I feel like I’ve stumbled upon gold with this recipe, guys. This Roasted Broccoli Salad with Almonds uses almost all ingredients that I keep on hand, and is so good that I was literally shoveling it into my mouth as I was taking photos. Thank goodness the crunch lo mein noodles come in a really big bag, because I’ll be making this Roasted Broccoli Salad with almonds again several times in the next couple of weeks.
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Crunchy Noodle Alternatives
While I love what the crunchy chow mein noodles bring to the texture of this salad, I already know some of you will want to know what you can use in their place. If you just don’t want to buy chow mein noodles, you could use a brick of uncooked ramen noodles broken up, or if you’re looking to make this a little more low-carb, you can double the broccoli and just skip the crunchy noodles altogether. I wouldn’t suggest skipping the sugar in the dressing, though, because it is absolutely critical to balancing the salt and acid in the dressing.
Should I Use Fresh or Frozen Broccoli?
You can use either fresh or frozen broccoli florets, just be aware that fresh may take a different amount of time to roast. When roasting vegetables it’s always a good idea to keep an eye on them anyway, since the size of the vegetable and differences in oven temperatures can change roasting time quite a bit.
How Do Leftovers of Roasted Broccoli Salad Hold Up?
Leftovers of this recipe are okay, but it’s definitely best fresh. Luckily, this makes a small-ish batch. It will make four small side servings or two larger servings.
Goes great with: Easy Sesame Chicken, Pan Fried Sesame Tofu with Broccoli, Easy Orange Chicken, Sticky Ginger Soy Glazed Chicken
Roasted Broccoli Salad with Almonds and Simple Sesame Dressing
Ingredients
SIMPLE SESAME DRESSING
- 2 Tbsp neutral oil* ($0.08)
- 1 Tbsp rice vinegar ($0.12)
- 4 tsp soy sauce ($0.13)
- 1 tsp toasted sesame oil ($0.11)
- 1 Tbsp brown sugar ($0.02)
- 1 tsp grated fresh ginger ($0.04)
- 1/2 Tbsp sesame seeds ($0.04)
SALAD
- 1 lb frozen broccoli florets ($2.10)
- 1 Tbsp neutral oil ($0.04)
- Pinch of salt ($0.02)
- 1/3 cup sliced almonds ($0.67)
- 1 cup crunchy chow mein noodles ($0.32)
- 2 green onions ($0.22)
Instructions
- Make the dressing first to allow the flavors time to blend. Add the oil, rice vinegar, soy sauce, toasted sesame oil, brown sugar, fresh grated ginger, and sesame seeds to a small jar or bowl. Whisk the ingredients together or close the jar and shake to combine. Set the dressing aside until ready to use.
- Spread the broccoli florets out on a baking sheet. Begin to preheat the oven to 400ºF. Place the baking sheet with broccoli on the stove top as the oven preheats to allow them to begin to thaw. Once the broccoli is soft enough to slice, cut any large florets into smaller bite-sized pieces. Drizzle the broccoli with 1 Tbsp oil and and pinch of salt, and toss to coat.
- Roast the broccoli for 30 minutes in the preheated oven, stirring after 20 minutes. Sprinkle the sliced almonds over the broccoli after 25 minutes, and allow them to roast together for the final five minutes. Take the broccoli and almonds out of the oven and allow them to cool (5-10 minutes).
- Once the broccoli is mostly cooled, add the crunchy lo mein noodles and sliced green onions, and stir to combine. Give the simple sesame dressing another stir or shake, and then drizzle the dressing over the baking sheet. Stir until everything is coated in dressing. Serve immediately.
See how we calculate recipe costs here.
Notes
Nutrition
How to Make Roasted Broccoli Salad – Step by Step Photos
Start by making the simple sesame dressing so that the flavors have time to blend (this is actually a double batch pictured). In a jar or bowl combine 2 Tbsp neutral or light oil (I used canola), 1 Tbsp rice vinegar, 4 tsp soy sauce, 1 tsp toasted sesame oil (pictured on right), 1 Tbsp brown sugar, 1 tsp freshly grated ginger, and 1/2 Tbsp sesame seeds. Whisk the ingredients together or place a lid on the jar and shake until combined. Set the dressing aside.
Spread 1 lb. of frozen broccoli florets out on a baking sheet. Begin to preheat the oven to 400ºF. Place the baking sheet with the broccoli on the stove as the oven preheats so that they can begin to thaw. Once they’re soft enough to cut, slice any larger florets into smaller bite-sized pieces. Drizzle the broccoli with 1 Tbsp oil and toss to coat. Add a pinch of salt to the broccoli.
Roast the broccoli florets for 30 minutes total, stirring after 20 minutes, and adding 1/3 cup sliced almonds after about 25 minutes (roast the almonds with the broccoli for the last five minutes). Allow the broccoli to cool for 5-10 minutes.
Add 1 cup crunchy chow mein noodles and two sliced green onions, and stir to combine.
This is what the noodles look like, if you’re looking for them in the store. It’s quite a large bag, but I plan to make this salad again and again. :) If you have any other favorite recipes that you like to use these for, please share in the comments below!
Finally, give the dressing one last stir or shake, then drizzle it over the salad. Stir until everything is coated in the dressing.
And that’s it! This Roasted Broccoli Salad with Almonds is ready to devour!
Made this tonight for dinner. It was great! I marinated chicken in the dressing and made another round for the broccoli. We didn’t do the noodles but my husband added rice to his. You’re right – the brown sugar is key. Delicious, easy, and cheap. Thanks!
This was amazing. I’m not a huge fan of broccoli, but the dressing and chow mein noodles made it delicious. I sliced whole almonds because I don’t keep pre-sliced almonds on hand (and they’re more expensive). I doubled the recipe, so we had leftovers. The noodles got soggy, so next time I’ll just serve them on the side.
I think that I will use this dressing on everything! I found out (too late) that there wasn’t enough broccoli in the house for the recipe. I used the tiny bit of broccoli that I had and mixed it into pasta with the dressing and the the family loved it.
Fantastic. I wanted to eat just this for dinner. I don’t cook with almonds much, but now I might start. When I got home, I realized my chow mein noodles were stale (oops) so I threw them into the pan with the almonds and if anything, that made it better.
I made this as a dinner for two. My boyfriend had high praise.
Is it correct, that this recipe is using the noodles more or less uncooked for crunchiness? I’m just not sure, whether I understood it correctly.
Yes, that type of chow mein noodle is fried, so they can’t be boiled like a regular noodle. They’re almost like a fried cracker texture. You can see a photo of the package down toward the end of the step by step photos after the recipe.
Thanks.
So easy and so flavorful thank you!!!
Extremely delicious!
Can you tell me when you posted this so I can get the nutritional info to know the total carbs so I know how much I insulin. to give? I couldn’t find it any where at the top, if it’s up there you can tell me that and I’ll go hunt down the nutritional Info. But sometimes I go blind and don’t see anything that’s right in front of me 🤦🏼♀️🤦🏼♀️
Hi Mary! We’re working our way back from the newest posts to the older posts. This was posted in 2017 so we’ll get here as soon as we can! Until then you can input it into your go to online calculator that you use.
Super good!! :) To reduce calories I used 20oz broccoli, half of the crunchies & about 2/3 or the dressing. Tossed it in a Tupperware instead of on the pan.
I’ve been inspired by your Vegetarian Challenge! I’m not quite ready to go veggie (I’m going to try Meatless Mondays!) but I definitely need more green things in my diet. This salad will on my table tonight and I’ve grabbed a few others for the rest of the week! I love your site!
Thank you! And I’m glad you’re doing a Meatless Monday! :)
I’ve made this a few times, incredibly delicious!
This one is SO good! The first time I made it, I meant to portion it out for later, but just ended up eating a big bowl full in front of the television that day… I like pairing it with the chili garlic tofu snagged from one of your bowl recipes, it makes for the best lunch!
Hahah, story of my life. :)
Hi Beth,
I noticed that reviewers are commenting about the Broccoli-Sesame salad dish being soggy. Maybe they are not thawing/draining frozen veg in a colander and patting it dry before applying the oil. Perhaps, if a note is attached at the end of the recipe, that may eliminate the problem. Personally, I use fresh in the recipe and do not have any isssues, other that making sure the broccoli is overdone. I’ve also tried it on the grill, preheated, medium-high heat for about 15 minutes and the results is great. Also, the tasty dressing is my go-to for broccoli or green bean sides. Keep up the good work!.
Love this recipe! I typically double the dressing for this as I like to put the broccoli over a bit of rice to make it a bit more filling. Also you can modify the dressing pretty easily to make a quick marinade for some chicken to go with it! I have made this for guests and each person has asked for the recipe. A +
Love! Love! Love! this recipe. Tastes just like a restaurant quality, but I made it at home! So good!
SOOO good!! Love this recipe!
Followed the recipe to a T, but the broccoli turned out soggy, presumably because of all the ice that was on it. It was nearly inedible so we ended up tossing it.
Came out great! Grilled up a couple chicken breasts, cubed them up, and tossed them in for a full meal. The only thing I’d change next time is adding the crunchy noodles to each bowl individually since the leftovers I’m currently eating are nowhere near as good since the noodles are now all soggy.
This looks yummy! The only other thing I’ve used Chow mein noodles for is a topping in Hawaiian haystacks (you know, rice, cream of chicken sauce, chicken, pineapple, shredded coconut, Chow mein noodles, green onions (some times tomatoes and olives)….maybe it’s a regional thing…good for big get togethers cuz everyone builds their own.)
This is a winner! I have made it twice now and my husband enjoys it, too.
This was amazing! I paired it with rice and sticky ginger chicken and put it all in a bowl. My daughter asked for seconds of broccoli and loved the chicken and she doesn’t like chicken. Next time I will use 1.5 lb of frozen broccoli with the same amount of dressing since the broccoli cooks down so much. We were all left wanting more broccoli.
Meant to give it a 5 start rating!
This was a winner! I plan to make it again next week.
This was lunch today. I thought I would not be able to eat the whole pan. I not only did that, but I swear I’m going to be dreaming about that salad till I make it again. Thank you for the new addition to my recipe box! (I can only rate this five stars?! It needs, like, 10… of course, that won’t be enough either, lol)
I’ve made this twice already and love it!!
This looks delicious! It’s now next on my to make list. I just made your Vegetarian NOT Fried Rice last night so I have to eat the leftovers first. That was yummy as well. Thanks for all the recipes.
This looks delicious and super fresh =)
In the introduction you say lo mein, but in the instructions and pictures say chow mein.
Thanks for catching that! Fixing now. :)
Looking forward to trying this! I use chow mein noodles as a crunchy topping for casseroles, or an addition to tossed salad. Sometimes I do a stir-fry with lots of veggies and a protein, but either serve just a small amount of rice or skip it entirely, and just sprinkle some of the dry noodles on top. That’s if my husband doesn’t eat them all first (he loves to just eat them plain as a crunchy snack). I suppose they could be added to Chex-mix type snacks, too.
There are some cookie and candy recipes, too, which have been around for ages. I remember something called Haystacks which was chocolate and dry noodles mixed together. They are good and used to be much better, I think, when I was a kid. High calorie and nutritionally nil but, like potato chips, they add a lot of texture and fun to a dish. When I use them in a recipe, I’ll probably have to measure the noodles so as not to use too much. That’s a good idea to have less rice when using them. I’m trying hard to get more vegetables in my diet and maybe the noodles will help.
Just google chow mien noodles and I’m sure you’ll find lots of recipe. They are popular in retro recipes from the Baby Boomer era and the 70s because the noodles, soy sauce, rice and fortune cookies meant automatic Oriental as well as being among the among the few Asian ingredients available in regular supermarkets. Nowadays, of course, we’re lucky to have many more authentic ingredients in grocery stores but before about the last twenty and thirty years you had to have access to Asian markets to find them. I love retro recipes, myself, and believe strongly in eating what appeals to you rather than being strictly authentic. I’d say if it tastes good to you then eat it at least in moderation or as a treat now and then.
This recipe is just in time. Broccoli is a vegetable that I feel is I should eat but don’t really like. I have a bag of it which I was just trying to decide whether or not to take to the food bank. This is worth a try. I know you’ve published a couple of skillet recipes with broccoli which sound good but I’m single my freezer is very small and rather full at the moment so I don’t want a lot of leftovers at the moment so this sounds worth a try. Thanks.
YESSS!
Long time reader, first time commenter ;)
I also had pretty much all these ingredients in my pantry already, so this was a revelation. Such a great upgrade on my already-great staple of roasted broccoli.
One thing I didn’t have was brown sugar (ran out at Easter, oops) so I used honey instead. I bet brown sugar would be better but honey worked in a pinch.
You could probably use chow mein noodles instead of ramen in your crunchy Chinese chicken salad.
Yummy. I LOVE broccoli!!! :-)