Chicken chow mein is probably already one of your favorite Chinese takeout dishes. This one-pan dinner is so satisfying with chicken, vegetables, classic chow mein noodles, and the best homemade chow mein sauce. Also, it’s way healthier than ordering takeout.

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I can’t wait to share this recipe for chicken chow mein with you because it hits all the marks!
Chicken Chow Mein
Chow mein is a traditional Chinese dish made with egg noodles and stir-fried veggies. We love adding a protein and our favorite is chicken, but you can try different meat or tofu. This dish is pan-fried so the noodles get a nice crisp to them and then tossed in a yummy sauce. Chow mein is perfect for those nights when you don’t want to dirty too many pans or make a big mess of the kitchen.
Chow mein gets its signature flavor from the thick, dark homemade sauce the noodles are tossed with. It’s the perfect balance of sweet and salty and makes putting down your chopsticks absolutely impossible.

Ingredients for Chow Mein:
- Chow Mein Noodles: Chow mein noodles are made with wheat and egg. They are very similar to Italian pasta noodles and have a wonderful bite to them. Most grocery stores carry dry chow mein noodles in the Asian aisle. But, if you are lucky, you will find pre-cooked chow mein noodles in the refrigerated section that can be thrown straight into your pan.
- Vegetables: Carrots, cabbage, green onions, and bean sprouts are the perfect combination of veggies to use for chow mein. However, they can easily be replaced with other veggies like bok choy, celery, broccoli, spinach, kale or baby corn. Feel free to get creative and use what you like or whatever you have hanging around in your fridge!
- Meats: Great quality chicken breasts are your best bet for slicing into chow mein-ready strips. If you like, feel free to swap chicken out for beef, shrimp or pork.
- Hot tip: Hosting vegetarians also? Use vegetable broth and set some of your noodles aside to toss them with cubes of baked tofu.

The BEST Chow Mein Sauce:
The homemade chow mein sauce is amazing in this recipe! Combine soy sauce, light sesame oil, oyster sauce, granulated sugar, cornstarch, and chicken broth to make the signature sweet and savory sauce that makes chow mein taste authentic.

How to Make Chow Mein:
- In a small mixing bowl, combine ingredients for chow mein sauce: oyster sauce, sesame oil, soy sauce, chicken broth, and cornstarch. Set aside.
- Cook noodles according to package instructions, set aside.
- Heat a large wok or pan. Add a bit of oil to the pan and cook chicken until it’s golden brown. Remove chicken and set aside.
- Add carrots, cabbage and pressed garlic and saute for a few minutes until veggies are slightly softened.
- Add chicken back to the pan, followed by cooked noodles and pour the sauce right on top. Cook for about 2 minutes, distributing all that saucy goodness around evenly.
- Add chopped green onions and remove from the heat. Serve hot!

We love recreating popular takeout recipes. Noodles are king in Chinese cooking! This Homemade Chow Mein Recipe is simple to make and oh-so-satisfying, these stir-fried noodles are sure to become a part of your weeknight dinner rotation.

More Quick Asian Recipes
- Chicken Stir Fry with Rice Noodles – Make this amazing dinner in just 30 minutes!
- Chicken Stir Fry– so much better than takeout.
- Beef Stir Fry Recipe with 3 Ingredient Sauce– So Easy- perfect weeknight dinner.
- Korean Stir-Fried Glass Noodles a.k.a Japchae– You will be going for seconds!
- Yakisoba Noodles Recipe– A Classic Yakisoba, made in one pan
Chicken Chow Mein with the Best Chow Mein Sauce

Ingredients
- 1 lb chicken breast, boneless, skinless
- 3 Tbsp oil
- 12 oz chow mein noodles, (uncooked noodles)
- 2 cups cabbage
- 1 large carrot, julienned
- 1/2 batch green onions
- 2 garlic cloves
Chow Mein Sauce
- 4 Tbsp oyster sauce, or added to taste*
- 3 Tbsp low sodium soy sauce
- 3 Tbsp light sesame oil, (not toasted)
- 1/2 cup chicken broth
- 1 Tbsp corn starch
- 1 Tbsp granulated sugar
Instructions
- In a small mixing bowl, use a whisk to combine oyster sauce, granulated sugar, sesame oil, soy sauce, chicken broth and cornstarch. Set aside.
- Cook your noodles according to package instructions then drain, rinse with cold water and set aside.
- Heat a large wok or pan with olive oil over medium-heat. Cut your chicken breasts into bite-sized strips and cook them in the oil until golden brown. Remove strips and set aside.
- Add carrots, cabbage and pressed garlic and saute for a few minutes until veggies are slightly softened and the cabbage is a bit translucent.
- Add chicken and noodles back into the pan. Pour sauce over the top and continue cooking all the ingredients together for another 2 minutes.
- Garnish your chow mein with chopped green onions and serve the noodles straight from the pan and piping hot!
Notes
*Oyster sauce can vary in salt content and if you use regular soy sauce rather than reduced, you will want to adjust the oyster sauce to taste.
Nutrition Per Serving
Filed Under
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Hi! I’m Natasha Kravchuk, a New York Times bestselling cookbook author, recipe developer, food photographer, and writer. Here you’ll find delicious, reliable recipes made with simple ingredients, plus easy step-by-step photos and videos to help you cook confidently at home.
Hi! I’m interested in making this recipe, but I can’t consume oyster sauce. Can I omit it, or is there anything I can replace it with?
Hi Zahra! You can try these substitutes: hoisin sauce, soy sauce and brown sugar or teriyaki sauce. Hope you love it!
Made this tonight. SO INCREDIBLY DELICIOUS!! Thanks so much for sharing.
Followed recipe to the letter and it was ABSOLUTELY DELICIOUS!! Very authentic Chinese takeout flavor. My family LOVED it!! This will definitely be in my recipe toolbox.
Hello, I am using your recipe to make the Kung Pao Chicken. Could I make the Chow Mein as a nice side addition without the chicken?
Hi Lisha, we love it with the chicken, but that should work!
My family loved this recipe, I should have doubled the sauce since I made more veggie and noodles so it was light on sauce. This was delicious and everyone went back for seconds. I didn’t have green onion so I sautéed a bit of white onion with the veggies.
Maybe a dumb question, but is this a good recipe to freeze? I want to make it for someone else
Hi Lauren! I haven’t tried freezing this to advise, I think you can without the noodles since some noodles freeze better than others so you can experiment with a smaller batch to see if it works well if you decide to freeze with noodles. The noodles will absorb some of the moisture from the sauce, if they are dry, you can add more sauce as needed when you reheat it.
Absolutely delicious and easy. Ingredients can be changed to your liking if you would want variety. We highly recommend this!
Thank you for the great feedback and for the note!
I don’t understand all the chow mein recipes with NOODLES! Chow mein doesn’t have noodles! It’s a mix of vegetables over rice. Can someone explain?
Chow means stir fried, and mein means noodles. Chow mein literally translates to stir fried noodles.
Do you not use any msg for in this recipe?
Hi Colin, we do not.
I am interested in making this dish, What brand oyster sauce do you use?
Hi Kelly! I don’t have a specific brand to recommend, I just purchase what I find in the asian grocery aisle at the store.
The Mama Sita’s Oyster sauce is the best so far that I have used and experienced.
YUM, Looks Delicious, is the noodles your using rice noodles?
Hi Lawanda! No, they are chow-mein stir fry noodles. I linked them in the recipe card. Click on the red/bold font, it’s a link.
My husband and I love it!! I did add extra sauce and used catonese egg noodles because it was what I could find. We are going to add double the veggies next time. Thank you for sharing!
Sounds like a great idea for next time. Happy to know that you enjoyed it!
Lacked flavours I followed it to the T I’m disappointed
Hi Selena! I’m sorry to hear it didn’t hit the mark for you. This has been a very popular recipe on my site. Did you change or substitute anything in the sauce, or possibly change the volume of noodles? I have found that adding too many noodles without increasing the sauce can make it seem a bit bland.
Do you have a picture of what it looks like please? Thank you
Hello Candie! Just open the recipe, there are some photos in the recipe blog.
Really yummy, used Singapore noodles as it was all I had and chicken mince which gave it great texture. Definitely a keeper 😁
This recipe is delicious. I absolutely love the flavours and the left overs!!!
I used a lot more cabbage and carrots than called for and it cooked down a lot so was great with the 12 oz of noodles.
It’s definitely a keeper! Thanks!
Hi Natasha…I found this kind of “one note”…one flavour if you will. I found it lacking seasoned chicken, a sweet element, a spicy element, and contrasting textures. I’ll continue to use your recipes…but this one I’ll throw some modifications in.
Hi Jeff! I’m sorry you didn’t enjoy it. Did you make any substitutions or leave out anything? You can definitely modify it to your liking to add more depth, sweetness, and spice.
Delish. I only had toasted sesame oil – so i used that. And i used a rotisserie chicken – partially cut it bite size pieces- partially shredded with a fork -i used only the white meat. Wish i had water chestnuts to add – bit i do have raw cashews -so ill add them before e i serve. Also didn’t use any noodles— who needs the carbs.
This is very good, but the prep time takes longer than noted. I am wondering about the amount of noodles. I used a package that was 10.5 ounces and it was a lot. I did not use all of them and the sauce would not have been adequate for that amount.
Hi Beth! For less noodles, you can go for 8–10 oz uncooked if you prefer more balanced sauce coverage rather than a full 12 oz.
Delicious results from this recipe. The family loved it! We followed the recipe, and it is perfectly flavoured.