How to Stir-Fry Veggies, Tofu, and More

Stir-frying is a cooking technique that hails from China and is popular in many Asian cuisines. It calls for quickly cooking small pieces of food in a wok (or wide pan) over high heat. Simple, right? But never boring. The stir-fry method intensifies the taste of foods, enhances their texture, and offers endless possibilities when it comes to flavor combinations. Total cooking time for most stir-fries clocks in under 15 minutes, which means you can get a colorful, flavorful meal on the table in under half an hour. 

Here’s everything you need to know to master stir-frying in your own kitchen, including how to cook a stir-fry without oil and how to whip up an all-purpose sauce that can transform any veggie combo (including leftovers) into a tasty stir-fry.

Stir-Frying Without Oil

The healthiest oil to use for a stir-fry? None! Traditional stir-fries are cooked in a small amount of oil, but you can easily use water or broth instead. Water can also be used to safely preheat a nonstick wok or pan—see below for instructions

Secrets to Stir-Fry Success

These easy guidelines ensure your stir-fries turn out perfect every time. 

Cut ingredients into uniform pieces.

Evenly sized equals evenly cooked when it comes to stir-frying. For best results, chop or slice ingredients into 1-inch pieces before you start to cook. The 1-inch size provides enough surface area to sear the foods but still allows them to cook through relatively quickly. 

Use a wok or a wide pan.

“Stir-frying” is something of a misnomer. Rather than stirred, stir-fried foods should be tossed and turned, shaken and flipped—and that requires space. Woks, with their wide mouths, are tailor-made for tossing and turning, but a large (12-inch) skillet can also do the job. 

Don’t overcrowd the pan.

Regardless of the type or size of the pan, be sure not to overcrowd it. You want all the ingredients to have plenty of room to move around and come into contact with the hot surface. 

Preheat the pan with water. 

High heat is key to stir-frying because it sears foods, caramelizes their natural sugars, and seals in moisture. Because nonstick cookware should not be heated when empty, we recommend preheating the wok or skillet with a little water. Simply add 2 tablespoons of water or broth to the cold pan, then heat over high heat until almost all of the liquid has evaporated. (This will take about 2 minutes.) Once the pan is good and hot, you can proceed as directed in your chosen recipe. 

Heat the cooking liquid, too. 

Oil-free stir-frying calls for small amounts of water or broth to keep foods from sticking, but each addition of liquid can cool down cooking temperatures. Using hot water or broth (heated in the microwave or in a small saucepan on the stove) helps maintain high heat in the pan so foods will sizzle, not simmer.

Step-by-Step Instructions for Stir-Frying

The difference between a so-so stir-fry and a spectacular one is not which ingredients you use—anything goes in a stir-fry—but when they are added. Here’s a step-by-step timeline for when to add what.

1. Aromatics

Ginger, garlic, onions, shallots, bell peppers, and hot chiles (if using) are the first ingredients that should go into a stir-fry. Stir-frying time: These get cooked 2 to 3 minutes with a little water or broth to soften them and mellow their pungency.

2. Longer-Cooking Vegetables 

Carrots, cauliflower, winter squash, turnips, red or white cabbage and mushrooms all have longer cooking times and should be added to a stir-fry right after the aromatics. One easy way to think of them is as “anything that’s not green”—though there are a few exceptions to that rule, like corn and summer squash. Stir-frying time: 6 to 10 minutes total. (If you’re planning to add quick-cooking vegetables next, add them after them after your longer-cooking veggies have been in the pan for 4 to 5 minutes.)

3. Quick-Cooking Vegetables 

Broccoli, bok choy, Napa cabbage, zucchini, and all types of peas (garden, snow, sugar snap) get added next, then stir-fried until crisp-tender. Stir-frying time: 3 to 4 minutes.

4. Sauce 

Stir-fries get their glistening, moist goodness from a savory sauce that’s swirled in at the end of the recipe cooking time. Stir-frying time: 1 to 2 minutes.

5. Noodles or Grains 

When a recipe calls for adding a precooked starch directly to the stir-fry, it should go in last and stir-fried until just heated through.

6. Garnishes 

Chopped scallions (aka green onions), fresh herbs, chopped peanuts, sesame seeds, and other garnishes go in at the last minute so they retain their fragrance, color, and crunch. 

Stir-Frying Tofu

Tender, creamy tofu requires its own stir-fry session to remain intact and crisp up before it’s added to the other ingredients. Stir-fry extra-firm tofu cubes with a little broth or water over high heat 3 to 5 minutes or until browned on most sides; then set aside. You can also bake the tofu cubes in the oven or crisp them in an air fryer

Add the precooked tofu cubes to the stir-fry just after the sauce; then cook until heated through. 

All-Purpose Stir-Fry Sauce

This basic recipe makes enough for 4 cups of ingredients and can be used with any vegetable stir-fry combination. Feel free to doctor it up with ½ teaspoon five-spice powder or red pepper flakes or a dash of hot sauce for even more flavor. 

Ingredients

1 tablespoon low-sodium soy sauce
2 teaspoons arrowroot powder
1 teaspoon rice vinegar or distilled vinegar
1 teaspoon pure maple syrup

Instructions

Stir together all ingredients and ¾ cup water or vegetable broth. Use immediately. 

Easy Stir-fry Recipes to Try

This collection showcases just a few of the ways you can whip up stir-fry meals. Give them a try—then feel free to come up with your own combinations. 

For more guidance in healthy cooking, check out Forks Meal Planner, FOK’s easy weekly meal-planning tool to keep you on a plant-based path. To learn more about a whole-food, plant-based diet, visit our Plant-Based Primer.

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About the Author

Headshot of Mary Margaret Chappell

About the Author

Mary Margaret Chappell

When Mary Margaret Chappell first started out in the plant-based food world as a writer, editor, and recipe developer, she was a bacon-loving former pastry chef who didn’t think she could ever cook without butter. Fourteen years, four cookbooks, dozens of cooking classes, and hundreds of recipes later, her favorite thing in the world is sharing the tips, techniques, and recipes that show just how easy and delicious whole-food, plant-based cooking can be. The former food editor of Vegetarian Times magazine has done away with her dependency on butter and is honing her skills at baking with natural sweeteners. Chappell lives in France, where plant-based eating can often be a challenge, but the fruits, vegetables, grains, and legumes available are simply amazing. Find her on Instagram and Facebook.
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