Store Guides
Best First Things To Buy At 99 Ranch
A first-cart Rice Queen shortlist for 99 ranch: what earns space, what can wait, and which buys make dinner easier right away.

Quick Answer
Keep the first cart tight: Frozen Dumplings, Frozen Scallion Pancakes, Kikkoman Soy Sauce, Lee Kum Kee Panda Brand Oyster Sauce, and Kadoya Pure Sesame Oil. Those are the buys most likely to turn into real meals before the week is over.
At A Glance
Comparison snapshot
| Product | Best for | Verdict | Availability |
|---|---|---|---|
![]() Frozen Dumplings | Fast lunches, backup dinners, and first-cart freezer insurance. | Freezer staple | Very common at Asian groceries, warehouse stores, and larger supermarkets. |
Frozen Scallion Pancakes | A crisp, flaky freezer shortcut for breakfast, snacks, or a low-effort side. | Good freezer shortcut | Most reliable at Asian groceries and some Trader Joe's locations depending on the product. |
![]() Kikkoman Soy Sauce Soy Sauce | The easiest first soy sauce for most North American kitchens. | Best easy first soy | Very common at mainstream supermarkets, Asian groceries, and online. |
![]() Lee Kum Kee Panda Brand Oyster Sauce Panda Brand Oyster Sauce | the easiest starter oyster sauce for stir-fries, noodles, and brown sauces. | Best starter oyster sauce | Common at Asian groceries and many larger supermarkets. |
![]() Kadoya Pure Sesame Oil Pure Sesame Oil | A dependable toasted sesame oil for finishing and quick sauces. | Best everyday sesame oil | Common at Asian groceries and many mainstream stores. |
![]() Lao Gan Ma Chili Crisp Chili Crisp | A classic value chili crisp for eggs, dumplings, noodles, and rice. | Best value chili crisp | Very common at Asian groceries and online. |
Recommendations
Product-by-product picks

Freezer staple
Frozen Dumplings
Fast lunches, backup dinners, and first-cart freezer insurance.
The best packs taste savory and balanced without needing much more than a dipping sauce.
Look for wrappers that can steam or pan-fry without tearing or turning gummy.
One of the highest-payoff freezer buys because it solves an actual meal.
Very common at Asian groceries, warehouse stores, and larger supermarkets.
- Turns into a meal quickly
- Easy for beginners to cook
- Quality varies a lot by filling and wrapper
Good freezer shortcut
Frozen Scallion Pancakes
A crisp, flaky freezer shortcut for breakfast, snacks, or a low-effort side.
Mild, savory, and scallion-forward enough to feel useful without needing a recipe.
The reason to buy them is the crisp outside and layered chew after pan-frying.
Worth freezer space if you like quick savory breakfasts or snack plates.
Most reliable at Asian groceries and some Trader Joe's locations depending on the product.
- Cooks quickly from frozen
- Works for breakfast, snacks, and simple sides
- Not essential if you are only building a sauce pantry

Best easy first soy
Kikkoman Soy Sauce
The easiest first soy sauce for most North American kitchens.
Salty, familiar, and balanced enough for dipping, marinades, and everyday cooking.
Thin and predictable, which makes it easy to dose.
Strong first buy because it is useful, affordable, and easy to replace.
Very common at mainstream supermarkets, Asian groceries, and online.
- Easy to find
- Works across many beginner recipes
- Not the deepest soy sauce if you are building a more specialized pantry

Best starter oyster sauce
Lee Kum Kee Panda Brand Oyster Sauce
the easiest starter oyster sauce for stir-fries, noodles, and brown sauces.
Savory, slightly sweet, and direct enough to make weeknight cooking taste fuller.
Thick and glossy, so it coats quickly in the pan.
A good first buy because it is easy to find and forgiving.
Common at Asian groceries and many larger supermarkets.
- Easy beginner bottle
- Useful across stir-fries, noodles, and marinades
- Not as deep as premium oyster sauce

Best everyday sesame oil
Kadoya Pure Sesame Oil
A dependable toasted sesame oil for finishing and quick sauces.
Nutty, familiar, and strong enough that you only need a little.
Use it as a finishing oil, not as the main fat for high-heat cooking.
A strong default because it is easy to recognize, easy to replace, and useful in small amounts.
Common at Asian groceries and many mainstream stores.
- Reliable aroma
- Easy to find and rebuy
- Can overpower food if poured too generously

Best value chili crisp
Lao Gan Ma Chili Crisp
A classic value chili crisp for eggs, dumplings, noodles, and rice.
Savory, chile-forward, and familiar, with enough crunch to wake up simple food.
Crunchy bits in oil, best spooned over finished dishes.
Excellent value because it is inexpensive, useful, and easy to rebuy.
Very common at Asian groceries and online.
- Classic pantry reference point
- Good price for frequent use
- Different variants can taste noticeably different
Rice Queen Take
A good 99 ranch trip starts with restraint. The store has more good options than a first cart needs, so the better move is to buy products that can turn into meals right away.
Keep the first cart tight: Frozen Dumplings, Frozen Scallion Pancakes, Kikkoman Soy Sauce, Lee Kum Kee Panda Brand Oyster Sauce, and Kadoya Pure Sesame Oil. Those are the buys most likely to turn into real meals before the week is over.
What To Put In The Cart
These are the products that make the strongest first-cart case.
- Frozen Dumplings: Fast lunches, backup dinners, and first-cart freezer insurance.
- Frozen Scallion Pancakes: A crisp, flaky freezer shortcut for breakfast, snacks, or a low-effort side.
- Kikkoman Soy Sauce: The easiest first soy sauce for most North American kitchens.
- Lee Kum Kee Panda Brand Oyster Sauce: the easiest starter oyster sauce for stir-fries, noodles, and brown sauces.
- Kadoya Pure Sesame Oil: A dependable toasted sesame oil for finishing and quick sauces.
- Lao Gan Ma Chili Crisp: A classic value chili crisp for eggs, dumplings, noodles, and rice.
What Can Wait
Skip the niche sauces, novelty snacks, and duplicate bottles until you know what you actually reach for. A short useful cart beats a crowded pantry every time.
How To Read This Guide
How these picks were judged
These picks are judged by how clearly they help a home cook make the dish or shopping decision in front of them.
- Clear pantry role
- Low-regret first buy
- Easy ways to use it this week
- Whether the upgrade is worth paying for
- Prices and store shelves change.
- A premium bottle is only worth it if the difference shows up in your cooking.
- Category picks are buying direction, not a claim that every brand in the category tastes the same.
Rice Queen's take is intentionally practical: buy the product when it solves the cooking problem in this guide, and skip it when it would only add clutter.
FAQ
What should I buy first?
Keep the first cart tight: Frozen Dumplings, Frozen Scallion Pancakes, Kikkoman Soy Sauce, Lee Kum Kee Panda Brand Oyster Sauce, and Kadoya Pure Sesame Oil. Those are the buys most likely to turn into real meals before the week is over.
What should I skip for now?
Skip anything that feels exciting on the shelf but does not solve a meal you already make.
How do I know it belongs in my pantry?
It belongs when you can name the dish, sauce, bowl, or shortcut it improves without having to invent a special occasion for it.