Penang Asam Laksa: Malaysia's Most Celebrated Noodle Soup, Now Fully Vegan
Penang asam laksa was ranked #7 on CNN's World's 50 Best Foods — and for good reason. The tangy, spicy, sweet, aromatic broth is unlike anything else in Southeast Asian cuisine. Traditionally made with mackerel, this iconic dish seemed impossible to veganise without losing its soul.
That was before Pinxin Vegan spent years perfecting a plant-based asam laksa paste that captures every layer of that complex flavour. The secret? Hericium mushroom (lion's mane) provides a naturally savoury depth that replaces fish without relying on mock meat or artificial flavourings. Combined with tamarind, torch ginger flower, lemongrass, and galangal — this is the real thing, made kinder.
Best of all, you can make it at home in about 15 minutes. Here is how.
What You Need
Main Ingredients
- 1 packet Pinxin Asam Laksa Paste (200g)
- 400g thick rice vermicelli (laksa noodles) or rice stick noodles
- 800ml water
Garnishes (Traditional Style)
- 1 small pineapple — cut into thin strips
- 1 cucumber — julienned
- 1 red onion — thinly sliced
- Fresh mint leaves — a generous handful
- Torch ginger flower (bunga kantan) — thinly sliced
- Fresh red chilli — sliced
- Lettuce leaves — shredded
- Sweet prawn paste (hae ko) — use a vegan version, or skip
Step-by-Step: Vegan Asam Laksa in 15 Minutes
Step 1 — Prepare the Noodles
Cook your rice vermicelli or laksa noodles according to the packet instructions. Drain, rinse under cold water to stop cooking, and set aside in serving bowls.
Step 2 — Make the Broth
Bring 800ml of water to a boil. Add the entire packet of Pinxin Asam Laksa Paste and stir well. Reduce heat and simmer for 8–10 minutes, allowing the tamarind, lemongrass, and galangal to meld together. Taste and adjust — add a squeeze of lime for extra tang if you like it sour.
Step 3 — Assemble and Garnish
Ladle the hot broth over the noodles. Top generously with pineapple strips, cucumber, sliced onion, mint, torch ginger flower, chilli, and shredded lettuce. Add a small dollop of vegan prawn paste on the side if available.
Step 4 — Serve Immediately
Asam laksa is best eaten right away while the broth is piping hot and the garnishes are crisp. Serves 2–3 bowls.
Tips for the Most Authentic Taste
- Torch ginger flower is non-negotiable. It is the single ingredient that defines Penang laksa. You can find it at most wet markets in Malaysia. No substitute comes close.
- Pineapple must be fresh — canned pineapple will make the broth too sweet and lose that sharp bite.
- Mint, not basil. Unlike curry laksa, asam laksa uses spearmint (daun pudina). The cool herbal note balances the sour broth.
- Thick noodles matter. Penang-style thick rice vermicelli has a chewier texture that holds the broth. Thin vermicelli works in a pinch, but thick is authentic.
Why Pinxin's Asam Laksa Paste is Different
Most commercial laksa pastes are loaded with MSG and preservatives. Pinxin takes a different approach, drawing on 13 years of heritage recipes from Penang:
- Zero MSG — flavour comes from real ingredients, not additives
- No five pungent (allium-free) — no garlic, onion, leek, chives, or shallots. Suitable for strict Buddhist vegetarian diets
- Hericium mushroom base — natural umami from lion's mane mushroom, not from mock meat or soy protein isolates
- Low sodium — seasoned with Australian lake salt for a cleaner mineral profile
- Flash-frozen at -40°C — locks in freshness without preservatives
Nutrition at a Glance
A bowl of vegan asam laksa made with Pinxin paste is naturally low in saturated fat and cholesterol-free. It is a solid choice for anyone managing the "three highs" — hypertension, high cholesterol, and high blood sugar — without giving up the hawker flavours they grew up with.
Ready to Cook?
Skip the hours of pounding and simmering. With Pinxin's Asam Laksa Paste, you get the deep, sour, spicy complexity of Penang's most famous noodle soup — fully plant-based, allium-free, and on the table in 15 minutes.