Taiwanese Cold Noodles in Japan: Sesame Sauce with Nerigoma, Peanut Butter and Black Vinegar

A practical Taiwanese cold noodle recipe for Japan, using white nerigoma, unsweetened peanut butter and Japanese black vinegar to recreate the thick, garlicky sesame sauce.

Taiwanese cold noodles sound simple until you try to shop for the sauce in Japan. Sesame paste, peanut butter and black vinegar all have nearby Japanese options, but none of them behave exactly like the Taiwanese ingredients on their own.

The most reliable Japan version starts with three things: 白ねりごま or 練りごま for sesame body, unsweetened peanut butter for the familiar Taiwanese thickness, and 黒酢 for the black-vinegar acidity. Once those are balanced with soy sauce, sugar, garlic and cold water, the sauce becomes much closer to the cold noodles from a Taiwanese breakfast shop or convenience store.

This is not a mechanical copy of Japanese gomadare. It is a practical Taiwanese sesame sauce built from ingredients you can actually buy in Japan.

Quick answer: the best Japan substitute combination

For Taiwanese cold noodle sesame sauce in Japan, I would start with this combination:

  • White nerigoma / nerigoma (白ねりごま/練りごま): the main sesame body and thickness.
  • Unsweetened peanut butter: the small peanut note that makes the sauce feel more Taiwanese.
  • Japanese black vinegar (黒酢): the closest easy substitute for Taiwanese black vinegar in this sauce.
  • Soy sauce, sugar, garlic and cold water: the seasoning and texture controls.

If you find YOUKI sesame paste (芝麻醤/チーマージャン), you can use it instead of plain nerigoma. If you are shopping only at a normal Japanese supermarket, white nerigoma is enough to make a good version.

If you are deciding which vinegar to keep at home for Taiwanese cooking, see the English guide to choosing vinegar substitutes in Japan.

Ingredients you can buy in Japan

Taiwanese ingredientJapan substituteHow to use it
Sesame pasteWhite nerigoma / nerigomaBest everyday choice. It gives body, but you need to season it yourself.
Sesame pasteYOUKI 芝麻醤/チーマージャンClosest Chinese-style option when available.
Peanut aromaUnsweetened peanut butter, or KALDI Skippy ChunkAdds the familiar Taiwanese thickness. Reduce sugar if the peanut butter is already sweet.
Taiwanese black vinegarJapanese 黒酢Good practical substitute; the aroma is cleaner and less heavy than Taiwanese black vinegar.
Black vinegar backupRice vinegar plus a little soy sauce and sugarEmergency option only. Add gradually because the acidity can feel sharper.
Garlic pasteFresh garlic or にんにくチューブFresh grated garlic tastes closest; tube garlic is convenient but softer.

I often use KALDI Skippy Chunk peanut butter for this. The tiny peanut bits actually help the sauce feel closer to Taiwanese sesame sauce. Because it is not a completely neutral peanut paste, start with less sugar and adjust at the end.

Taiwanese cold noodle sauce ratio

This ratio makes enough sauce for about 2 servings of cold noodles.

IngredientAmountPurpose
White nerigoma / nerigoma2 tbspMain sesame aroma and body.
Unsweetened peanut butter1 tbspPeanut thickness and Taiwanese-style roundness.
Soy sauce1.5 tbspSalt and savory depth.
Black vinegar (黒酢)1 tbspAcidity and black-vinegar finish.
Sugar1 to 1.5 tspBalances garlic and vinegar.
Grated garlic1 tspThe key Taiwanese cold noodle aroma.
Sesame oil0.5 tspJust enough for fragrance.
Cold drinking water3 to 5 tbspAdd gradually until the sauce flows.

Mixing order matters. Stir nerigoma and peanut butter into a thick paste first. Add soy sauce, black vinegar, sugar and garlic, then loosen with cold water in several additions. The sauce emulsifies better and is less likely to split.

How to adjust the flavor

If it tastes too much like Japanese gomadare

Add more nerigoma, a little grated garlic, soy sauce and black vinegar. Japanese gomadare or sesame dressing is often sweeter, thinner and more dressing-like, so it needs more sesame body and sharper seasoning.

If the sauce tastes too heavy

Add black vinegar and cold water, not more soy sauce. Soy sauce only makes the sauce saltier; acidity is what makes sesame sauce feel lighter on cold noodles.

If you want a Taiwanese breakfast-shop style

Increase the garlic slightly and keep the vinegar present. Breakfast-shop cold noodle sauce is not only sesame aroma; it also has garlic, acidity and a small amount of sweetness.

If you want a FamilyMart-style cold noodle sauce

Increase peanut butter and sugar slightly, and reduce the garlic. Taiwanese convenience-store cold noodles usually taste smoother, sweeter and less garlicky than a breakfast-shop version.

Which noodles to buy in Japan

Taiwanese cold noodles usually use cooked yellow noodles or cold-noodle noodles with a little springiness. In Japan, choose by availability:

  1. Fresh Chinese noodles / 生中華麺: best everyday choice after cooking and rinsing.
  2. Hiyashi chuka noodles / 冷やし中華用の麺: easy to buy and already intended for chilled noodles.
  3. Yakisoba noodles / 焼きそば麺: usable if you loosen them quickly with hot water, rinse and chill.
  4. Thin udon or Inaniwa udon: not the same texture, but convenient for a cold mixed noodle meal.

I would not use somen as the main version. It is very thin, absorbs sauce quickly and can become pasty, so the result feels less like Taiwanese cold noodles.

Recipe card: Taiwanese cold noodles

The recipe card below keeps the sauce practical for Japan: build a thick sesame-peanut paste, loosen it slowly, then spoon it over cold rinsed noodles and cucumber.

Taiwanese cold noodles sesame sauce made with nerigoma, peanut butter and black vinegar

Taiwanese Cold Noodles with Sesame Peanut Sauce

Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 5 minutes
Total Time 15 minutes
Servings: 2 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Taiwanese

Ingredients
  

Ingredients, 2 servings
  • 2 servings fresh Chinese noodles or hiyashi chuka noodles cook, rinse under cold water and drain well
  • 1 Japanese cucumber julienned
  • 2 tbsp white nerigoma or nerigoma (白ねりごま/練りごま) replaces Taiwanese sesame paste
  • 1 tbsp unsweetened peanut butter KALDI Skippy Chunk works too; reduce sugar if it tastes sweet
  • 1.5 tbsp soy sauce
  • 1 tbsp Japanese black vinegar (黒酢) stands in for Taiwanese black vinegar
  • 1 to 1.5 tsp sugar adjust to taste
  • 1 tsp grated garlic fresh garlic tastes closest
  • 0.5 tsp sesame oil plus a little extra for the noodles if needed
  • 3 to 5 tbsp cold drinking water add gradually to loosen the sauce
  • a little chili oil optional

Method
 

Method
  1. Cook the noodles, rinse them immediately under cold water to wash away surface starch, drain well, and toss with a tiny amount of sesame oil if they seem sticky.
  2. In a bowl, mix the nerigoma and peanut butter until smooth before adding the liquids.
  3. Add soy sauce, black vinegar, sugar, grated garlic and sesame oil. Stir into a thick paste.
  4. Add cold water little by little, stirring until the sauce emulsifies each time. Stop when it flows but still coats the noodles.
  5. Place the cold noodles in bowls, add cucumber, spoon over the sesame sauce, and finish with chili oil if you like a little heat.

Notes

  • For a breakfast-shop style sauce, add a little more garlic and black vinegar.
  • For a convenience-store style sauce, increase the peanut butter and sugar slightly, and keep the garlic softer.
  • Always make a thick paste first, then dilute with cold water. This keeps the sauce from separating.
  • If using KALDI Skippy Chunk peanut butter, start with less sugar because the peanut butter may already taste slightly sweet.

FAQ

Related reading: Cold noodles depend a lot on cucumber texture. You may also want the guide to choosing and preparing Japanese cucumbers, or a simple Taiwanese cucumber salad for the side.

Related reading: If you are adjusting sweetness between Taiwanese and Japanese ingredients, see the Japan and Taiwan sugar comparison guide.

What can I use instead of Taiwanese sesame paste in Japan?

White nerigoma or plain nerigoma is the easiest substitute. If you can find YOUKI sesame paste, that is also close. To make the sauce feel more like Taiwanese cold noodles, add a little unsweetened peanut butter for body and aroma.

How do you make Taiwanese cold noodle sesame sauce?

Mix nerigoma and peanut butter into a paste first, then add soy sauce, black vinegar, sugar, garlic and sesame oil. Add cold water gradually until the sauce flows but still coats the noodles.

What noodles should I buy in Japan for Taiwanese cold noodles?

Fresh Chinese noodles or hiyashi chuka noodles are the closest easy options. Yakisoba noodles can work in a pinch if you loosen them with hot water, rinse, chill and drain them well.

How do I make it taste closer to Taiwanese convenience-store cold noodles?

Increase the peanut butter and sugar slightly, and reduce the raw garlic. Convenience-store style sesame sauce is usually smoother, sweeter and less sharp than a breakfast-shop version.

Why not just use Japanese gomadare?

Japanese gomadare is often sweeter, thinner and more dressing-like. Taiwanese cold noodle sauce needs stronger sesame body, garlic, soy sauce and vinegar. If you start with gomadare, reinforce it with nerigoma, garlic, soy sauce and black vinegar.

What is a reliable sesame sauce ratio for two servings?

Use 2 tablespoons nerigoma, 1 tablespoon peanut butter, 1.5 tablespoons soy sauce, 1 tablespoon black vinegar, 1 teaspoon sugar, 1 teaspoon garlic and 3 to 5 tablespoons cold water. Adjust garlic, sugar and vinegar depending on the style you like.

What is the most important step for Taiwanese cold noodles?

Rinse the cooked noodles under cold water, remove surface starch, drain them well, and keep the sauce emulsified by adding cold water gradually. This keeps the noodles refreshing instead of sticky.

If you remember only one rule, do not use Japanese gomadare as the finished sauce. Treat nerigoma as the sesame base, peanut butter as the Taiwanese-style body, and black vinegar as the acidity. That is the balance that makes a Japan-made bowl of cold noodles taste familiar.

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