Gado-Gado Recipe | Authentic Indonesian Salad with Spicy Peanut Sauce

Gado-Gado (Indonesian Salad with Peanut Sauce) - Indonesian recipe with sambal
Easy
Main Course
Indonesian

Gado-Gado (Indonesian Salad with Peanut Sauce)

Gado-gado means 'mix-mix', and that's the dish: lightly blanched vegetables, boiled potato, egg, fried tofu and tempeh, tossed or draped in a rich, spicy-sweet peanut dressing and finished with krupuk. It's Jakarta street food, a complete vegetarian meal, and one of Indonesia's national dishes — a salad substantial enough to be dinner.

45mTotal Time
4Servings
EasyLevel

Chef Yossie

Traditional Indonesian Recipe

Make this recipe taste authentic

The dressing's warmth comes from real sambal, not chilli powder. Ours is handmade in Lancashire using Chef Yossie's Indonesian family recipe, and it ships across the UK.

What You'll Need

Hard to find these outside Indonesia? These are the ingredients and tools that make this recipe authentic.

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Interactive Cooking Guide

Master blanching, the peanut dressing, and the mix-mix assembly with step-by-step guidance

45m
4 servings
Easy
Prep Time
25m
Cook Time
20m
Total Time
45m
Step 1 of 6
1
8 min
Easy

Grind the peanuts until mostly smooth, then blend in garlic, sambal, kecap manis, palm sugar, tamarind, salt, and the warm water.

Equipment needed:
Food processor
Chef's Tip:

Leave a little texture in the peanuts — silky-smooth dressing is less interesting to eat.

2
8 min
Easy

Simmer the dressing for 5-8 minutes, stirring, until thick, glossy, and pourable. Taste and balance: sweet (palm sugar), sour (tamarind), spicy (sambal), salty.

Equipment needed:
Small saucepan
Wooden spoon
Chef's Tip:

It thickens as it cools — stop while it still pours like double cream.

Important:

Peanut sauce catches easily; keep the heat gentle and keep stirring.

3
10 min
Easy

Blanch the vegetables separately in salted boiling water — beans 3 minutes, cabbage 2, bean sprouts 30 seconds — refreshing each in cold water.

Equipment needed:
Large saucepan
Colander
Bowl of cold water
Chef's Tip:

Separate batches, always: gado-gado lives and dies on the vegetables keeping their bite.

4
8 min
Easy

Fry the tofu and tempeh in a little oil until golden and crisp outside.

Equipment needed:
Frying pan
Chef's Tip:

Press the tofu dry with kitchen paper first so it crisps instead of spitting.

5
5 min
Easy

Arrange the vegetables, potato, cucumber, tofu, tempeh, and halved eggs on a platter.

Equipment needed:
Large platter
Chef's Tip:

Group ingredients rather than mixing — the pour-over moment is half the pleasure.

6
2 min
Easy

Pour the warm dressing generously over, scatter fried shallots, add krupuk, and toss at the table.

Equipment needed:
Serving spoons
Chef's Tip:

Serve extra dressing in a jug — someone will always want more.

Get the Perfect Sambal for Gado-Gado

This recipe uses our Sambal Oelek. Get the authentic taste Chef Yossie uses in professional kitchens.

Sambal Goreng — Authentic Indonesian Chilli Paste
Available now

Sambal Goreng

Want the sambal used in this recipe? Order our Sambal Goreng — handmade in Lancashire using Chef Yossie's authentic Indonesian family recipe.

(4.8/5 from 89 reviews)
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🛒 Perfect Ingredients for This Recipe

Recipe Match

Sambal Oelek

Available Now

Pure chilli paste that gives the peanut dressing its warmth — add a spoonful to taste. Ships UK-wide.

Rating
4.8
Price
£8.99

Recipe Match

Buy Sambal Online UK

Full Range

Browse the full Spice Island Indonesia sambal range and find the right heat level for your cooking.

Rating
4.8
Price
From £8.99

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A Salad That Became a National Dish

Gado-gado began with the Betawi people of Jakarta and spread until the government named it one of Indonesia's five official national dishes. Street vendors assemble it to order — a handful of this, a handful of that, sauce ladled over, krupuk balanced on top — which is exactly the spirit to cook it in at home: a formula, not a fixed list.

What holds it together is the dressing: roasted peanuts, sambal, sweet soy, palm sugar, and tamarind, simmered until rich and pourable. It's the same family of sauce that crowns satay — proof that in Indonesian cooking, the sauce is never a side note.

How Indonesians Serve It

The Classic Plate

  • • Warm dressing poured over just before eating
  • • Krupuk or emping crackers on top
  • • Fried shallots for crunch and sweetness
  • • Lontong (rice cakes) or steamed rice on the side

Make It a Feast

  • • Add satay skewers for the meat-eaters
  • • Extra sambal stirred into the dressing
  • • A jug of spare dressing at the table
  • • Iced tea — the classic warung pairing