Crisp romaine, juicy grilled chicken, and a creamy Caesar dressing make this salad feel complete instead of like a side dish pretending to be dinner. The best versions don’t drown the lettuce or leave the chicken tasting like an afterthought. This one lands in the middle: plenty of dressing to coat every leaf, enough Parmesan to give it a salty edge, and chicken that stays tender because it’s rested before slicing.
The dressing is built from mayonnaise, which gives you the body of a classic Caesar without having to fuss with raw egg or a blender. Lemon juice keeps it bright, Dijon sharpens it, and anchovy adds that quiet savory depth that makes Caesar taste like Caesar. Grill the chicken hard enough to get color, then let it rest long enough that the juices stay in the meat instead of leaking across the cutting board.
Below you’ll find the small details that matter most here: how to keep the lettuce crunchy, when to slice the chicken, and the easiest way to adjust the dressing if you like your Caesar looser or punchier.
The dressing coated every leaf without making the romaine soggy, and the grilled chicken stayed juicy even after I sliced it. My husband said it tasted like the restaurant version, only better because the croutons stayed crunchy right up to the last bite.
Save this Chicken Caesar Salad for the nights when you want crisp romaine, grilled chicken, and a creamy dressing that comes together in about 25 minutes.
The Reason Caesar Dressing Stays Creamy Instead of Going Thin
Caesar dressing gets trouble when it tries to behave like a vinaigrette. A little lemon and garlic are necessary, but too much acid without enough body turns the whole bowl sharp and runny. Mayo solves that problem here because it already has the fat and emulsification built in, so the dressing clings to romaine instead of sliding off the leaves.
The other common failure is over-seasoning the salad before you toss it. Parmesan and anchovy already bring salt, so the dressing needs a light hand at first. Taste it before it touches the lettuce. If it tastes bold in the bowl, it usually lands right once it coats the romaine.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Salad

- Chicken breasts — These cook fast and slice neatly, which matters because you want the salad to eat like a composed meal. If yours are thick on one end, pound them to an even thickness so the thin side doesn’t dry out before the center is done.
- Mayonnaise — This is the backbone of the dressing. It gives you a thick, stable base without separating, and that stability is what keeps the salad creamy after tossing.
- Anchovies or anchovy paste — This is the ingredient people skip and then wonder why their Caesar tastes flat. You don’t taste fish; you taste depth. Use paste if that’s what you have, but mince the fillets well so they disappear into the dressing.
- Romaine — Crisp romaine is the whole point here. Dry it thoroughly after washing, because even a little surface water dilutes the dressing and makes the leaves limp.
- Croutons — They give you crunch and a little toasted bread flavor. Store-bought is fine if you’re short on time, but use a sturdier one that won’t dissolve the second it hits the dressing.
- Parmesan — The salty, nutty finish belongs here. Grated Parmesan blends into the dressing and also works as a final shower on top; if you can, use a wedge and grate it fresh for the cleanest flavor.
How to Grill the Chicken and Toss the Salad Without Losing the Crunch
Seasoning the Chicken Evenly
Coat the chicken with olive oil, salt, and pepper before it ever hits the pan. That thin layer of oil helps the surface brown instead of sticking, and the seasoning goes on more evenly than if you try to chase it in the pan. If the breasts are uneven, press them lightly or pound them so they cook at the same pace.
Getting Color Before the Chicken Dries Out
Heat the grill pan over medium-high until it’s properly hot, then lay the chicken down and leave it alone. If you move it too soon, you lose the grill marks and risk tearing the surface. Cook until the first side releases cleanly and has a deep golden color, then flip and finish until the thickest part reaches 165°F.
Building the Dressing in One Bowl
Whisk the mayonnaise, lemon juice, Dijon, anchovy, garlic, salt, and pepper until the dressing looks smooth and glossy. If the anchovy pieces are still visible, keep whisking; they should melt into the dressing, not sit in little salty bits. Taste now, before the romaine goes in, because this is the point where you can adjust the brightness or salt without overworking the lettuce later.
Tossing at the Very End
Add the romaine to the bowl and toss just until every leaf is lightly coated. The salad should look dressed, not soaked. Add the chicken, croutons, and Parmesan after the greens are coated so the croutons stay crisp and the chicken stays on top instead of disappearing into the bowl.
What to Change When You Want a Different Caesar Night
Gluten-Free Chicken Caesar Salad
Use gluten-free croutons or skip them and add roasted chickpeas for crunch. The dressing and chicken are already gluten-free, so the swap is all about keeping that crisp bite on top.
Dairy-Free Caesar Style Salad
Leave out the Parmesan and add a little extra anchovy and lemon for more punch. You’ll lose some of the nutty finish, but the dressing still tastes layered and savory.
Make It a Bigger Meal
Add avocado, soft-boiled eggs, or extra chicken if you want a more filling dinner. Keep the dressing quantity the same at first, then add more only if the lettuce needs it; overloading a Caesar is the fastest way to lose the crunch.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store the chicken, dressing, and lettuce separately for up to 3 days. Once dressed, the romaine loses its snap fast.
- Freezer: The dressed salad doesn’t freeze well, but the cooked chicken can be frozen for up to 2 months. Slice it after thawing so it doesn’t shed as much moisture.
- Reheating: Warm the chicken gently in a skillet over low heat or in short bursts in the microwave. High heat dries out the meat and makes the salad taste patchy instead of fresh.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Chicken Caesar Salad
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Season the chicken breasts with olive oil, half the kosher salt, and half the black pepper.
- Heat a grill pan over medium-high heat and cook the chicken for 5–6 minutes per side, until golden and the internal temperature reaches 165°F.
- Let the chicken rest, then slice it into bite-size pieces.
- Whisk together the mayonnaise, lemon juice, Dijon mustard, minced anchovy fillets, minced garlic, and the remaining kosher salt and black pepper until smooth.
- Toss the chopped romaine with the Caesar dressing until evenly coated.
- Top with the sliced chicken, croutons, and grated Parmesan.
- Serve immediately with extra Parmesan on the side.