It’s no news that China has some of the world’s most sophisticated and well-developed meals.
Their cuisines honestly can sometimes seem intimidating because of their unique ingredients and adventurous flavors, but don’t let that stop you!
And when you add crockpot to the equation, simplicity absolutely does not compromise the authenticity, flavor, or classic nature of these dishes.
Each crockpot Chinese recipe here is quick and easy to prepare, and only requires a few accessible components.
You don’t need any advanced culinary skills or hard-to-find ingredients.
Are you ready?
Let’s go…
1. Soy Ginger Almond Chicken

This one leans Chinese-inspired with soy sauce, brown sugar, garlic, and ginger, so it makes sense in the lineup.
Soy Ginger Almond Chicken starts with soy sauce, brown sugar, garlic, and ginger, and the crockpot makes it smell like dinner has been handled for hours.
When the lid comes up, you get tender chicken with almonds on top, which is exactly the kind of payoff I want after doing very little.
I would make this for rice waiting on the side, when nobody has the patience for a fussy skillet situation.
The flavor is bold enough to carry a simple side, which helps.
Keep the serving setup easy and let people build their own plates.
Honestly, that is how crockpot dinners earn their counter space.
Ingredients
- 4 pounds broiler-fryer chickens, cut up
- 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
- 1/3 cup soy sauce
- 2 tablespoons brown sugar
- 2 tablespoons water
- 1 garlic clove, minced
- 1 teaspoon ground ginger
- 1/4 cup slivered almonds
Directions
- Brown the chicken on both sides in oil, then transfer it to the slow cooker.
- Mix the brown sugar with soy sauce, garlic, ginger and water in a bowl and then pour mixture into the slow cooker around the chicken.
- Cover and cook for 5 to 6 hours at low setting or until done.
- Transfer the chicken to plates, sprinkle with almonds, and spoon over the cooking juices if you want them.
- Serve warm.
Prep: 10 mins | Cook: 5 to 6 hours on low | Serves: 4 to 6
Small tweak: Use extra garlic, fresh ginger, chopped onion, and dry-roasted almonds, then skip browning if you want a softer prep.

2. Slow Cooker Peanut Chicken Bowls

This one leans Chinese-inspired with peanut butter, soy sauce, orange juice, and honey, so it makes sense in the lineup.
Ever open the slow cooker and immediately know the sauce is going to do the work?
That is the whole vibe here, with peanut butter, soy sauce, orange juice, and honey rolling around the kitchen.
The finished dish lands as soft chicken in a nutty sauce, so it feels like more than a plain protein dump.
It works for noodle night, especially when dinner needs to sit warm without getting dramatic.
Taste near the end, because slow cooking can soften sharp flavors.
A little salt, heat, or acid can wake the pot right back up.
Then serve it before everyone starts hovering.
Ingredients
- 3 1/2 pounds boneless skinless chicken breasts
- 1/3 cup peanut butter
- 2 tablespoons soy sauce
- 2 tablespoons orange juice
- 1/4 teaspoon pepper
- 1 to 2 tablespoon honey
- 1/2 to 1 cup chicken broth
Directions
- Add the ingredients to the slow cooker and stir to combine.
- Cover and cook on low for 6 to 8 hours or until cooked through.
- Serve with noodles or hot steaming rice.
Prep: 10 mins | Cook: 6 to 8 hours on low | Serves: 6
Worth trying: Add more peanut butter, extra soy sauce, chopped chilies, green onion, and carrots for a fuller sauce.

3. Thai-Style Honey Curry Chicken

This one is Thai-style, not straight Chinese, but the curry, peppers, and rice-friendly sauce still fit the Asian-flavor mood.
Some recipes smell quiet, and some make people ask what is in the crockpot before they even take off their shoes.
This one gets there with honey, mustard, curry, onion, and peppers.
The texture is saucy chicken with carrots underneath, which makes it feel cozy without asking much from you.
I like it for a weeknight that needs color, when the whole point is keeping dinner moving.
Nothing here needs a big speech.
Just spoon it up, add the right side, and let the sauce do the talking.
That is usually enough.
Ingredients
- 1 medium onion, halved and sliced thin
- 1 pound baby carrots
- 2 tablespoons grainy brown mustard
- 2 tablespoons Dijon mustard
- 3 tablespoons honey
- 2 teaspoons curry powder
- 1 dash cayenne pepper
- 4 (5 ounce) boneless skinless chicken breasts
- 1 tablespoon water
- 1 1/2 small red peppers, halved and cut into 1/2 inch thick strips
Directions
- Layer the onion slices in the slow cooker’s base and spread the baby carrots over the onions.
- Combine mustard with honey, cayenne powder and curry powder in a small bowl. Brush the chicken with half of the mixture.
- Set the brushed chicken over the carrots, then add the red peppers on top.
- Mix water with the rest of the mustard-honey mixture and pour into the slow cooker around the peppers and chicken. Cook at low setting for 3 to 4 hours.
- Serve warm.
Prep: 10 mins | Cook: 3 to 4 hours on low | Serves: 4
Little switch: Use boneless thighs and more spice, or swap grainy mustard for yellow mustard with Worcestershire.

4. Thai-Style Peanut Chicken Thighs

This is Thai-style, not Chinese, and the peanut-lime sauce is exactly why it belongs in this flavor cluster.
Thai-Style Peanut Chicken Thighs is not trying to be fancy, and I mean that kindly.
The crockpot pulls together cilantro salsa, peanut butter, ginger, soy, and lime while you go deal with the rest of the day.
By serving time, you have juicy thighs with a creamy sauce and a kitchen that smells like you tried harder than you did.
This fits the five o clock dinner wobble, especially if people are eating in shifts.
Keep toppings or sides nearby so nobody starts customizing over the pot.
That always turns weird.
Ask me how I know.
Ingredients
- 8 boneless skinless chicken thighs
- 1 (16 ounce) jar cilantro salsa
- 1/2 cup peanut butter
- 2 teaspoons ginger
- 2 tablespoons soy sauce
- 2 teaspoons lime juice
Directions
- Place all ingredients in the crockpot.
- Cook for 6 to 8 hours over low heat.
- Top with cilantro, peanuts and scallions.
- Serve with rice.
Prep: 5 mins | Cook: 6 to 8 hours on low | Serves: 4
My move: Add fresh cilantro, lime juice, light coconut milk, and a little Sriracha for a creamier sauce.

5. Island-Style Sweet Savory Chicken

This is island-style sweet and savory, not Chinese, with pineapple and ginger doing the heavy lifting.
The first good sign is the smell, because pineapple, citrus, ginger, and brown sugar does not stay shy for long.
The second good sign is the texture: glossy fruit-sauced chicken.
That combo makes this useful for kids asking what smells sweet, when dinner needs to be ready without a lot of hand-holding.
I would keep the sides simple and let the sauce be the main event.
No need to pile on ten extras.
Two good sides beat a crowded plate almost every time.
Anyway, the crockpot already did its part.
Ingredients
- 2 to 3 pounds boneless skinless chicken breasts
- 1 (16 ounce) can pineapple slices, drained
- 1 (15 ounce) can mandarin oranges, drained
- 1/4 cup cornstarch
- 1/4 cup brown sugar
- 2 tablespoons lemon juice
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1/4 teaspoon ground ginger
Directions
- Place the ingredients in the slow cooker and stir to blend well.
- Cover and cook for about 4 to 5 hours at low setting.
- Serve with some rice.
Prep: 10 mins | Cook: 4 to 5 hours on low | Serves: 6 to 8
Flavor note: Add teriyaki sauce, toasted coconut, toasted pecans, or pineapple juice with diced onion.

6. Ginger Teriyaki Pork Chops

This one leans Chinese-inspired with ginger, brown sugar, and Kikkoman marinade, so it makes sense in the lineup.
Ginger Teriyaki Pork Chops starts with ginger, brown sugar, and Kikkoman marinade, and the crockpot makes it smell like dinner has been handled for hours.
When the lid comes up, you get tender chops in a glossy sauce, which is exactly the kind of payoff I want after doing very little.
I would make this for a rice bowl night, when nobody has the patience for a fussy skillet situation.
The flavor is bold enough to carry a simple side, which helps.
Keep the serving setup easy and let people build their own plates.
Honestly, that is how crockpot dinners earn their counter space.
Ingredients
- 1/3 cup Kikkoman marinade
- 1 tablespoon packed brown sugar
- 1 teaspoon minced fresh gingerroot
- 4 center-cut pork loin chops
Directions
- Mix the Kikkoman with ginger and brown sugar in a bowl.
- Arrange the pork chops in the slow cooker and then pour in the prepared sauce.
- Cover and cook for at least 7 hours at low setting.
- Serve warm.
Prep: 10 mins | Cook: 7 hours on low | Serves: 4
Easy riff: Add minced garlic, or use two thick bone-in chops and double the sauce.

7. Indian-Inspired Chicken Vindaloo

This brings Indian-inspired heat, so it is not Chinese, but it sits nicely with the broader Asian-style lineup.
Ever open the slow cooker and immediately know the sauce is going to do the work?
That is the whole vibe here, with vinegar, ginger, cumin, curry, and tomato rolling around the kitchen.
The finished dish lands as sharp warm chicken with deep sauce, so it feels like more than a plain protein dump.
It works for a night plain chicken will not cut it, especially when dinner needs to sit warm without getting dramatic.
Taste near the end, because slow cooking can soften sharp flavors.
A little salt, heat, or acid can wake the pot right back up.
Then serve it before everyone starts hovering.
Ingredients
- 3 tablespoons vinegar
- 3 garlic cloves, minced
- 1 1/2 tablespoons fresh ginger
- 3/4 tablespoon curry powder
- 1 tablespoon ground cumin
- 1/4 teaspoon ground cardamom
- 1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
- 1/4 teaspoon ground hot pepper
- 1 tablespoon mustard seeds
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 1 cup tomato sauce
- 1 cinnamon stick
- 1 small onion, chopped
- 3 boneless skinless chicken breast halves, quartered
- 2 tablespoons fresh parsley, chopped
Directions
- Using a blender puree the first 10 ingredients.
- Pour pureed mixture into the crockpot. Stir in tomato sauce, onion and cinnamon stick. Blend well.
- Add in chicken and turn to coat the chicken with the mixture.
- Cover and cook for about 5 hours over low heat.
- Garnish with chopped parsley then serve with bread rolls or rice. .
Prep: 10 mins | Cook: 5 hours on low | Serves: 3
Tiny upgrade: Reduce the vinegar, then add a little brown sugar substitute, salt, cumin, curry, or cayenne.

More Crockpot Chinese Recipes Around The Globe
That Sticky Orange Chicken You’ve Been Craving But Don’t Wanna Leave the House For
Image via Dinner Then Dessert
For this recipe, the orange juice, honey, a little soy sauce, and some garlic are doing all the heavy lifting while you’re doing literally anything else for four hours.
The sauce thickens and becomes glossy when you stir in the cornstarch slurry.
And honestly, it tastes better than Panda Express, I said what I said.
You can even freeze this whole thing ahead of time, which is kinda genius for those weeks when everything goes sideways.
Ten minutes of actual work and then you just… wait.
Your kitchen’s gonna smell insane by hour three.
Throw it over some rice and call it a whole entire mood.
General Tso’s But Make It Crockpot Because We’re Not Restaurant People Today
Image via The Recipe Critic
Hear me out on this one…
You toss the chicken in cornstarch, give it a quick sear, and then dump everything into the slow cooker.
That little bit of browning at the beginning makes such a difference, I can’t even explain it.
The hoisin and brown sugar situation happening in this sauce is honestly ridiculous.
Sweet, with a little kick from the red pepper flakes.
One reviewer said her picky husband loved it, and honestly, that’s the ultimate seal of approval right there.
Three to four hours on low, and you’re eating better than any mall food court could ever serve you.
Garnish with sesame seeds if you’re feeling fancy.
Or don’t, I’m not your mom.
Beef and Broccoli Without Standing Over a Wok Like Some Kind of Hero
Image via Spend With Pennies
Takeout beef and broccoli costs like $15 now, and for what?
This flank steak is gonna blow your mind.
You slice it thin against the grain (this is important, so don’t skip it) and let it hang out in this teriyaki-style sauce with hoisin and fresh ginger.
The broccoli goes in at the end, so it stays bright green and not all mushy and sad.
One reviewer swapped the beef for chicken thighs and added carrots and mushrooms, and honestly, that sounds incredible, too.
About an hour and a half on low, which is pretty quick for a crockpot meal.
Serve it over rice, obviously.
This one’s gonna become a regular thing, I’m warning you now.
Honey Garlic Sesame Chicken, That’s Giving Comfort Food Energy

Image via Closet Cooking
Sometimes you just need something sweet and garlicky and absolutely zero stress.
This is that meal.
The honey-and-garlic combo is basically foolproof, and the sesame at the end ties it all together.
It’s giving cozy Sunday dinner vibes, but also Tuesday night when you forgot to thaw anything until 3 pm.
The chicken gets so tender that it practically falls apart when you look at it.
And your house is gonna smell like an actual restaurant, which never hurts.
This is the kind of recipe you text your sister about.
Kung Pao Chicken For When You Want That Spicy Sweet Thing Going On

Image via Life Made Sweeter
Alright, so this one’s got options, which I love.
There’s a keto version, a paleo version, and the regular version, so basically everyone can eat.
Those dried red chili peppers give it that authentic heat without burning your face off.
The cashews and bell peppers go in toward the end, so everything stays textured and pretty.
You can skip the browning step if you’re in a rush, but honestly, the crispy edges are worth the extra ten minutes.
Someone said their whole family loved it, and that’s basically the dream, right?
This works in the Instant Pot, too, if you’re that person.
Either way, you’re eating well tonight.
The zucchini addition is lowkey genius for sneaking in extra veggies.
The Mongolian Beef That Still Slaps Even When You Totally Mess Up the Steak

You know that feeling when you’re in the kitchen feeling real confident and then you immediately humble yourself?
That’s basically what happened with this crockpot Mongolian beef, and honestly, it made me trust the recipe even more.
One reviewer cut her flank steak too thin, watched it dissolve into what she called an “unattractive pile,” and then her husband asked her to make it again anyway.
Because the flavor was that good.
Flank steak gets tossed in cornstarch, goes into the slow cooker with garlic, ginger, soy sauce, brown sugar, and sesame oil, and then it just… sits there doing its thing for a few hours.
High for two to three hours or low for four to five, and by the time you stir in the green onions and serve it over rice, it tastes like something you waited in line for.
Just cut your slices a little thicker than you think you need to, and you’ll be just fine.
Ten Minutes of Prep and Then You’re Done — This Beef and Broccoli Does the Rest

Some recipes say they’re easy, and then you’re standing in the kitchen for 45 minutes wondering what went wrong.
This one is actually telling the truth.
Chuck roast strips go into the slow cooker with beef broth, soy sauce, sesame oil, dark brown sugar, and garlic — then you close the lid and just walk away.
Two and a half to three and a half hours on low, and the meat cooks through to exactly that tender-but-not-falling-apart texture that beef and broccoli is supposed to have.
One reviewer made it exactly as written and said the sauce was amazing and the texture was perfect, which, honestly, is the kind of comment that makes you trust a recipe.
If you want the broccoli to stay bright and not go mushy, steam it separately and toss it in right at the end.
Over white or brown rice with a sprinkle of sesame seeds, and this is genuinely one of the easier crockpot Chinese recipes you’ll make all week.
The Sweet and Sour Crockpot Chicken My Family Keeps Asking Me to Make Again

Tell me why this sweet-and-sour chicken in the crockpot had people saying the whole family gave it rave reviews, the husband asked for it again a couple of weeks later, and it’s also great for leftovers.
Because that’s three wins in one recipe, and that almost never happens.
Chicken breast chunks, pineapple, and red and green peppers all go in together with a sauce built from sugar, vinegar, ketchup, soy sauce, garlic, and ginger — nothing weird, nothing you have to hunt down at a specialty store.
Low for three to four hours, or high for 1.5 to 2 hours if you’re pressed for time.
The chicken comes out juicy and coated in that sticky, tangy sauce that makes sweet-and-sour chicken worth eating in the first place.
Serve it over rice or noodles, and honestly, this is a Sunday cook-ahead situation that sets you up for the whole week.
Slow Cooker General Tso’s Chicken With One Fix You Really Should Make to the Sauce

I’m gonna be real with you because that’s what we do.
This General Tso’s from Le Crème de la Crumb has two very different kinds of people in the reviews, and I think you deserve to know that before you commit four hours to it.
One person said it’s their absolute favorite and way healthier than the local Chinese restaurant – she steams broccoli and throws it in at the end and loves every bite.
Another person said the sauce was too thin, the chicken came out dry, and it missed that whole crispy-yet-saucy thing that makes General Tso’s worth ordering in the first place.
Here’s the fix: double the sauce.
The recipe has you brown the chicken in a cornstarch coating with hoisin and soy first, which gives it a little texture before the slow cooker does its thing.
Go in with more liquid than the recipe calls for, and you’ll probably land somewhere much closer to what you were hoping for.
Four hours on low, served over rice, and it’s a pretty solid crockpot Chinese recipe once you sort out the sauce situation.
Orange Chicken That’s Actually Lighter Than Takeout but Still Has That Sauce You Love

Have you ever hit that 4 pm craving for orange chicken, but the thought of ordering takeout just feels heavy somehow?
This one from Well Plated is exactly what you want in that moment.
Two pounds of chicken breast sit in a sauce of orange juice, honey, soy sauce, rice vinegar, garlic, ginger, and a pinch of red pepper flakes – all cooked low for five to six hours or high for about two.
Someone said the sauce wasn’t too sweet, just a nice balance, and that’s the thing about this version — it doesn’t knock you out with sugar the way restaurant orange chicken sometimes does.
No frying, less sugar, and the chicken gets tender in a way that feels almost indulgent, even though it’s not.
The sauce gets strained, thickened with a cornstarch slurry, and then the chicken goes back in, so everything gets properly coated.
One reviewer said they’d add a little chili next time for heat, which honestly sounds like the right call.
This hits different on a slow Tuesday when you just want something comforting that doesn’t feel like a decision you’ll regret.
The Cashew Chicken That Uses a Restaurant Trick and Honestly Tastes Like It

Okay, so restaurants do a thing called velveting, where they coat the chicken in baking soda and cornstarch before cooking, which makes the meat almost impossibly silky.
This cashew chicken from Carlsbad Cravings actually uses that technique, which is why it hits different from most crockpot Chinese recipes.
Chicken thighs or breasts get the velveting treatment: browned in a skillet, then transferred to the slow cooker with a sauce of soy sauce, chicken broth, honey, and a whole bunch of supporting flavors that somehow all work together.
Bell pepper and cashews go in during the last 30 minutes, so they keep their bite instead of going soft.
If you want a thicker sauce (and you do), pull it out and let it boil down on the stovetop for a couple minutes before stirring it back in.
This is the kind of recipe where you make it once, and it quietly becomes the thing you bring out when you want people to be impressed without telling them how easy it was.
The Mongolian Beef Someone’s Husband Said Was the Best Meal She Had Ever Made

“My husband said this could be the best meal I’ve ever made.”
That’s an actual review from someone who made this Mongolian beef from The Chunky Chef, and I need you to sit with that for a second.
Thinly sliced flank steak goes into a bag with cornstarch, gets shaken up really well, then lands in the slow cooker with garlic, ginger, soy sauce, brown sugar, water, carrots, and a hit of sriracha.
High for two to three hours or low for around four, and the beef turns meltingly tender while the sauce goes silky with that sweet-spicy thing Mongolian beef is supposed to have.
Someone made it with cauliflower rice and steamed broccoli on the side and said it was a great lighter version — didn’t change a thing about the sauce.
This is a crowd dinner move, not a quiet Tuesday thing.
Make it when you want people to talk.
Crockpot Cashew Chicken With Snap Peas for When You Need Some Actual Texture in Your Life

You know what most slow cooker meals are missing half the time?
Texture.
This cashew chicken from XO Bella actually thought about that and it shows.
Snap peas and cashews go in toward the end, so you still get that saucy, tender chicken, but with real crunch when you bite in.
One reviewer said the sauce had the right amount of spice and the snap peas added exactly what she was hoping for.
Chicken breast pieces get browned first with a cornstarch, salt and pepper coating, then into the crockpot with soy sauce and a sauce that runs sweet and savory with just enough heat.
Seven hours total on low, but the result is genuinely worth it, and honestly, this one would be a killer potluck bring.
Six ingredients are all this General Tso’s Needs and It Still Rated Almost Five Stars

Six ingredients – that’s all.
Garlic, honey, ginger, soy sauce, red pepper flakes, and chicken – that’s the whole sauce situation for this General Tso’s from The Foodie Affair.
Cut the chicken into medium chunks (not bite-size – the size actually matters for how it cooks), pour the sauce over, and let it cook on high for 3 to 5 hours.
The honey brings the sweetness, the red pepper flakes bring a mild heat, and together they make something that genuinely tastes like the dish you’d order.
Over 20 people rated this 4.91 out of 5, and for a recipe this stripped back, that’s kinda wild.
Serve it over rice with a vegetable on the side, and you’ve got a full dinner without buying a single specialty ingredient.
Mongolian Beef Gets Pineapple Thrown In and Somehow That’s Exactly What It Was Missing

Pineapple in Mongolian beef.
This one from Dessert Now Dinner Later throws pineapple chunks and juice into the slow cooker, along with garlic, ginger, hoisin, soy sauce, brown sugar, Thai sweet chili, and red pepper flakes.
The pineapple juice thins the sauce in a good way and adds this sweet-fruity note that plays against the chili and soy without taking over.
Flank steak gets seared first, then goes in low and slow for three to four hours, before the carrots and pineapple go in for the last 30 minutes.
It comes out a little spicy, a little sweet, and way more interesting than your standard Mongolian beef.
Green onions and sesame seeds on top, over rice, and it’s genuinely something you’d feel proud putting on the table.
Lower Calorie Sweet and Sour Chicken From the Crockpot That Doesn’t Taste Like It’s Being Healthy

You don’t need to call for takeout when this exists in your crockpot.
Pinch of Nom’s version is lower in calories, easier on the wallet, and genuinely as satisfying as what you’d order.
Chicken, onion, garlic, courgette, peppers, baby corn, sugar snap peas, and pineapple chunks all go in, along with a homemade sauce made from orange juice, soy sauce, rice vinegar, and tomato puree.
The brightly colored veggies go in during the last 20 minutes, so they stay tender without getting soft and sad.
A fluffy bed of rice underneath soaks up every bit of that sticky-sweet sauce, making the whole thing feel way more indulgent than it actually is.
Nearly 80 people rated this 4.08 out of 5, which tells you it’s not one of those “healthy” versions that taste like compromise.
This is the one for when you’re being mindful but still want dinner to feel like an actual treat.
The All Day Mongolian Beef You Start in the Morning and Walk Home to at Dinner

This Mongolian beef from Supergolden Bakes is a seven-hour low-cook – chuck steak, bell peppers, garlic, ginger, tamari or soy sauce, brown sugar, and sriracha, all doing their thing together all day while you live your life.
The beef gets browned in batches before it goes in, which takes maybe an extra ten minutes but gives you that deep, rich color you honestly can’t get any other way.
Chuck steak holds up to long, slow cooking way better than flank sometimes — it gets genuinely tender in a way that feels almost luxurious.
Onions and half the peppers go in as the base; the rest of the peppers go in later, so they have some texture when it’s done.
Better than takeout, but in that slow, cozy Sunday evening kind of way where the whole house smells incredible.
Building Asian Flavor in a Slow Cooker Without It Tasting Flat
Slow cookers are great for tender meat, but they can soften sharp flavors if you do not help them out.
Soy sauce, ginger, garlic, curry, vinegar, citrus, peanut butter, and pineapple all bring different kinds of punch.
Use them with balance.
Sweet sauces need salt.
Salty sauces need acid.
Creamy peanut sauces need lime or heat so they do not taste sleepy.
For Chinese-inspired dishes, finish with scallions, toasted almonds, sesame seeds, peanuts, or a squeeze of lime right before serving.
For Thai-style and Indian-inspired recipes, fresh herbs and a little heat at the end make the flavor feel awake again.
And for island-style sweet chicken, keep the fruit bright instead of letting it turn syrupy.
Serve these meals with rice, cauliflower rice, noodles, stir-fried greens, or crisp cucumbers.
That fresh crunch matters.
It keeps the plate from becoming one soft slow-cooked blur.
