This seaweed salad is colorful, delicious, and boldly flavored with sesame dressing. If you enjoy seaweed salads at Japanese restaurants, try this fun twist on the concept. Many prepared seaweed salads are colored with food dyes, but this one obtains its lively color from veggies.
If you’re relatively new to seaweed, like I am, this salad offers a great introduction. It calls for arame, which has a more mild and sweet flavor compared to other seaweed varieties. The crisp textures of cabbage and bell pepper, combined with soy sauce and ginger, contrast beautifully with the seaweed.
This salad is the perfect way to incorporate nutritious seaweed into your diet. Seaweed’s nutritional benefits vary depending on the specific variety, but they are often a good source of fiber, iodine, potassium and magnesium, among others. I try to consume a wide variety of whole foods, so seaweed is a welcome addition.
Seaweed Salad Ingredients
Arame
Arame seaweed, or sea vegetable, is a brown algae. It grows off the shores of the Ise-Shima National Park in Japan, and has been part of Japenese cuisine for centuries. I ordered EDEN brand arame online through Amazon, which seems to be sold out at the moment. Look for it in well-stocked grocery stores or Asian supermarkets.
Cabbage
Crisp strands of cabbage offer lots of colorful texture. I used green and purple varieties to make this recipe as bright as possible for photos, but either option will work well at home.
Bell Pepper
Sweet bell pepper is the perfect addition to this seaweed salad. Choose red, orange or yellow for this salad.
Cilantro and Green Onion
These herbs offer more fresh flavor. If you don’t like cilantro, you can skip it.
Avocado
Creamy avocado is the perfect counterpoint to the crisp textures. Wait to add avocado until you’re ready to serve each bowl.
Sesame Dressing
This homemade sesame dressing brings it all together! It’s made with tamari (soy sauce), toasted sesame oil, and fresh lime juice.
How to Make Seaweed Salad
Seaweed salad is surprisingly easy to make, and you’ll find the full recipe below. Arame requires a 5-to-10-minute soak in cool water. During that time, you can whisk together the dressing and chop the vegetables.
Drain the arame, then squeeze out any excess water. Return it to the bowl, add the prepared vegetables, pour in the full batch of dressing, and stir it all together. How’s that for easy?
Reserve the avocado until just before serving since it browns over time. The recipe keeps well in the refrigerator for up to four days.
Watch How to Make Seaweed Salad
How to Serve Seaweed Salad
This seaweed salad is a fun and nutritious side salad. Serve it with Japanese cuisine and beyond at any time of year.
You can turn this salad into a complete meal by topping it with Crispy Baked Tofu or prepared fish or shrimp, perhaps on a bed of brown rice. You could even skip the sesame dressing and serve it in place of the kale in my Build-Your-Own Buddha Bowls.
Here are a few more complementary serving options:
- Blistered Shishito Peppers
- Colorful Veggie Lettuce Wraps
- Fresh Spring Rolls with Peanut Sauce
- Veggie Sushi Bowls
Leftover cabbage?
This recipe calls for 1 1/2 cups of cabbage, less than one full head. Leftover cabbage will keep well in the refrigerator, wrapped, for up to one week.
Here are a few ways to use the remaining cabbage:
- Extra Vegetable Fried Rice
- Easy Black Bean Tacos or Epic Vegetarian Tacos
- Perfect Roasted Cabbage
- Simple Healthy Slaw
Please let me know how your recipe turns out in the comments! I love hearing from you and hope you enjoy this salad.
PrintSeaweed Salad
- Author: Cookie and Kate
- Prep Time: 25 minutes
- Total Time: 25 minutes
- Yield: 4 servings 1x
- Category: Salad
- Method: By hand
- Cuisine: Japanese-inspired
- Diet: Gluten Free
This seaweed salad recipe is colorful, delicious and boldly flavored with sesame dressing. The arame needs to soak for 5 to 10 minutes before using, so you can prepare the vegetables and dressing during that time. Recipe yields 4 servings (1 ½ cups per serving for 6 cups total).
Ingredients
- 1 ounce arame sea vegetables (about 1 ½ cups dried)
- 1 ½ cups thinly sliced purple or green cabbage, roughly chopped into pieces no longer than 3 inches
- 1 red or orange bell pepper, chopped
- ½ cup thinly sliced green onion, sliced on the diagonal
- ¼ cup finely chopped cilantro
- 1 batch Sesame Dressing
- 1 ripe avocado, diced
Instructions
- Rinse the arame well in a fine sieve, then place it in a generously sized bowl. Fill the bowl with cool water and let it soak for 5 to 10 minutes, until nicely pliable. Drain the arame in the sieve, and gently squeeze out any excess water. Transfer the arame back to your empty bowl, which we will use as a mixing bowl.
- Add the cabbage, bell pepper, green onion and cilantro. Whisk the dressing once more, and pour it all over the salad. Gently toss until the salad is evenly coated in the dressing.
- When it’s time to serve, divide the seaweed into bowls and top with diced avocado. The salad will keep well in the refrigerator, covered, for up to 4 days (add the avocado just before serving).
Julia Mama
I bought some seaweed in Guernsey at the Surf and Turf shop (they didn’t know what kind it was) but I thought I would try your recipe.
I loved the red cabbage, red pepper, cilantro and avocado with it – definitely you need that crunch. Especially as I think I over soaked the seaweed.
When it came to the dressing I found the toasted sesame oil too oily and tried my sisters dressing which won on the dressing front.
2 tbsp rice wine vinegar,
2 teaspoons soy sauce (I used tamari – think preferable)
2 tbsp fish sauce (she suggested bonito dashi, but wasnt available)
finely chopped shallots
To finish it I also added toasted mixed seeds (as didn’t have plain sesame) and I loved your addition of this.
Kate
Hi Julia, thanks for your feedback! If a dressing tastes too oily, it probably needs more acidity so another squeeze of lime juice likely would have helped. If you prefer an oil-free dressing, then mine is not for you!
Valerie Hess
Did you use whole leaf or flaked seaweed?
Kate
Hi Valerie, I used Eden’s arame, which they finely shred before packaging. Hope that helps!