Lunar New Year is about fresh starts, good fortune, and gathering the people you love around the table.
It’s not about spending 12 hours folding dumplings while your kids circle the kitchen asking for snacks.
The good news? You can absolutely create a meaningful, lucky, beautiful feast at home. You just need a smart mix of symbolic dishes, crowd-pleasers, and recipes that actually work for real life.
No stress. No obscure ingredients you’ll never use again. Just a generous, lucky feast you can actually pull off.
1. Quick Pork & Chive Dumplings🥟
Symbolises wealth
Dumplings are shaped like ancient gold ingots, which makes them one of the most important Lunar New Year foods.
If you really, really want it easy and quick, these are perfect:👉 Mr Chen’s Pork & Chive Dumplings
Pan-fry or steam them, serve with soy and chilli oil, and you instantly have a symbolic, crowd-pleasing starter.
Simple. Meaningful. Done.
2. Special Fried Rice🍚
Symbolises unity and abundance
If you want that classic Chinese takeout fried rice flavour, the kind you order on a Friday night, this is the one.
Rice represents prosperity and togetherness, which makes it perfect for Lunar New Year.
Our recipe for Special Fried Rice delivers that authentic takeaway-style taste, but you can easily make it at home:
It includes the essentials you expect from takeaway fried rice:
- Day-old rice for the right texture
- Bacon for that savoury hit
- Prawns for a bit of luxury
- Eggs, peas, and carrots for colour
- Soy sauce and sesame oil for flavour
Cook it on high heat, use cold rice, and do not overcrowd the pan. Let it fry properly before stirring too much.
Affordable, filling, and always one of the first dishes to disappear.

3. Chinese Steamed Fish🐟
Symbolises surplus and prosperity
Fish represents abundance for the year ahead.
If you want something traditional but not overly complicated, this ginger and spring onion steamed fish recipe is a beautiful option:👉 Whole Steamed Fish Recipe
Ask your fishmonger to clean and prep the fish. Steam, pour over hot oil, and serve whole before carving.
It looks impressive, but it is far easier than it seems.
4. Chinese Five Spice Roast Chicken🍗
Symbolises family unity
Serving a whole chicken represents completeness and togetherness.
The Chinese Roast Chicken delivers that glossy soy and honey flavour without complicated steps.
Everything marinates in one bowl, then straight into the oven. This makes a beautiful centrepiece without requiring chef-level skills.
5. Chicken San Choy Bau 🥬
Symbolises renewal and vitality
Fresh greens represent new beginnings.
Chicken San Choy Bau is perfect for balancing heavier dishes. It is fresh, crunchy, and vibrant!
Prep the filling ahead of time and let everyone assemble their own lettuce cups at the table. It keeps things relaxed and interactive.
6. Noodles🍜
Symbolises long life
Noodles represent longevity, especially when served long and uncut.
👉 Get the Chow Mein recipe here
Family-friendly, full of flavour, and perfect for feeding a crowd. Try to keep the noodles long while cooking to honour the tradition.
7. Spring Rolls🤤
Symbolise wealth and prosperity
Spring rolls resemble gold bars, which makes them a lucky addition to your Lunar New Year table.
Crisp, golden, and packed with savoury pork and vegetables, they work beautifully as a starter or shared platter.
If you would like to make your own, this Pork & Vegetable Spring Rolls recipe from Taste is a great option: Pork & Vegetable Spring Rolls
If you prefer to keep things simple, spring rolls are widely available ready to cook, either chilled or frozen. You can bake or air fry them straight from the pack, which makes them a very practical option if you are already cooking several dishes.
Whether homemade or store-bought, their golden colour and crisp texture make them a festive and symbolic addition to your feast.
8. Orange Cake 🍰
Symbolise wealth and good fortune
Oranges and mandarins are strongly linked to prosperity, which makes citrus desserts a beautiful way to end your Lunar New Year feast.
If you love the symbolism but want options, here are our favourite orange cakes that bring that bright, celebratory flavour in different ways.
Chocolate Orange Jaffa Cake
Rich chocolate paired with fresh orange gives you that classic Jaffa flavour in a show-stopping cake. Perfect if you want something indulgent.
Orange Chocolate Bombe Cake with White Chocolate Mousse
Layers of orange and chocolate with a creamy mousse centre make this one feel truly special occasion worthy.
Whole Orange Cake with Lemon Drizzle Icing
A simpler option that uses the whole fruit for bold flavour and a beautifully moist texture, finished with a fresh lemon drizzle.
All three use easy-to-find supermarket ingredients and do not require complicated techniques.
Whether you choose rich chocolate orange or a simple citrus drizzle, you are finishing your feast with a symbol of luck, prosperity, and sweetness for the year ahead.
9. Jian Dui (Crispy Sesame Balls)🥢
Symbolise wealth, luck, and completeness
Jian Dui are golden, sesame-coated balls that are crisp on the outside and chewy inside, usually filled with sweet red bean paste. Their round shape represents family unity, and their golden colour symbolises prosperity.
The ingredients are easy to find, including glutinous rice flour from major supermarkets and red bean paste from Asian grocers.
They are deep-fried, so they require careful oil temperature control to puff properly and stay round. If you enjoy hands-on cooking, they make a stunning and meaningful dessert.
Prefer to keep things simple? Buy sesame balls from a local Asian bakery or stick with oranges and cake for an easier finish.
Either way, they are a beautiful way to end your Lunar New Year feast on a golden note.
How to Make This Feast Easy
This is a full menu, but you do not need to cook everything.
- Pick one centrepiece, one rice or noodle dish, one fresh dish, and one dessert. Everything else is optional.
- Use shortcuts where it makes sense. Buy dumplings. Bake ready-made spring rolls. Order sesame balls if you prefer. It all still counts.
- Prep what you can the day before, then cook quick dishes fresh on the day.
- Most importantly, serve everything in the middle of the table and let it feel relaxed.
Lunar New Year is about generosity and fresh beginnings, not perfection.
Even a simple spread can feel abundant when it is shared.

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