Chicken Salad Chick Copycat Recipe: How to Make the Classic Carol at Home
The first time I tried to recreate a restaurant chicken salad in my own kitchen, I burned through three pounds of chicken breast and still couldn’t figure out why mine tasted like, well, chicken salad — while theirs tasted like something worth driving across town for. That restaurant was Chicken Salad Chick, and the dish that humbled me was the Classic Carol.
Here’s the thing about that chicken salad: it isn’t complicated. There’s no hidden truffle oil, no chef’s trick you need a culinary degree to pull off. What makes it work is technique — the way the chicken is cooked and shredded — paired with a short, disciplined ingredient list. Once you understand both, you can make it at home, and honestly, once you taste your own batch, you might stop ordering it out altogether.
Key Takeaways Before You Start Cooking
- Chicken Salad Chick uses chicken tenderloins, not chicken breast, and poaches them low and slow for maximum moisture.
- The mayo of choice is Duke’s — a tangier, egg-yolk-rich mayonnaise that’s a Southern kitchen staple.
- Texture matters as much as flavor: the chicken is shredded almost fluffy-fine, not chopped into chunks.
- The “secret seasoning” isn’t magic — home cooks have gotten remarkably close with onion powder, garlic powder, salt, pepper, and a splash of apple cider vinegar.
- This base recipe is a launchpad. Once you nail it, you can turn it into half a dozen other Chicken Salad Chick flavors.
Step-by-Step: Making the Classic Carol
Step 1: Poach the Chicken Low and Slow
Place your chicken tenderloins in a pot with the bouillon cube and enough water to cover them by about an inch. Bring it to a boil, then drop the heat immediately and let it simmer gently for 10 to 15 minutes, until the chicken hits 165°F internally. Resist the urge to boil it hard — an aggressive boil toughens the meat, and toughness is the enemy here.
Step 2: Shred It Fine — Finer Than You Think
This is the step most home cooks skip, and it’s the one that makes the biggest difference. Let the chicken cool slightly, then shred it with two forks, a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, or a quick pulse in a food processor. You’re aiming for a soft, almost fluffy texture, not the chunky shreds you’d use for tacos. That fine shred is exactly what lets the dressing cling to every bite instead of pooling at the bottom of the bowl.
Step 3: Mince the Celery Until It Nearly Disappears
Grate or very finely mince your celery rib — you want crunch and freshness without big, obvious pieces interrupting that smooth texture. A box grater works surprisingly well here if you don’t want to dice by hand.
Step 4: Combine and Season
In a mixing bowl, combine the shredded chicken, mayonnaise, minced celery, apple cider vinegar, onion powder, garlic powder, salt, and pepper. Stir until everything is evenly coated — you’re looking for a creamy, cohesive mixture, not dry pockets of plain chicken.
Step 5: Chill Before You Judge It
Cover the bowl and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes, though an hour is better. Chicken salad is one of those rare dishes that gets better with a little patience — the flavors need time to settle in and marry. If you taste it straight out of the mixing bowl, you’re tasting an unfinished product.
Step 6: Serve It the Way They Do
At the restaurant, you’ll see this scooped onto a plate, piled into a sandwich on a croissant or wheatberry bread, or tucked into a lettuce wrap with tomato. All three are correct. My personal favorite is a buttery croissant with a slice of tomato — it’s indulgent without being fussy.
Make It Your Own: Menu-Inspired Variations
What I love about this base recipe is how easily it branches out. Once you’ve got the Classic Carol down, you’re one or two ingredients away from several other menu favorites:
- Dixie Chick: Add a tablespoon of finely minced yellow onion.
- Buffalo Barclay: Stir in 2–3 tablespoons of buffalo sauce and a pinch of cayenne.
- Olivia’s Old South: Add two chopped hard-boiled eggs and a couple teaspoons of sweet pickle relish.
- Sassy Scotty: Mix in finely minced jalapeño and a dash of cayenne.
- Cranberry Kelli: Fold in dried cranberries and slivered almonds or pecans.
- Fancy Nancy: Skip the celery, add halved grapes, diced apple, and chopped pecans for a fruitier, dairy-free take.
You don’t need to master all of these at once. Start with the Classic Carol, get comfortable with the shredding technique, and treat every variation after that as a fun weeknight experiment.
What You’ll Need
You probably have most of this in your kitchen already, which is part of the charm.

Chicken Salad Chick Copycat Recipe (Classic Carol Style)
Ingredients
Equipment
Frequently Asked Questions:
Does Chicken Salad Chick use mayo or Miracle Whip?
Mayo — specifically Duke’s mayonnaise, a Southern favorite known for being tangier and richer than standard grocery-store mayo because it’s made with extra egg yolks and no added sugar. If you can’t find Duke’s near you, a good full-fat mayonnaise will get you close, but the tang won’t be quite the same.
Does Chicken Salad Chick use real chicken?
Yes. The chain uses all-white-meat chicken tenderloins, gently poached rather than fried or heavily processed. That’s actually the backbone of the recipe — real, whole poached chicken shredded to a fine texture, not a chicken-based filler product.
Is Chicken Salad Chick actually healthy?
It’s a reasonable question given how mayo-forward this style of chicken salad is. The upside is that it’s high in protein from real chicken and relatively low in carbs. The trade-off is that mayonnaise brings fat and calories along with the flavor, so portion size matters more than the ingredient list itself. Pairing a smaller scoop with a lettuce wrap or side salad instead of a heavier bread option is the easiest way to lighten it up.
What are the different chicken salads at Chicken Salad Chick?
The menu includes over a dozen varieties built off the same chicken-and-mayo base, including Classic Carol, Dixie Chick, Buffalo Barclay, Olivia’s Old South, Sassy Scotty, Cranberry Kelli, Fancy Nancy, Fruity Fran, and seasonal options like Maui Mama and Southwest Senorita. Nearly all of them start from the same core technique you just learned — poached, finely shredded chicken bound in a well-seasoned mayo dressing — with different mix-ins layered on top.
Final Thoughts
Chicken salad has a reputation for being an afterthought — something you throw together with leftovers on a Tuesday. This recipe proves that reputation wrong. Get the chicken texture right, don’t skimp on the chill time, and season with a light hand rather than dumping in a packet of ranch mix, and you’ll land somewhere very close to the real thing.
Give the Classic Carol a try this week, and once you’ve got the technique down, pick a variation and make it your signature. If you make it, I’d genuinely love to hear how it turned out — drop a comment below, or share a photo the next time you serve it up. There’s nothing better than seeing someone else fall in love with a recipe you’ve spent time perfecting.
