good stir before measuring. If you don’t mix it, you’ll end up with either too much oil or too much sludge, and neither will work.

3. The water seems like a lot, but it’s essential.

You can experiment with adding a little bit less if you want a punchier sauce, but 3/4 cup of water is not a mistake. The rest of the flavors are extremely powerful, and they need that water to balance everything out.

4. Scaling up and down

This recipe is easy to scale up! But some of the quantities make it a little tricky to scale down (if you’re measuring with cups and tablespoons). It can be done though! I have quantities for a half-recipe in the notes at the bottom of my cold soba noodles post, which uses this sesame ginger dressing. The half recipe has a tad more vinegar and tad less lime juice to normalize some of those odd volumetric measurements.

But I highly recommend making a full batch of sesame ginger dressing, because you’ll never run out of ways to use it…

sesame ginger sauce with spring rolls
sesame ginger sauce with baked purple sweet potato
spring rolls
cold soba noodles

Ways to use it

  • On a baked sweet potato with sliced green onions and hot peppers
  • As a dipping sauce for spring rolls
  • Over silken tofu with green onions and cilantro (or even better, tofu with perilla!)
  • With cold soba noodles
  • Drizzled over a sweet potato broccoli grain bowl
  • Massaged into a kale salad with roasted sweet potatoes and sesame seeds
  • Drizzled over sautéed broccoli and sprinkled with sesame seeds
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Sesame Ginger Dressing

sesame ginger sauce with spring rolls
Print Recipe

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  • Yield: 2¾ cups [660 g]

Ingredients

  • 1 cup [250 g] tahini
  • ¾ cup [175 g] water
  • ⅓ cup [80 g] rice vinegar
  • 3 Tbsp soy sauce
  • 2 Tbsp honey
  • 2 Tbsp sesame oil
  • 1 Tbsp lime juice
  • 3 Tbsp minced fresh ginger
  • 3 garlic cloves, crushed through a press

Instructions

  1. In a medium mixing bowl, whisk together the tahini, water, vinegar, soy sauce, honey, sesame oil, lime juice, ginger, and garlic. It will start out watery, but will thicken as you continue to whisk, and will thicken further in the refrigerator.
  2. This sauce will keep for 3 to 4 days in the fridge, or at least 3 months in the freezer in a tightly sealed container.

find us on instagram and let us know what you made!

Psst… by the way, I love this recipe so much, I ended up including it in my cookbook, Piecemeal.

If you like this recipe as much as I do, you might like my book! It’s full of mix-and-match recipes and inspiration for fun and easy meals. There are recipes in it for spring rolls, baked sweet potato, and cold soba noodles, which all use this sesame ginger dressing as their base.

Filed Under: dairy free, every recipe, gluten free, sauces, vegan, vegetarian, weeknight Tagged With: ginger, sesame, tahini

Roasted Squash Steaks

July 26, 2025 by Kathryn Pauline Leave a Comment

roasted squash steaks

After trying these roasted squash steaks, there was no going back to treating squash as a mere background vegetable. That butternut squash sitting on your counter? Suddenly it’s not just a future soup or a boring side. When roasted just right and paired with a few simple ingredients like feta, dates, and rosemary, squash becomes a centerpiece.

roasted squash steaks
roasted squash steaks

Tips for success with you roasted squash steaks

1. Use any firm-fleshed winter squash.

One medium butternut squash is ideal for the quantities below, but kabocha or acorn also work beautifully. If your squash is larger or smaller, simply scale up or down the toppings. Be sure to add enough feta, rosemary, dates, and vinaigrette.

2. Use that vinaigrette (before and after).

Coating the squash steaks and onions in vinaigrette instead of plain olive oil adds a punch of flavor right from the start. And don’t forget to drizzle on a little more after roasting for a bit more brightness. Same goes for the rosemary—I like to chop some to roast and then sprinkle on some tiny sprigs after roasting.

3. Don’t crowd the pan.

Crowded squash = steamed squash rather than roasted squash. Use two sheet pans if needed and make sure each piece has space around it.

4. Add the dates toward the end.

Sprinkle the dates on after about 15 minutes of roasting so they soften and slightly caramelize without burning.

5. Cut evenly.

Try to keep the squash steaks around ¾ inch thick. Thinner pieces will overcook before the feta chars; thicker ones may stay too firm. Same goes for the feta, which should be around ¼ in.

roasted squash steaks
roasted squash steaks
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Roasted Squash Steaks

roasted squash steaks
Print Recipe

5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star

No reviews

  • Prep Time: 5 minutes
  • Cook Time: 20 minutes
  • Total Time: 25 minutes
  • Yield: 8 servings

Ingredients

  • 1 butternut squash*
  • ½ red onion, thinly sliced
  • 3 Tbsp vinaigrette,** plus more for serving
  • ¾ tsp salt
  • 6 oz [170 g] ¼ in [6 mm] sliced feta
  • 1 Tbsp chopped fresh rosemary needles, plus more for serving
  • 8 pitted, halved Medjool dates (125 g)

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 500°F [260°C].
  2. Peel the butternut squash, slice off the stem, slice in half, and discard the seeds and pulp. Slice into about eight ¾ in [19 mm] thick wedges.
  3. Line a rimmed sheet pan with parchment paper and place the squash and onion slices on it. Drizzle on the vinaigrette and use your hands to coat evenly. Arrange the squash in a single layer with space around each piece (use 2 sheet pans if necessary, and don’t crowd the pan) and sprinkle with the salt. Layer the feta on and around the squash, and sprinkle with the rosemary.
  4. Roast for about 20 minutes, until the feta is charred in spots and the squash has cooked through (stop before it gets mushy). Sprinkle on the dates after 15 minutes of roasting.
  5. Serve with a small sprinkling of rosemary needles (do not sprinkle whole sprigs), and drizzle with a little more vinaigrette, to taste.

Notes

* One medium butternut squash is ideal for the quantities in this recipe, but any firm-fleshed winter squash will work. If your squash is larger or smaller, simply scale up or down the toppings.

** I linked here to my favorite recipe, which you’re welcome to make (without water). Or feel free to use your favorite vinaigrette.

find us on instagram and let us know what you made!

Psst… by the way, I love this recipe so much, I ended up including it in my cookbook, Piecemeal.

If you like this recipe as much as I do, you might like my book! It’s full of mix-and-match recipes and inspiration for fun and easy meals.

Filed Under: dinner, every recipe, gluten free, side dishes, vegetarian, weeknight Tagged With: dates, fall, feta, herbs, onion, winter

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