When takeout means a long drive before dinner even starts, staying home starts to look a lot better. These 17 Asian recipes cover the dishes people usually leave the house for: noodles, rice bowls, curry, fried snacks, soup, and quick sides that help build a full plate. The mix includes fast weeknight options, restaurant-style projects, and simple add-ons that turn one main into a full dinner. It gives Dad plenty of reasons to keep the car keys on the counter.

Thai Red Curry Paste

Starting with a 10-minute base, Thai Red Curry Paste brings dried red chilies, lemongrass, cilantro, shallots, lemon zest, and cumin seeds into one blender-ready sauce. The recipe makes 6 servings, which gives you enough to build curries, noodle soups, or stir-fries without opening a jar. It fits the takeout-at-home angle because the flavor starts before the main dish even hits the pot. Keep it ready for Thai curry nights or quick marinades.
Get the Recipe: Thai Red Curry Paste
Chicken Chow Mein

Ready in 30 minutes, Chicken Chow Mein uses chicken thighs, chow mein noodles, cabbage, carrot, red bell pepper, green onions, garlic, and a sauce built with oyster sauce, soy sauce, sesame oil, chicken broth, cornstarch, and brown sugar. The noodle-and-sauce combo gives the same dinner payoff Dad usually drives out for, only without waiting on a pickup order. Serve it straight from the pan when everyone wants a full noodle dinner fast.
Get the Recipe: Chicken Chow Mein
California Roll Sushi Bowl

Built in 15 minutes for 4 servings, California Roll Sushi Bowl layers cooked sushi rice with imitation crab, avocado, cucumber, carrot, crumbled nori, black sesame seeds, and spicy mayo. It skips the rolling mat while keeping the pieces people expect from a California roll. That makes it a smart takeout swap for sushi nights when delivery prices start acting brave. Serve it for quick lunches, weeknight bowls, or meal prep with the sauce packed separately.
Get the Recipe: California Roll Sushi Bowl
Black Bean Noodles

With a 35-minute total time and 3 servings, Black Bean Noodles coats fresh udon noodles in a glossy sauce made with Korean black bean paste, pork belly, sesame oil, cabbage, onions, garlic, ginger, soy sauce, and oyster sauce. The cucumber and scallion garnish gives the rich noodles a fresh finish. It fits the takeout theme because it brings a Korean-Chinese noodle shop style to a weeknight pot. Serve it fresh while the sauce still clings to the noodles.
Get the Recipe: Black Bean Noodles
Chicken Ramen

Finished in 30 minutes for 4 servings, Chicken Ramen builds a fuller bowl with ground chicken, instant ramen noodles, chicken stock, tahini, soy sauce, Sriracha, brown sugar, chard, green onions, sesame seeds, and boiled eggs. It turns basic noodles into a dinner Dad can eat at home without missing the ramen shop run. The broth and toppings make it work as a main dish. Serve it right away so the noodles stay springy.
Get the Recipe: Chicken Ramen
Chinese Salt & Pepper Shrimp

A 35-minute recipe for 4 servings, Chinese Salt & Pepper Shrimp uses large shrimp, Thai chili peppers, fish sauce, garlic, ginger, flour, cornstarch, scallions, peppercorns, coarse salt, and cilantro. The shrimp get coated, fried, and tossed with aromatics for the crisp bite people usually order as an appetizer or main. It fits the stay-home takeout plan because the ingredient list is short, but the finish feels restaurant-style. Serve it hot with rice or noodles.
Get the Recipe: Chinese Salt & Pepper Shrimp
Bibimbap

Ready in 30 minutes for 2 servings, Bibimbap builds a Korean rice bowl with cooked white rice, beef tenderloin, eggs, carrot, cucumber, sprouts, green onions, sesame seeds, cilantro, and gochujang sauce. The sauce uses rice vinegar, soy sauce, sugar, sesame oil, and garlic, so every bowl gets heat and depth. It works for takeout cravings because each person can mix the bowl at the table. Serve with extra sauce nearby for anyone who wants more kick.
Get the Recipe: Bibimbap
Shrimp Tempura

In 25 minutes for 4 servings, Shrimp Tempura pairs medium shrimp with a light batter made from flour, cornstarch, iced water, egg whites, and salt. The dipping sauce uses water, soy sauce, mirin, and sugar, giving the fried shrimp a classic sidekick without needing a restaurant order. It fits the title because it turns a special takeout item into a short home project. Serve it immediately with rice, miso soup, or cucumber salad.
Get the Recipe: Shrimp Tempura
Elevated Ramen Noodles

A 25-minute recipe for 2 servings, Elevated Ramen Noodles upgrades instant ramen with eggs, sesame oil, garlic, ginger, soy sauce, chicken broth, baby bok choy, carrot, black sesame seeds, and green onions. It keeps the low-cost noodle base but adds enough broth, vegetables, and toppings to feel like dinner. That makes it an easy win when Dad wants takeout but the pantry can handle the job. Serve it hot, with the noodles still firm.
Get the Recipe: Elevated Ramen Noodles
Korean Corn Dogs

Made in 40 minutes for 16 servings, Korean Corn Dogs coat hot dogs in a yeasted flour batter, roll them in panko breadcrumbs, and fry them until crisp. The recipe uses skewers, oil, sugar for dusting, ketchup, and mustard for serving. It brings street-food energy to the kitchen without needing a drive across town. Serve them right after frying for snacks, movie night, or a family dinner side that gets people hovering near the counter.
Get the Recipe: Korean Corn Dogs
Thai Peanut Curry (Better Than Take-Out!)

Built for 6 servings in 45 minutes, Thai Peanut Curry simmers red curry paste, peanuts, red bell pepper, sweet potato, carrots, vegetable broth, kale, coconut milk, garlic, ginger, and coconut oil. The curry covers the saucy takeout craving while still giving the table plenty of vegetables. It fits the no-drive dinner plan because it can anchor the meal with rice on the side. Serve it with herbs and a squeeze of lime if you want a brighter finish.
Get the Recipe: Thai Peanut Curry (Better Than Take-Out!)
Vegetable Stir Fry

In 27 minutes for 4 servings, Vegetable Stir Fry cooks broccolini, red bell pepper, green bell pepper, yellow bell pepper, mushrooms, green onion, and sesame seeds in a sauce made with soy sauce, rice vinegar, honey or maple syrup, sesame oil, and cornstarch. The high-heat cooking keeps the vegetables crisp instead of limp. It fits the takeout theme as a fast main or side for rice and noodles. Serve it right from the wok before the sauce thickens too much.
Get the Recipe: Vegetable Stir Fry
Egg Fried Rice

Ready in 25 minutes for 4 servings, Egg Fried Rice uses jasmine rice, eggs, vegetable oil, green onions, soy sauce, and sesame oil. It turns basic pantry ingredients into the kind of side that can carry a whole plate when paired with shrimp, curry, egg rolls, or stir-fry. That makes it a practical takeout replacement when everyone wants rice but no one wants another delivery fee. Serve with chili crisp or extra soy sauce at the table.
Get the Recipe: Egg Fried Rice
Miso Soup

A 25-minute soup for 4 servings, Miso Soup combines dashi, nori, red miso paste, green chard, green onions, and firm tofu. It gives the table a light, savory starter that pairs well with tempura, sushi bowls, rice, or noodles. That matters for a takeout-style meal because a small bowl of soup can make dinner feel complete without much extra work. Serve it warm, but avoid boiling after the miso goes in.
Get the Recipe: Miso Soup
Egg Roll

Finished in 30 minutes for 12 servings, Egg Roll wraps ground pork, grated ginger, garlic powder, soy sauce, green onions, and coleslaw mix inside egg roll wrappers before frying. The simple flour-and-water paste seals the rolls, while hot oil gives them the thicker crunch people expect from takeout boxes. It fits the title because it handles the appetizer craving at home. Serve warm with sweet and sour sauce, soy sauce, or duck sauce.
Get the Recipe: Egg Roll
Thai Jasmine Rice

With an 18-minute total time and 2 servings, Thai Jasmine Rice keeps the ingredient list to jasmine rice and water, then uses rinsing and covered cooking to keep the grains separate. It may be simple, but it is the side that makes curry, bulgogi, stir-fry, and shrimp feel like a full plate. Dad does not need takeout rice when this can run beside the main. Serve warm with saucy dishes that need a base.
Get the Recipe: Thai Jasmine Rice
Beef Bulgogi

After 30 minutes of marinating, Beef Bulgogi finishes in 1 hour and 10 minutes total for 4 servings using thinly sliced beef sirloin or ribeye, soy sauce, brown sugar, garlic, onion, sesame oil, green onions, and sesame seeds. The quick sear gives the beef caramelized edges and a sweet-savory glaze. It fits the takeout swap because it brings Korean barbecue flavor home. Serve it with steamed rice and lettuce leaves for bowls or wraps.
Get the Recipe: Beef Bulgogi