- Calories
- 130
- Protein
- 3g
- Fiber
- 4g
- Sat. fat
- 2g
- Sodium
- 210mg
- Added sugar
- 0g
What this recipe does for you.
The viral chopped green goddess salad: finely diced cabbage, cucumber and chives under a blender-herb dressing. 20 minutes, scoopable with a chip, naturally clean.
Why this works
Every recipe on this site ships with an explanation of the technique decisions, why sear then braise, why the acid goes in at the end, why the fat renders before the aromatics. The method below is those decisions, in order.
A sharp 8-inch chef knife (or a mandoline for the cabbage)
This salad lives or dies on a uniform quarter-inch dice, and a dull knife crushes herbs and cabbage instead of cutting them. A sharp 8-inch chef knife is all you need, though a mandoline shreds the cabbage faster and more evenly. UK readers: the OXO Good Grips mandoline is widely stocked and has a finger guard worth using.
Ingredients
Serves 4- A sharp 8-inch chef knife (or a mandoline for the cabbage) · The tool that makes the chop
- Aromatics, salt, fat (full ingredient list ships with photography)
Method
The base is finely chopped cabbage, cucumber and chives
Half a head of green cabbage, one English cucumber, a small bunch of chives. That is the chopped base. The cabbage is the body and the crunch, the cucumber brings water and freshness, the chives carry a mild onion note. Everything else is dressing. No lettuce, which is the trick to a salad that keeps.
Chop to a uniform quarter-inch dice, this is the whole recipe
Quarter-inch dice on everything, as even as you can manage. This is the difference between a salad you eat with a fork and one you scoop with a chip. Stack and shred the cabbage thin, then cross-cut it small. Quarter the cucumber lengthwise and slice. Snip the chives fine. Uneven chunks will not hold dressing or sit on a chip.
The dressing goes in a blender, not a bowl
Greek yoghurt or mayonnaise, a big handful each of basil and parsley, the chives, lemon juice, garlic, olive oil, salt. Blend until smooth and pale green. A bowl with minced herbs leaves fibrous strings and uneven garlic. The blender pulls the herbs into a pourable sauce that coats every piece of dice evenly.
Soften the garlic in lemon juice before it goes in
Raw garlic blended into a cold dressing turns sharp and only gets louder over the next hour. Grate the clove, stir it into the lemon juice, and let it sit for 5 minutes while you chop. The acid takes the edge off so the garlic reads as savoury rather than hot, even on day 2.
Dress, salt, then rest for 15 minutes
Toss the dice with the dressing and a good pinch of salt, then walk away for 15 minutes. The salt draws a little water from the cabbage and softens that raw squeak into tender-crisp, while the dressing settles down into the dice instead of sitting on top. Served straight away it tastes raw and unmarried. The rest is not optional.
Serve it scoopable, with a chip or in a wrap
The point of the fine chop is that it scoops. Pile it in a bowl and eat it with tortilla chips or crackers, or spoon it into a wrap or onto toast. It also works as a side under grilled chicken or fish. A handful of toasted sunflower seeds or pepitas on top adds crunch if you want it.
Make it vegan: yoghurt to mayo, or use a cashew base
Vegan mayonnaise swaps in one-for-one for the yoghurt and keeps the tang. For a whole-food version, blend a quarter cup of cashews soaked in hot water for 10 minutes with the herbs, lemon and a splash of water until creamy. Both hold the same pale-green colour and coat the dice the same way.
Storage: it keeps 3 days, best if you store it dry
Undressed, the chopped base keeps 3 days in a sealed container in the fridge. Dressed, it is best within 24 hours and still good at 48, the cabbage stays crisp because there is no lettuce to wilt, though it sheds a little water you can pour off. For meal prep, store the dice and dressing separately and combine the morning you eat it.
Variations
Substitutions and adaptations land with the photography shoot. The method holds across most reasonable swaps.
Storage
Refrigerator: 3 to 4 days, sealed. Freezer: up to 3 months. Reheat covered to retain moisture.
Why we tested this green goddess salad: chopped, 20 minutes 3 times.
Every flagship recipe on this site goes through at least three rounds of kitchen testing before publication. We log what changed between tests so you can see the recipe's evolution, and so we can't quietly drop the failures.
- 01
Test 1
- What we tried
- Hand-chopped everything roughly, dressing made in a bowl with finely minced herbs and mashed garlic, dressed and served straight away.
- What happened
- Chop was uneven so it would not scoop onto a chip, the minced herbs left fibrous strings, and the raw garlic was aggressive within minutes.
- What we changed
- Moved the dressing to a blender for a smooth pour, and committed to chopping everything to a uniform quarter-inch dice.
- 02
Test 2
- What we tried
- Blender dressing, uniform quarter-inch dice, dressed immediately and eaten right after tossing.
- What happened
- Texture was right and it scooped, but the cabbage tasted raw and squeaky and the flavours had not married. The dressing sat on top rather than soaking in.
- What we changed
- Added a 15-minute rest after dressing so the salt could soften the cabbage and the dressing could settle into the dice.
- 03
Test 3
- What we tried
- Uniform quarter-inch dice, blender dressing, salted and rested 15 minutes before serving, garlic softened in lemon juice first.
- What happened
- Cabbage went from squeaky to tender-crisp, the dressing clung to every piece, it scooped cleanly onto a tortilla chip, and the garlic had mellowed. Held its crunch on day 2 stored separately.
- What we changed
- This is the published version. The 15-minute rest and the lemon-soaked garlic were the two variables that made it taste like the viral one.
Frequently asked
- Why does this salad keep when most salads go soggy?
- There is no lettuce. Cabbage, cucumber and herbs hold their structure for days where delicate leaves collapse within hours. Dressed, the cabbage sheds a little water but stays crisp, which is why the chopped base is the part you can prep ahead and the dressing is the part you add last.
- How fine do I really need to chop it?
- A quarter-inch dice, and yes it matters. The viral version scoops onto a chip because every piece is small and uniform, so the dressing coats it and it holds together on a spoon. Rough chunks fall off the chip and trap dressing unevenly. If chopping by hand feels slow, a mandoline handles the cabbage in seconds.
- Yoghurt or mayonnaise for the dressing?
- Greek yoghurt is lighter, tangier and adds a little protein, which is what we tested as the default. Mayonnaise is richer and closer to the original green goddess. Use whichever you have, or split them half and half, the herbs and lemon carry the flavour either way.
- Can I make the dressing ahead?
- Yes, it holds 3 days in the fridge in a sealed jar and the colour stays bright if you blend in the olive oil. The lemon-softened garlic means it does not turn harsh overnight. Give it a shake before using, as the herbs settle. Dress the salad only when you are ready to eat.
- What goes in it besides the dressing?
- The base is just cabbage, cucumber and chives, keep it that simple and it stays scoopable. If you want more, fold in diced avocado at the end, or top with toasted seeds or grilled chicken for a meal. Avoid wet add-ins like tomato, which release water and break the texture.
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