Get this recipe sent to your inbox, plus
new home-style recipes from An Amateur Cook every week.
So here’s how this peanut sauce recipe happened.
I was standing in my kitchen staring at a pack of spring roll wrappers like they personally offended me. I had veggies. I had peanut butter. I had absolutely no plan. Classic Tuesday.
I didn’t grow up making peanut sauce. Honestly, I thought it came from a mysterious bottle labeled “Thai Something” in the grocery store. But that night I wanted something creamy and salty and a little spicy. Comfort food, but the kind that doesn’t require a culinary degree.
Also, a small confession. The first time I made this, I forgot to warm the coconut milk. I just dumped it in cold and wondered why everything looked slightly confused. It still tasted good. It just looked like it needed a minute to emotionally process what was happening.
That’s kind of how this recipe became mine. Not perfect. Not fancy. Just me whisking peanut butter in a bowl and thinking, “Yeah, this’ll probably work.”
And it did.
Table of Contents
Why I Keep Making This Dish (The Real Reasons)
Hard to Mess Up: I’ve eyeballed measurements. I’ve added too much lime. I’ve forgotten the garnish. It still tastes good every time.
Fast Comfort: When I want something that feels like I tried, but I didn’t actually try that hard, this is it.
Looks Impressive: Put it in a bowl with chopped peanuts on top and suddenly people think you know things.
Pantry Friendly: Most of this lives in my kitchen already. Peanut butter basically has permanent residency.
Adjustable Mood Food: Sweet? Spicy? Extra salty? This sauce listens to your emotional needs.
No Oven Required: Which is great because I forget to preheat it about 60 percent of the time.
It Makes Veggies Exciting: Carrots become vehicles. Cabbage becomes interesting. That’s powerful.
How do I Actually Make It?
Here’s what goes into my peanut sauce:
Ingredients
¾ cup smooth natural peanut butter
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 tablespoons brown sugar
1 tablespoon fish sauce
2 teaspoons soy sauce
2 teaspoons toasted sesame oil
Juice from half a lime
1 teaspoon Sriracha, or more if I’m feeling bold
One 5.6-ounce can of coconut milk
Chopped red bell pepper, cilantro, and peanuts for topping
Equipment
Mixing bowl
Whisk
Small saucepan
Knife and chopping board
Serving bowl
Instructions
Prepare the Sauce Base
Add peanut butter to a mixing bowl.
Add minced garlic.
Add brown sugar.
Add fish sauce.
Add soy sauce.
Add toasted sesame oil.
Whisk until well combined.
Add lime juice.
Add Sriracha (adjust to taste).
Whisk until smooth.
Heat the Coconut Milk
Pour coconut milk into a small saucepan.
Heat over medium heat.
Bring to a gentle simmer (do not boil).
Combine and Finish
Carefully pour hot coconut milk over peanut butter mixture.
Whisk until smooth and creamy.
Transfer sauce to a serving bowl.
Garnish with chopped red bell pepper.
Garnish with chopped fresh cilantro.
Sprinkle chopped peanuts on top.
Serve warm or at room temperature with spring rolls.
Tips I Learned the Hard Way!
Warm the Coconut Milk: Cold coconut milk makes everything stiff and weird. Heat it gently. Your whisk will thank you.
Taste Before Adjusting: The fish sauce is salty. The peanut butter might be salty. Don’t panic and over-correct before tasting.
Go Easy on Garlic: I once added four cloves. I was basically breathing fire.
Use Natural Peanut Butter: The super sweet kind changes the vibe. Not wrong. Just different.
Add Heat Slowly: Sriracha gets bold fast. You can always add more. You cannot subtract spice.
Whisk Like You Mean It: A quick, lazy stir won’t cut it. Commit to the whisk.
Let It Sit a Minute: After mixing, the flavors calm down and become friends.
Thin It Slowly: If it’s too thick, add warm water a tablespoon at a time. Not half a cup as I did once.
Peanut Sauce Recipe
Creamy, savory peanut sauce with coconut milk, garlic, lime, and a hint of spice for dipping spring rolls.
Leave a Reply