Fresh greens and juicy orange slices are tossed on a creamy carrot ginger dressing to create this healthy and refreshing Japanese-inspired salad.
If you go out to a Japanese restaurant for dinner and order a salad, it will probably look and taste something like this. The salad I regularly get at my favorite local Japanese place certainly does, as did many a salad I've eaten out at various sushi and hibachi joints over the years.
I've been wanting to make Japanese carrot ginger dressing at home for a while now. I love that it's light and flavorful, and being made from carrots and ginger it's almost like a salad in and of itself. I could eat it with a spoon. Okay, I did eat it with a spoon. Just a few spoonfuls...not a meal or anything.
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Ingredients You'll Need
- Carrots. These are the base for our Japanese salad dressing. Choose very fresh, sweet carrots if you can.
- Onion.
- Ginger.
- Vegetable oil. Any neutral oil will work. Avocado oil, corn oil, and canola oil are all good options.
- Rice vinegar. Look for this in the international aisle of the supermarket.
- Soy sauce. Need to keep this salad gluten-free? Substitute gluten-free tamari or liquid aminos.
- Agave. This helps balance the acidity of the dressing. You can skip it if your carrots are very sweet, or if you just prefer to avoid added sugar.
- Salad greens. Use what you like! I used a mix of baby lettuces, but any variety of lettuce will work, as well as other greens like baby spinach.
- Orange. Use one large orange or a couple of mandarins.
- Cherry tomatoes.
- Avocado.
- Scallions.
- Toasted sesame seeds.
How It's Made
To make the dressing, simply place all of the dressing ingredients into a food processor bowl: carrot, onion, ginger, oil, vinegar, soy sauce and agave.
Blend the mixture until it's pretty smooth, keeping in mind that it won't get perfectly smooth because carrots, the main ingredient, are pretty hard and fibrous.
Assembly your salad ingredients: greens, orange slices, tomatoes, and avocado slices. Pour on the dressing, sprinkle with sesame seeds and scallions, and enjoy!
Leftovers & Storage
I recommend storing your salad ingredients and dressing separately, if possible. Kept in airtight containers in the fridge, the salad will keep for 3 to 4 days and the dressing will keep for about a week. The avocado will probably turn brown during storage, but will still be edible. I like to slice up a fresh avocado to serve with the leftovers.
Like this recipe? If so, please stop back and leave me a review and rating below if you try it! Also be sure to follow me on Facebook, Pinterest or Instagram, or subscribe to my newsletter for more recipes like this one!
Japanese Salad with Carrot Ginger Dressing
Ingredients
For the Dressing
- 2 medium carrots
- ¼ cup roughly chopped onion
- 2- inch piece of ginger, peeled and cut into a few chunks
- 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
- 2 tablespoons rice vinegar
- 1 tablespoon soy sauce
- 1 teaspoon agave or sweetener of choice, optional—you might not need it if your carrots are sweet
For the Salad
- 8 cups salad greens, I used a baby lettuce mix
- 1 large orange or 2 mandarins, peeled and broken into chunks
- About 15 cherry tomatoes
- 1 avocado, sliced
- 2 scallions, chopped
- Sesame seeds
Instructions
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Place the carrots, ginger, oil, vinegar, soy sauce, and sweetener, if using, into food processor and process until a thick paste forms. Stop to scrape the bowl down, and then continue running the food processor, drizzling in a few tablespoons of water if necessary. (see Note)
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Divide the greens among salad bowls and top with the dressing, followed by the oranges, cherry tomatoes, avocado, and scallions. Sprinkle with sesame seeds. Serve.
Recipe Notes
This is a thick dressing with some texture to it, so it won’t get completely smooth.
Heather burns says
Yum! My toddler and Inboth had seconds!
Alissa Saenz says
Awesome! I generally consider little kids to be the ultimate recipe testers. Glad you both liked it. :)
Melissa @ Insider The Kitchen says
This looks delicious, I like the combination of flavors.
Alissa Saenz says
Thanks so much!
Val says
We really enjoyed this. Fast, easy and yummy. Thanks!
Alissa Saenz says
Yay! I'm glad to hear that!
Caroline | RD-Licious says
I'm always wary of the Japanese dressings at the restaurants...I never really know what's in them. This is the PERFECT way to recreate it at home! This looks delicious and so fresh!
Alissa Saenz says
The first time I had a dressing like this I was convinced there was some type of seafood in it! I think it was miso.
Ben says
I’m looking forward to making this. In your food processor there appears to be onion or shallot but I didn’t see that in the ingredients. Is that an intentional omission?
Alissa Saenz says
That's onion - thanks for catching that! I've updated the recipe.
Elizabeth Mattfield says
Been trying to find this dressing in stores with no luck. This is a perfect reproduction of the restaurant one. Thank you!
Alissa Saenz says
I'm so glad to hear that!! I looked all over for it in stores as well before deciding to just come up with a recipe of my own. :)
Craig says
Thanks. Loved it, and super easy/minimal ingredients too. I had a some edamame beans in the freezer so I added them too. Delicious
Alissa Saenz says
Great idea to add some edamame! I'm glad you enjoyed it!