Kimchi Tuna Salad
Updated May 7, 2021

- Total Time
- 10 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1(16-ounce) jar cabbage kimchi, including juice
- 2tablespoons unseasoned rice wine vinegar, plus more to taste (or lemon or lime juice or 1 tablespoon fish sauce)
- 3teaspoons toasted sesame oil, plus more to taste
- 10 to 12ounces canned tuna (preferably oil-packed), drained
- 6celery stalks, thinly sliced crosswise (about 2 cups)
- 1(2-inch) piece fresh ginger, peeled and thinly sliced into less than ¼-inch-thick matchsticks
- Mayonnaise (optional)
- Red-pepper flakes, gochugaru or sambal oelek (optional)
- 1tablespoon toasted sesame seeds or furikake (optional)
Preparation
- Step 1
Place a colander in a medium bowl and drain the kimchi. Coarsely chop the kimchi; you should have about 2 cups.
- Step 2
To the medium bowl with the kimchi juice, add the rice wine vinegar and sesame oil; stir to combine. Stir in the tuna and celery, breaking up the tuna into large chunks.
- Step 3
Add the chopped kimchi and ginger, and stir to combine. Because each batch of kimchi tastes different, it’s important to taste and adjust seasonings. If it needs more tang, add more rice wine vinegar. If it’s too intense, add more oil or even mayonnaise. If you want it spicier, add red-pepper flakes, gochugaru or sambal.
- Step 4
Serve with a sprinkle of sesame seeds, if desired. The salad keeps in the refrigerator for up to 3 days.
Private Notes
Comments
Delicious. A little secret: drizzle a bit of melted butter into the salad for extra deliciousness. (Oh, and lose the celery.) Served on toasted sourdough. Yum.
I love kimchi, but it is scarce in rural Maine...I’ve made Emergency Kimchi with common cabbage (search the web) and it is delicious and authentic enough. Definitely making this with tuna and my staple, canned salmon as well. Great recipe!
I've been looking for a way to enjoy kimchi in a way other than my go-to: using a fork, right out of the jar. This is an excellent recipe, easy, just in time for summer. I was hesitant to add the mayo but found that a couple of tablespoons kinda tied the room together without really altering the taste too much. Love it.
This recipe is great even if you don’t have all the ingredients. I regularly forget to buy and use ginger in this recipe. It’s still good. Lately I enjoy eating it over fresh chopped romaine and radishes as a not-sad desk lunch.
I was skeptical of that much celery but it provides most of the texture for the dish, I say keep it. Definitely don’t skip the ginger.
Has anyone used this as a sandwich filling? Thinking of serving it on a whitewater rafting trip