Fresh & Vibrant Vietnamese Chicken Salad
This Vietnamese Chicken Salad recipe story was originally shared in August 2010 and is one of our most popular recipes. By request of our readers, we’re re-sharing the story with updated info about our favorite fish sauce, new image and a few recipe updates for easier reading.
Vietnamese Chicken Salad Recipe
My Mother has acquired an unprecedented fan base here on our blog since I started sharing her nail-shop-eats escapades and she has absolutely no idea of her devoted following. Mom is not a woman of technology, social media nor simple “hand-phone” use. To explain to her what twitter, facebook, social media and blogging are would be too epic of an explanation for her. I would lose hairs just wondering where to start. She would be bored after the first 3 minutes.
Mom thinks twitter is a cute video game with a blue bird and that blogging is a waste of time in front of a “digital machine”. But she’s seasoned home cook and can whip together a meal for our family of 10 faster than I can write a short post. Her kitchen skills far exceed anything that I can ever accomplish online.
Her kitchen training began as soon as she could barter her way through the market stalls of Viet-Nam and became head of household at the age of 11 when my grand-father died in the Viet-Nam war. She had no choice but to leave school and was catapulted into adulthood to tend for my grand-mother and family of 5. Mom had to grow up fast, learn the street and market smarts like a savvy produce dealer and grew a skin thicker and sharper than a durian shell.
Mom is tough, as is the rest of her nail shop staff, and when they all discuss things they are passionate about, it’s a delirious afternoon of stories and laughter. When it comes to food-talk, everyone has a strong opinion about how a dish is prepared. With 12 women hailing from different regions of Viet-Nam and with different flavor preferences, there’s never a dull moment.
They were talking chicken salad one afternoon. Everyone had the best chicken salad recipe.
So there were 12 best-chicken-salad-makers in one nail shop, at one time. Oh hell, watch out. This nail shop is way too small to have 12 BEST-CHICKEN-SALAD-MAKERS. It’s one thing to have 12 best eye-brow-waxers and 12 best-mani/pedi-curers in town, but for some reason, having 12 best cooks working within the same walls doesn’t garner the same camaraderie.
I sat in the corner and listened to each of the techniques and recipes shared out-loud across the bustling shop. The conversation was intense, often sisterly combative, but friendly and mostly silly-snarky about Northern or Southern ways of seasoning the fish sauce dressing and particularly on how they poached the chicken.
Customers were drawn into the conversation, often wondering if the staff was smack-talking the customers’ hairy eyebrows.
I re-assured the clients that the staff were talking food. The ladies don’t smack-talk. The customers felt relieved and were even more entertained. They decided to add more to their service just to stay longer. Mom was excited that business was bustling because of chicken salad talk.
Everyone was getting excited about their chicken salad recipe. The nail drills were grinding louder and the massages were becoming more firm.
Then I decided to add my own chicken recipe salad into the fun conversation and spoke up in Vietnamese, “I put napa cabbage in my salad and I BBQ my chicken instead of boiling it!”
Thunderous silence! The nail drills came to a halt, the 12 Vietnamese voices dropped dead silent. Vicky (aka Phuong) breaks the silence, ” You do what? The kimchi Korean cabbage? In a Vietnamese chicken salad? You don’t boil your chicken?” Vicky is hard-core. No substitutions are allowed in her cooking.
All eyeballs turned to me. I was getting hot. I stumbled for words, stuttered in my thoughts to explain my rationale on using napa cabbage instead of regular cabbage and why I prefer BBQ’d chicken. I started getting flashbacks from when I was a kid in trouble, trying to figure out if I should lie or just tell the truth.
Then I realized I was an adult, a 30-something Vietnamese-American woman who is dating a cattle ranch white-guy. My life has always been flooded with enriching things outside of my own culture. I was a diverse cook and embrace all things different and edible.
I felt empowered and respectfully blurted in one long breathless Vietnamese sentence, “Yes sister Vicky! And all you sisters!” (out of respect, we all call each other sisters). “I like napa cabbage because I like the delicate crunch and soft textures of the lacy leaves. And it’s really pretty when you have the different colors of the stem and green leaves. And I like the flavor and char of bbq chicken instead of boiled chicken. And you should try it too, dear sisters!” I gasped for air.
All got quiet on the nail shop front.
Mom broke the awkward silence, “Hey, I like that! Sounds like a good idea. Did Tot (she still can’t pronounce Todd correctly) show you that? Tot is smart.”
Omg, Mom had my back. She agreed with me about my recipe & technique for once. Mom didn’t try to tell me how to make my recipe better. I felt accepted as a bonafied Vietnamese home cook.
The rest of the staff agreed, “Yes little Sister, that sounds good, we’ll have to try that. Thank Tot for us.” Then the nail shops continues humming with the regular sounds, as if there were no distractions.
Whew. I think I won. I actually had the 12 best-chicken-salad-makers agree with me! And they gave all the credit to Tot.
Oh well, I don’t care where the credit went to. I still think my chicken salad recipe is great and we’re all winners!
Enjoy,
-diane
What fish sauce do we like to use? There are several brands we prefer for different types of dishes. In fact during the recipe testing on this salad, we tested 7 different fish sauces. They were all still good. But for overall general cooking and for this Vietnamese chicken salad recipe, we like using:
–Phu Quoc Flying Lion (there are many imitations, make sure to double check the label)
Vietnamese Chicken Salad Recipe (Gỏi Gà or Gỏi Bắp Cẚi Gà)
Ingredients
For the Chicken:
- 2 pounds boneless, skinless Chicken (910g)
- 1 tablespoon grated fresh Ginger (15ml)
- 2 cloves Garlic , crushed or finely minced
- 2 tablespoons Vegetable Oil or Grape Seed oil (30ml)
- 2 tablespoons Fish Sauce (30ml)
- 1 teaspoon Sugar (5ml)
For the Fish Sauce Dressing:
- 1/4 cup Fish Sauce (60ml)
- 1 teaspoon grated fresh Ginger
- 3/4 cup Water (180ml)
- 3 cloves Garlic , finely minced or crushed
- 1-2 Red Chilies , minced
- 1 teaspoon Sugar (5ml)
- 1 tablespoon fresh Lime Juice (15ml) or more to taste
- 2 teaspoons rice vinegar (10ml)
For the Salad:
- 6 cups thinly shredded cabbage (regular or napa)
- 1 cup chopped fresh herbs: rau ram (Vietnamese coriander), mint, basil, and/or cilantro
- 1/4 cup shredded Carrots (60ml)
- 1/4 cup crushed, roasted Peanuts (60ml)
- 1/4 cup fried Shallots (60ml) - Optional
- 2 tablespoons fried Garlic (30ml) - Optional
- 1/4 cup Pickled Red Onions (60ml) - Optional
Instructions
Make the Chicken
- In a large bowl, combine all chicken marinade ingredients (ginger, garlic, oil, fish sauce, and sugar). If your pieces of chicken are thick, place them between two sheets of plastic wrap and pound them with a meat mallet to an even 1/2-inch thickness. Remove the plastic wrap and add the chicken to the marinade. Let marinade for about 20 minutes.
- Heat a grill or heavy bottomed skillet over medium-high heat. Cook the chicken until it is browned and cooked through, usually 3-4 minutes per side. Let cool, and then shred or chop the chicken.
Make Fish Sauce Dressing
- In medium bowl or large jar, combine all ingredients well (fish sauce, ginger, water, garlic, chilies, sugar, lime juice, and vinegar). Allow sugar to completely dissolve before using. (You can keep chilled in fridge for up to 1 month).
Final Assembly:
- In large bowl, combine cabbage, herbs and shredded carrots. Add the chicken to the bowl and toss to combine.
- Add fish sauce dressing to taste just before serving. Top with peanuts and other optional fried shallots, garlic, and/or pickled onions if using and serve.
Hi Diane,
Can I use leftover chicken rotisserie, then shred it up and mix it with the marinate? Any advise would be great, thanks!
Hi Esther, yes leftover chicken rotisserie is perfect! It’s simple, quick and wonderful for the salad.
Hi Diane, can I use leftover store bought rotisserie chicken, shred it and then put the chicken in the marinate?
Hi Esther, yes you can totally do that! When we need a quick dinner, we’ll buy a store bought roast chicken. And leftover bones become chicken soup!
I just loved this story and am going to follow the recipe to a T. I live in Italy but actually have Vietnamese Coriander on my terrace (in Aus it gets called Vietnamese mint). I’m going to use the recipe for a cooking workshop I am putting together around the theme of flavours from my hometown (I’m from Melbourne). Thanks for sharing the nail shop story.
Hi Todd and Diane –
I love the story behind this recipe and can’t wait to try it. Any new photography classes planned? I am thankful for your class every day!
This looks like an amazing salad! (and you are a wonderful storyteller — nice tribute to your mom).
Oh, Diane! This brought happy tears to my eyes. As a fellow Vietnamese woman, whenever mom approves of my cooking, I shine!! I will always respect and honor traditional Vietnamese cuisine but as you mentioned we live in a beautiful, multi cultural country. To embrace and incorporate that into our cooking is not only fun, but offers creativity and inventive avenues to cooking which is the joy for me.
Such a great salad, I think I’m going to love is. Now I only have to get the ingredients for it… ๐
Seriously … you need to put these into a cookbook called “Nail Shop Eats”.
this recipe is GREAT. i’ll admit, i only used some of the elements…the dressing as a base and some of the salad ingredients. we made it vegetarian to have along side lime-mustard salmon, so to bulk it up we added peapods, green onions, bean sprouts, and extra carrots/peanuts. we also added sweet chili sauce to the dressing cause my hubs is very sensitive to fish sauce. i will be making this again and again – and will add chicken next time to make it a complete meal on its own. thank you so much! and i loved reading the story – your mom/nail ladies sound like a good group!
Do you have a recipe for kimchee. I had it made in Switzerland at a school by a team of visiting people from Korea. They served it fresh, rather than fermented. It was the best thing after this salad which works well in a wrap also. Thanks
A Google search for goi ga brought me here and I was desperately hoping to find a recipe that didn’t have poached chicken because I’m not a fan of poached chicken!
So not only was I thrilled to read that BBQ chicken has the authentic tick of approval but I also loved reading this story!
I will be making this salad tonight- with BBQ chicken!!!
Great blog ๐
I felt like making goi ga today, googled and was happy to see that you had a recipe. Lovely story – a lot of the time, the nail ladies don’t realize I can speak the language. And it’s true, most of the time they don’t talk about the clientele at all.
Btw, my parents call my husband Bread ๐
Oh wow….I stumbled upon your blog, i couldn’t stop reading. It’s just fascinating following the conversation in the nail shop. Thanks for sharing the chicken salad recipe.
Lily- thank you for coming, hope you enjoy more reads and recipes!
What a great (and funny) story! I printed out this recipe and left it lying on our kitchen counter. I laughed out loud when my husband walked by it, stopped and incredulously asked “We’re having nail salon salad?” I took the recipe to the beach with us Labor Day weekend, made it for some friends and everybody loved it. It’s definitely a keeper. Thanks for sharing!
What a wonderful story! I can just imagine the 12 best chicken salad makers staring at you. Of course, all kudos to “Tot”. I do understand ๐
Love the story and photos. Sounds like a scene out of The Joy Luck Club! I’m of Chinese heritage and I can attest that the Chinese are just as passionate and opinionated about food! Thanks for sharing.