Sandwich Lovers
Hand-drawn illustration of a green goddess chicken salad sandwich with multigrain bread, herb chicken salad, cucumber, tomato, sprouts, and avocado dressing.
Featured Sandwich

Green Goddess Chicken Salad Sandwich Recipe

Created by@sandwichloversOfficial

A social-ready herb chicken salad sandwich with avocado green goddess dressing, cucumber, tomato, and sprouts on multigrain bread.

Category

American Lunch ยท Social Trend

Bread

Toasted multigrain bread

LunchColdDeliAmericanEasy

Ingredients

Measured for 2 sandwiches.

Ingredient Note

Multigrain bread

Toasted multigrain bread gives the creamy filling enough structure.

Detailed Recipe

Time

20 min

Level

Easy

Servings

2 sandwiches

  1. 1Blend avocado, Greek yogurt, mayonnaise, lemon juice, herbs, half the scallions, salt, and pepper until mostly smooth.
  2. 2Fold the dressing into the shredded chicken with celery and the remaining scallions.
  3. 3Toast the multigrain bread lightly, then let it cool for 1 minute so the filling does not steam.
  4. 4Spread chicken salad over 2 slices of toast in an even layer.
  5. 5Top with cucumber, tomato, and sprouts.
  6. 6Close with the remaining toast, press gently, and slice cleanly for a visible green filling.

Recipe guide

How to make Green Goddess Chicken Salad Sandwich

This Green Goddess Chicken Salad Sandwich recipe is built for searchers who want a practical, repeatable sandwich rather than a vague list of fillings. It uses toasted multigrain bread with multigrain bread, cooked chicken, avocado and greek yogurt, then balances texture, moisture, and seasoning so the finished sandwich eats cleanly from the first bite to the last.

The goal is not only to assemble Green Goddess Chicken; it is to understand why the bread, filling, sauce, and bright layer work together. Use the notes below to adjust the sandwich for your kitchen while keeping the Sandwich Lovers structure intact.

What it is

Green Goddess Chicken Salad Sandwich is a american lunch / social trend sandwich built around toasted multigrain bread. The important idea is proportion: the bread should frame the filling, the main ingredient should be easy to bite through, and the final layer should add either crunch, acidity, or richness.

Because this version is measured for 2 sandwiches, it is easy to scale. Keep the same ratios when doubling the recipe so the sandwich still feels balanced instead of overloaded.

Why it works

Cooked chicken gives the sandwich its center, while Lemon juice keeps the bite from feeling flat. Toasted multigrain bread adds the structure, which matters as much as flavor because a good sandwich has to survive being picked up, sliced, and eaten.

Avocado should be spread all the way to the edges. That creates flavor in every bite and can also protect the bread from loose moisture.

Ingredient notes

Choose bread that is fresh but sturdy. If the bread feels too soft, toast only the cut side or inner face so the exterior stays tender while the inside gets a protective layer.

Cut or fold the main filling into bite-friendly pieces. Sandwiches fail when one ingredient pulls out in a single strip, even if the flavor is right.

Step-by-step technique

Prepare the wettest ingredients first, then drain or blot them before they touch the bread. Next, cook, warm, or toast each component just long enough to improve texture without making the bread heavy. Build from the sturdiest layer upward and keep slippery ingredients away from the outer edge.

After assembly, press the sandwich gently for a few seconds. That small pause helps the layers settle without crushing the bread or squeezing out the sauce.

Bread choice

Toasted multigrain bread is the default because it matches the filling weight. If you change the bread, match texture first: soft fillings need tender bread, saucy fillings need a sturdier roll, and crisp fillings need bread that yields before the filling pulls free.

For a cleaner cross-section, slice with a sharp serrated knife and let hot fillings rest for a minute before cutting. The sandwich will look better and eat with less collapse.

Substitutions

  • Swap toasted multigrain bread for a bread with similar sturdiness if needed.
  • Use a comparable amount of cooked chicken or another filling with the same bite size.
  • Replace avocado with a sauce that has the same thickness.
  • Keep a bright ingredient such as lemon juice so the sandwich does not taste heavy.

Make-ahead and storage

  • Prep fillings and sauces ahead, but keep bread separate until serving.
  • Drain juicy or pickled ingredients before storing so they do not water down the final sandwich.
  • Assemble close to eating time for the best texture; if packing, wrap tightly and keep chilled when appropriate.

Common mistakes

  • Overfilling the center so the first bite pushes ingredients out.
  • Letting wet ingredients sit directly on soft bread without a barrier.
  • Skipping seasoning on the main filling and expecting the sauce to carry the whole sandwich.

Serving ideas

  • Serve with pickles, chips, or a crisp salad for contrast.
  • Cut on a diagonal or through the thickest part so the layers are readable.
  • Pair with iced tea, sparkling water, or a bright citrus drink.
  • Use leftovers as a lunchbox sandwich only if the wet ingredients are packed separately.

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