A spicy-sweet snack mix
Haldiram’s Cornflake Mixture
A totally different “trail mix”
Buying Options
$8 from Amazon
This spicy-sweet-and-sour blend of cornflakes, potato sticks, nuts, and raisins had all our testers dipping back in again and again. While one person on our testing panel wasn’t crazy about the dried fruit, others loved the variety of textures and flavors, with one noting, “Some bites are very spicy, others are sweeter and malty. Also, that distinctive funky-savory asafetida flavor comes through, which I love.”
Airy crunch, standout flavors
Mr. Makhana Roasted Makhana Variety Pack
Popped lotus seeds with panache
Buying Options
Light, puffy, and crunchy, these popcorn-y puffed seeds hold their own in the simple Himalayan Salt & Pepper flavor, but they also shine in the more complex Pudina Party, which pairs mint chutney vibes with the tang of pickle chips. That said, our testers all had different favorites (from Cream & Onion to Piri Piri Paradise to Butter Tomato), which means the variety pack is the way to go. These lotus-seed snacks also happen to be gluten-free.
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Spicy, puffy crackers
Fuyishan Spicy Soda Crackers
Flavor-packed crackers
Buying Options
$100 from Weee!
Imagine if saltines and Cheez-Its had a baby, and it got enlarged by Rick Moranis’s machine. Or, think of eating uncooked ramen straight out of the pack, crushed up and sprinkled with the seasoning packet (maybe you actually did that as a kid!), but it’s in cracker form. Or, maybe these are a little like Chicken in a Biskit? Okay, so we couldn’t quite agree on how exactly to describe these bubbly, flame-tinted crackers, but we did all agree that they were surprisingly flavorful and fun to crunch.
Sichuan spiced peanuts
Huang Fei Hong Sichuan Pepper Peanuts
Roasted peanuts with mala heat
Buying Options
$6 from Bokksu Market
After trying these peanuts, we can’t imagine happy hour without them. They’re crunchy, they’re salty, they’re spicy, with a tingle of that numbing Sichuan peppercorn. Set these out as a pre-dinner snack or late at night with your libation of choice—the Chinese lager Tsingtao makes a classic combo—and watch them disappear.
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Fish skins with spice and crunch
The Golden Duck Sichuan Mala Hot Pot Fragrant Mix
Mala-flavored crispy fish skins
Buying Options
$15 from Amazon
Grab your wanderlust, ’cause this bag of snacks is about to take you on a trip. The Sichuan mala flavoring gets your tongue tingling with that characteristic numbing peppercorn. And the crispy fish skins (which gave pork rind flashbacks to one taster who grew up in the South) are accompanied by fried tofu skins and crispy dried mushrooms, in a true cornucopia of crunch. This is extreme snacking at its best, and those of us with tolerance for spice couldn’t get enough.
A lovely pair of spreads: one sweet, one sour
Pika Pika Coconut Spread
Toasty and coconutty, with brown sugar notes
Buying Options
$16 from Pika Pika
Pika Pika Calamansi Marmalade
A super-tart lime marmalade
Buying Options
$16 from Pika Pika
The coconut spread from Pika Pika was the top favorite of all the Southeast Asian–inspired jams we tried. It had a silky, easily spreadable texture and a mild but unmistakable coconut flavor, with buttery notes of brown sugar. We made kaya toast—toasted milk bread sandwiching cold salted butter and a coconut custard jam—and the result was a lovely take on the beloved Singaporean breakfast, though more subtle than the pandan punch of the Moon Man jam that we also tried. And unlike most kaya jams, this spread doesn’t use eggs, so it’s vegan-friendly.
We loved how tart Pika Pika’s calamansi marmalade was, though some of us found the flavor a little too bracing, and the texture a little thin, on its own. But it was a beautiful foil to the coconut spread when we paired them together, and if you include both on a charcuterie board, their contrasting and complementary flavors could make a lot of other foods sing.
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A jam for pandan fans
Moon Man Pandan Kaya Jam
A fluffy, pandan-scented spread
Buying Options
$12 from Umamicart
Unlike the Pika Pika coconut spread, Moon Man’s thicker, custardy pandan kaya jam is redolent with the grassy-herby scent of pandan leaves. It makes a great kaya toast, too, but its texture and sweetness are more dessert-y. One of our testers gushed, “I’m really quite into this! Sweet, slightly grassy, a nice fluffy texture, somehow slightly cooling.” You may find yourself sneaking a spoonful after dinner.
Fly By Jing’s crunchiest condiment
Fly By Jing Chengdu Crunch
A crunchy, spicy flavor bomb
Buying Options
$12 from Amazon
$15 from Fly By Jing
We taste a lot of things in our test kitchen, and no jar has emptied as quickly as this one. Studded with big, crunchy legumes—fava beans, yellow split peas, soy beans, pumpkin seeds, and more—and swimming in a silky, Sichuan pepper-laced chili oil, this condiment can make even the simplest desk lunch feel like a Moment. Several of us have confessed to eating a spoonful or two straight, with zero regrets. We’re just waiting for them to package this in a bigger jar, because the 6-ounce size disappears way too fast.
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Luxe chocolate for boba lovers
Kessho Craft Chocolate Boba Tea
Silky-smooth chocolate with rich tea flavor
Buying Options
$12 from Kessho
We’ve tasted a lot of boba- or tea-flavored snacks in the last couple years—and we’re not mad about that—but they can be hit or miss. This one’s definitely a hit. The tea flavor, pleasantly bitter and earthy, achieves an almost orchestral balance with the smooth, creamy chocolate and deep brown-sugar notes.
Kessho, an Austin, Texas–based chocolate company whose founder was born in Beijing and trained in Tokyo, also makes a great black sesame cookie that ships beautifully. But their boba tea chocolate is what I wake up thinking about. I’d like to order 10 of these so I can make someone’s day each time I go hang out at a girlfriend’s house or meet another family at the playground, but I know I’ll end up eating them all myself.
Sophisticated sodas
Refreshing yuzu, herby shiso
Buying Options
$3 from Umamicart
Moshi Sparkling Oolong Tea Passion Fruit
Deep tea flavor with zing
Buying Options
$10 from Umamicart
Yuzu is really having its moment (and it’s about time!). But especially in bottled drinks, it doesn’t always taste fresh or real—leaving you with a musty aftertaste. That’s why we were all impressed when we took our first sips of . The citrusy oils of the yuzu, the savory grassiness of the shiso, and the sweetness of the apple all came together in a refreshing, sophisticated soda. Its ruby-fuschia color is gorgeous to boot.
We also loved Moshi’s Sparkling Oolong Tea Passion Fruit flavor, with the bitter tea playing against the sweet-tart fruit. The Oolong with Lychee soda was delicious, too, just not as deeply complex. Many of Moshi’s simpler flavors that we tried (Yuzu and White Peach, Matcha, Matcha and Strawberry) were fun but a little more candy-like, and we wished that we could dial back their sweetness just a bit.
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On-the-go sake
Miyozakura Panda Junmai Sake Cup
A mild, easy-sipping cup sake
Buying Options
Senior staff writer Lesley Stockton has been extolling single-serve sake for months now, so we took her up on sampling a couple for this guide. We found the Miyozakura Panda Junmai Sake Cup to be an easy crowd favorite. This mild, smooth rice wine—with a hint of floral fruit and a clean finish—would go great with lunch and some cloud watching on a patch of grass or at the beach. But if you like a more assertive sake, as Lesley does, go for the Aoki Shuzo Yuki Otoko “Yeti” Cup Junmai Sake.
Cooling lychee jellies
Funny Hippo ABC Lychee Natural Fruit Bites
A beloved childhood treat
Buying Options
$17 from Amazon
Stash these in the fridge, and Future You will thank you while slurping up a cooling, lychee-flavored treat on a stifling day. Better yet, stick them in the freezer and tote them with you—on a picnic, on the bus, anywhere you could use a refreshing bite. This company’s jellies are especially squishy and juicy, and they’re not too sweet.
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Elegant white chocolate cookies
Ishiya Shiroi Koibito White Chocolate Cookies
Delicately crisp and sweet
Buying Options
$50 from EveryMarket
These white chocolate cookies from Japan are somehow both delicate and shatteringly crisp, with just enough mild sweetness to pair beautifully with a freshly steeped oolong or genmaicha. You can also purchase these in combination with a milk chocolate flavor, which some of our tasters preferred. (Imagine if Pepperidge Farm Milano cookies studied abroad at a French finishing school in Hokkaido.) Show up with these for a dinner party, and you’ll be the toast of the table.
A creamy, chewy treat
White Rabbit Creamy Candy
A classic milk candy
Buying Options
$24 from Amazon
This creamy, milk-flavored chewy candy wrapped in edible rice paper is a staple of many Asian immigrant childhoods. White Rabbit candies are soft and chewy when fresh, but many of us know that the stale, stick-to-your-teeth versions that come out of Grandma’s purse can be just as satisfying.
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Squishy, fruity candies
Hi-Chew
A chewy fruit candy
Buying Options
$14 from Amazon
$7 from Target
Hi-Chew candies are fruity Japanese sweets that taste especially juicy and have a slightly bouncy texture. The original flavors like mango, grape, and green apple can do no wrong, and they’re known for fruity verisimilitude—more fresh, juicy flavor and less of the candy-like vibe of Starburst.
But we love two standout packs the most: Hi-Chew Fantasy Mix, with its tangy tropical vibes and fun futuristic colors, and Hi-Chew Infrusions, whose “pockets of flavor” (visible bits of concentrated fruit) mob your tastebuds with the intense tartness of blood orange or the heady fragrance of peach.
Hyper-layered chips
Orion Turtle Chips Seaweed Flavor
Flaky, layered corn chips
Buying Options
$5 from Yami
Orion Turtle Chips Choco Churros Flavor
Flaky, layered corn chips
Buying Options
$4 from Yami
Bugles meet croissants in these layered chips that are both light as air and crispy as all get-out. Snack company Orion put a lot of R & D into this texture (seriously, it has a patent), and each turtle-shell-shaped piece is truly an architectural marvel. There’s something to love about all of the flavors, but many of us agreed that the Seaweed Flavor, whose briny notes still let the corn chip’s natural sweetness come through, had the most nuance and would be the easiest to eat in any mood.
That said, the Choco Churros Flavor appealed to those of us with a sweet tooth, with actual chocolate thinly coating the ridges of the shells. The Sweet Corn Flavor, while polarizing for being so intensely corn chowder–esque, is the signature flavor, and it’s unique enough to be worth experiencing at least once, if only for the marvel of taste engineering that it is.
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Velvety salted egg potato chips
Irvins Salted Egg Potato Chips
Addictive chips coated with eggy seasoning
Buying Options
$11 from Weee!
May be out of stock
If you have yet to try the phenomenon of salted egg snacks coming out of Singapore, this is a good place to start. The humble potato chip is coated with a heavy—and I mean heavy—dusting of powdered salted cured egg yolk and flavored with curry leaf and a slight hint of chili pepper. They’re velvety, salty, and unctuous, with a soft crunch. Even as we were deciding how we felt about these, we found ourselves reaching for another and another.
Classic Bokksu snack box
Bokksu Snack Box: Seasons of Japan
A box of textural delights
Buying Options
$65 from Bokksu
code WIRECUTTER15 for $15 off
We call the jam-packed Bokksu Snack Box: Seasons of Japan “a treasure chest of treats” in our gift-basket guide. Some highlights include soybean-powder-dusted rice crackers, citrusy battered seaweed snacks, and “surreal” white-chocolate-injected freeze-dried strawberries. The sheer range of flavors and textures is likely to expand your notion of what a snack can be. Although we think this box is a perfect gift, it’s also a great way to treat yourself.
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Spicy, beefy ramen
NongShim Shin Black Noodle Soup
Spicy, complex noodles
Buying Options
$27 from Amazon(pack of 10)
One of our favorite instant noodles is NongShim Shin Black Noodle Soup. Wirecutter’s Anna Perling noted: “It has a winning combination of a complex, spicy broth, substantial dehydrated vegetables, and toothsome noodles.” But honestly, you can’t go wrong with any NongShim noodle—we also love the combo of its Chapagetti and Neoguri flavors, as made famous by Bong Joon Ho’s Oscar-winning movie Parasite.
A seafood lover’s ramen
Prima Taste Singapore Laksa La Mian
Upgrade-pick ramen
Buying Options
$21 from Amazon(pack of six)
For seafood lovers, we also adore Prima Taste Singapore Laksa La Mian, which uses air-dried instead of fried noodles, for a bowl that’s closer to what you’d get at a Singapore hawker stand. The noodles take seven full minutes to boil, so they’re a little less “instant,” but dressed up with some hearty toppings, the rich, spicy coconut-milk and shrimp-paste curry broth will take you far, far away from a dorm room or a sad desk lunch.
This article was edited by Alexander Aciman and Marguerite Preston.
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