Chopped Salad

6 Reviews / 5 Average
Inspired by The Gladly restaurant in Phoenix, Arizona
↓ Jump to Recipe

I’m so excited to share my new favorite salad with you! This is one of those meals that you keep thinking about for days. And remember, that’s coming from someone who is not a big salad person (so you know this must be really good)! This Chopped Salad was inspired by the most well-known dish at The Gladly restaurant in Phoenix. I was there a few weeks ago for a conference and was immediately blown away by how good this dish is! All the hype was for good reason, and I hope you enjoy this version.

Chopped Salad on 100 Days of #RealFood

Want to Save this Recipe?

Enter your email below & we'll send it straight to your inbox. Plus you'll get great new recipes from us every week!

Save Recipe

Chopped Salad on 100 Days of #RealFood

Posts may contain affiliate links. If you purchase a product through an affiliate link, your cost will be the same but 100 Days of Real Food will automatically receive a small commission. Your support is greatly appreciated and helps us spread our message!

About The Author

39 thoughts on “Chopped Salad”

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




    1. The smoked salmon in this salad is perfectly fine to eat as is. It provides a lot of omega-3s, as well as several other nutrients, but it’s particularly high in salt. There are certain people who should stay away from some cold variety of smoked salmon, but that would need to be discussed with a doctor. – Nicole

  1. I really want to know how many calories this has. I did some slight substituting but need to have an idea to gage by. Added whole wheat pita bread as a side too

    1. For anyone else who might want to know. It is approximately 336 calories if you divide the recipe by 4 or 448 if divided by 3. A great way to count calories in a recipe is to log the recipe into a myfitnesspal account (just copy and paste the ingredients over, sometimes you can search the recipe and it automatically adds ingredients, and often credits the site too!). It is best to check the ingredients against the recipe to make sure they are correct and the correct measurement (more times than not they are but sometimes it gets it wrong, i.e. for this recipe it gave me buttermilk bread instead of buttermilk). It also gives you a panel of nutrient details, such as potassium, protein, carbs etc.

      I think though that if you are eating a predominantly or fully whole foods diet it really isn’t necessary to count calories. A better measure would be to ‘listen’ to your body if it tells you it’s full and stop eating. That is difficult for many to do after years of not eating consciously, so one may need to practice it. (I’m just learning this myself, but am also logging calories for the time being after illness where eating is difficult, and so this has been requested by my doctor.).

  2. Is there a replacement for butter milk, or a way to make it at home? I hate to buy it for only using that little bit..

  3. Made this tonight and it was super yummy. Heads up salmon haters: I really don’t like salmon but I thought I’d give it a shot since I can tolerate salmon as an ingredient in small quantities. When I make this next time I’ll omit the salmon or replace with a bean. I found myself picking the salmon out. I just really don’t like salmon and I’m ok admitting that:) But this is a keeper. The dressing is so simple but delish! I plan to make extra dressing as a dip for carrots and cucumbers!

  4. I’ve had this salad at The Citizen Public House in Scottsdale a couple times. It IS amazing. At home I just make the dressing by mixing homemade pesto with plain yogurt and maybe a little salt and pepper. Shredded chicken or smoked salmon both work well and sunflower seeds can also sub for the pepitas. The whole family gobbles it down

  5. 5 stars
    This is oozing with color, wholesomeness and arugula! (one of my favorite veggies). Plus, pumpkin seeds and raisins (which I carry in my bag to instantly rid me of the awful hunger pangs) are the icing on the cake. Divine!

  6. 5 stars
    Ok I just made this last night and OMG!!!!!!! It is so good. The dressing is amazing. I could bathe in it. I’m looking forward to leftovers at lunch today. If you’re reading this, MAKE THIS SALAD!!! :)

  7. Just finished dinner as I LOVED this salad! I didn’t even have smoked salmon and it was great. I was a little skeptical since the ingredients seem pretty basic, but the flavors compliment each other so well! I will definitely try it again with the salmon.

  8. I recently tried this salad at Gladlys and I’m still thinking about it over a month later. It is amazing. I’m am estatic to be able to make it at home. Thank you so much for this post. Yum!

  9. Any suggestions for a buttermilk substitute? Or other recipes that call for buttermilk to use the rest up? I hate to buy it because I never know what to use it for (besides pancakes, which we don’t really eat a lot of) so we always end up wasting most of the container.

    1. A good sub for buttermilk is putting 1 tablespoon of either lemon juice or vinegar in your glass measuring cup and then filling with milk to the 1 cup line. Let it sit for a few minutes, it will curdle, and you’ve got buttermilk. I never buy it separate. I don’t have refrigerator space for extra containers, and, like you, it would probably go bad before it’s completely used.

    2. MakeMine Cadburys

      You can purchase POWDERED buttermilk. You just mix up (with water) however much you need for your recipe! I find it in the grocery section near the rest of the baking and powdered milk items.

    3. Milk, regular milk will be fine in a salad dressing. For baking subbing sour milk (1 tablespoon vinegar or lemon juice) is essential because the acidity needs to react with the soda or baking powder to help it rise but in a salad dressing it is unnecessary. The buttermilk is just a taste preference (unless you want a little more acidity).

    4. Kefir will work as well. You can use the rest for anything you would use yogurt for. I love kefir it has more probiotics then yogurt plus good yeast. Its also super easy to make if you find you enjoy it.

  10. 5 stars
    This looks & sounds yummy. My husband & I both like any kind of smoked fish & I think this would be an easy meal to make when we are on our 3 month Motor-home adventure from Ontario Canada to Northwest Territories Canada this summer. We should have access to some freshly smoked fish at several stops along the way! Thanks for posting!!! :)

  11. This looks amazing…I just added it to my Plan To Eat planner for next week. (LOVE that site SO MUCH…a definite game-changer for me as a busy working mom!) Thanks for all you to help make eating healthy easier for me & my family.

  12. 5 stars
    Hi! This salad is famous here in Phoenix. We’ve been making it for some time – love it! I notice, though, that this version does not include the freeze dried corn (we use organic), which is one of the best things about it – a sweet and crunchy surprise. So nice to see our favorite salad here on our favorite site!

  13. any recommendations to sub for gluten/casein free? Quinoa? This sounds delish! I can’t wait to make but with our necessary substitutions :) thank you!

  14. This is my favorite salad from Citizen Public House in Scottsdale! To those who have never had it and don’t like fish, it doesn’t actually taste fishy at all, but I have also made it with shredded chicken, but it wasn’t as good. Can’t wait to try your recipe for it!!

  15. 5 stars
    I LOVE this salad, but the really funny thing is that I know it as the Stetson Chopped Salad at Cowboy Ciao in Scotsdale! Too funny, they copied! ;)

      1. They’re all Chef Bernie Kantak’s creation. He was originally at Cowboy Ciao, then left to open CPH, and most recently, the Gladly. Brought his famous salad with him! :)

  16. this sounds delicious! However we don’t like salmon. Would this be good with chicken or a white fish?

    1. I really think the smoked flavor of the salmon added a lot – so either smoked chicken or another kind of smoked fish might work as a sub!