Chopped Salad with Chicken & Wasabi Dressing

When we lived in California, we dined at a great little restaurant called Tao Tao, serving Asian fusion cuisine. It was good, but the dish that had us returning with enthusiasm was Tao Tao’s chicken salad. We’re not the only ones. If you search for it, there are several reviews and blog posts devoted to the salad and attempts to reverse engineer it to gain a recipe. I am one such person, though I tried to deviate enough that it was its own salad because, let’s face it, it will never be as good as Tao Tao’s chicken salad. But this is a nice salad in its own right.

Chopped Chicken Salad with Wasabi Dressing like Tao Tao's Chicken Salad Recipe | EvinOK.com

Chopped Salad with Wasabi Dressing

Makes 6–8 servings. 

CHICKEN INGREDIENTS (omit or substitute for vegetarian/vegan recipe)

4 chicken breasts, cut in strips 1 cup all-purpose flour

1/2 Tbsp. garlic powder 1 tsp. fresh ground pepper

Vegetable oil, for frying

SALAD INGREDIENTS

1 pkg. ramen noodles, uncooked and crushed

1 head fresh iceberg lettuce, finely shredded

1/2 head fresh white cabbage, finely shredded

1 bunch fresh cilantro leaves, chopped, no stems

3-4 Tbsp toasted sesame seeds

3-4 scallions, sliced thinly 1/4 cup grated carrot strips

1 clove garlic, minced 1 tsp. freshly grated ginger

DRESSING INGREDIENTS

1 Tbsp soy sauce 1 Tbsp rice wine vinegar

2 tsp fresh lemon juice 3 Tbsp toasted sesame oil

1 Tbsp white granulated sugar 3/4 tsp dry wasabi powder

1 tsp. freshly ground black pepper

 

DIRECTIONS

1. Mix all the chicken ingredients (except the oil) in an air-tight bag or container and shake to coat. Pan fry the chicken in the oil over medium-high heat in a large pan on the stove, turning once. Set aside to cool.

2. While the oil in the pan is still hot, toss in the crushed uncooked ramen noodles and stir constantly as they toast up a bit. Remove from heat, transfer the pan toasted ramen to a dish, and set aside.

3. In a large bowl, mix the finely shredded lettuce, cabbage, cilanto, sesame seeds, scallions, carrots, garlic, and ginger. Toss to combine them so each forkful has a variety of ingredients. Set aside.

4. Shred the chicken now that it has cooled slightly. Add to the ramen the toss chicken and noodles in the salad bowl the chopped medley.

5. In a cruet or medium bowl, whisk together the soy sauce, rice wine vinegar, lemon juice, sesame oil, sugar, wasabi powder, and pepper. Blend completely. If you’re making the dressing ahead of time, you could even mix it in a jar, shake, and store in the fridge overnight.

6. Toss the dressing with the salad to coat the chopped mix completely then serve immediately.

Serving suggestion: You can add edamame or additional toasted sesame seeds, carrot slivers, sliced scallions, crushed peanuts, or toasted almond slivers to the top for garnish. I prefer edamame, toasted sesame seeds, and crushed peanuts on mine.

8 comments

  1. Julie Cascio says:

    Oh, this sounds good, Evin. I look forward to trying it! However, I need an alternative to wasabi, as that is a little spicier than most of my family prefers. Any suggestions?
    Julie C

    • Evin says:

      You could omit the wasabi entirely and add chopped pickled or grated fresh ginger for a kick without spice, Julie.

  2. Shar from northern Cali says:

    This is far from Tao Taos Salad.
    The nuts they use is much of a flavor.
    They use cashews, no peanut oil or peanut
    No wasabi…. they use Chinese hot mustard.
    No ramen noodles..they use rice stick noodles that they flash fry to puff up. It’s cool. It’s the same white puffy noodles as in the delish Tao Tao beef, Another fan favorite.

    • Evin says:

      Thank you! It was hard for me to try to recreate this from memory when I haven’t had the salad in over a decade. I appreciate your clarifying things.

      • Shar from northern Cali says:

        No problem. I, too, am trying to create my own inspired salad. I’ve even sat in the restaurant and dissect it lol. . If someday I figure it out, I hope to share it. 🙂

        They are in downtown Sunnyvale, if you return to the area. ,)

        • Evin says:

          I used to live a block or two away from Murphy Avenue. Such great food options. I miss Dish Dash too. I actually worked at Leigh’s Favorite Books for a while.

          • Shar from northern Cali says:

            Hi Evin, I’m sorry if I missed your reply. Downtown Sunnyvale still has its long standing restaurants like Gumbas,, Turmeric, Tao Taos, the little cigarette shop, the Irish bar, Thai Basil and DishDash have you come across any Tao Tao chicken salad recipes? I still have it on my “to create” list. I’m soooooo craving that darn salad 🙂

          • Evin says:

            I haven’t seen your blog with your recipes, but that sounds great. Murphy’s Pub wasn’t it? Named for the founder of Sunnyvale. I celebrated my 30th birthday dinner at Dish Dash. So special to remember that place. I loved Il Postale too, my dad loved to take me there for their caprese salad.

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