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.
I apologize to all for my multiple comments of the same question! I didn’t see my 1st or 2nd comment after I posted, and now just saw it posted multiple times!!! Sorry! 🙂
Hi Natasha! I can’t wait to make this recipe tomorrow night! However, I couldn’t find the light sesame oil, or the chow mein noodles in the Asian Food aisle, and I went to a couple different stores! Do you have any suggestions on where I can find it? I did find Egg Noodles in the Asian Food Aisle…would that work? And if I can’t find the light sesame oil, should I just put on the toasted sesame oil at the end, right before serving? If you could help that would be appreciated! Sincerely, Stacey P.S. I love your recipes! Actually, made your Teriyaki Salmon tonight and it was delish!
Hi Stacey, You can also try purchasing it only. I found that local Asian stores usually have them in stock.
This was soooo good. I didn’t want to go to the store for the noodles so I used spaghetti. I think it’s the sauce that makes it so wonderful.
Thank you for your wonderful review, Becky! I’m so happy you enjoyed that!
my family rated this “better than the local take away” I am so glad i tried the recipe.
That’s just awesome! Thank you for sharing your wonderful review, Claire!
Very tasty. Definitely better than take out. Two things. I would add more cabbage next time and wait to add the garlic until I add chicken and noodles. Too easy to burn the garlic and no one likes burnt garlic.
Hi Sue, that sounds like a good plan. Glad you enjoyed the recipe, thank you for the review!
Love the recipe …great way to do an end of the week clean the fridge recipe..I actually make about 6 times the sauce recipe and freeze in small jars then pull one out the morning before I want to use …makes a really fast dinner if you prep everything the night before…
Thank you so much for sharing that with me, Lynda! We love fast dinners also, and this recipe is so perfect for that!
It’s delicious and super easy to make. I feel like this is more of a lo mein style dish since the noodles aren’t actually fried. Super yummy cross between lo mein and chow mein.
I’m so happy you enjoyed that. Thank you for sharing that with us, Brandie!
Really good- highly recommend! Added about 2 tsp grated fresh ginger, otherwise made as written. This is a keeper!
Thanks for the review and for sharing that with us, Julie!
What type of cabbage do you recommend for this dish? Green cabbage or chinese cabbage/Napa.
Hi Barbara, we used regular green cabbage. I bet it could work with another kind, but I haven’t tested that myself to provide feedback. I hope you love this recipe!
Excellent. I used 1 chicken breast and 3 eggs instead of 1 pound chicken breast. I also used 2 TBSP sesame oil and 1 TBSP chili/sesame oil. It gave is just the right amount of heat. Delicious dish, my son said it was his favorite out of all the stir frys I’ve ever made.
Wow, that’s a great compliment from your son. Thank you for the review and for sharing that with us!
Sorry Natashas, I still don’t know if I can make the sauce up ahead to take with me this weekend.
Hi Sharon, I think that will be okay to make the sauce ahead. I hope you love and enjoy it!
We had this for supper last night and loved it, much better than takeout. I’m going to my daughter’s this coming weekend and I was wondering if I can make the sauce (just the sauce) up ahead to take…we are doing a Chinese style meal. Thanks for sharing your recipes.
I’m so glad this recipe was a hit, Sharon! Thank you so much for sharing that with me.
This was sooooo good. I did mine with Shrimp and put in also straw mushrooms and baby corn. This is so good cold also. I’m obsessed with it. Next time I make it I’m going to use scallops.
Hi Denise, I’m glad you loved it! Thank you for the review.
Hi Natasha, I really want to make this recipe but my husband is allergic to shellfish. Is there any way that I can substitute the oyster sauce with something else?
Hi Tungalag, I haven’t tried this, but I’m reading that by mixing soy sauce and hoisin sauce at a 1:1 ratio, the result will be close enough to oyster sauce to get you by. I hope this helps.
Made the chicken chow me in tonight it was delicious. Family loved it. Thank you
Hello Elsa, good to know that you all enjoyed this recipe! Thanks for your good comments and feedback.
Hi is there any adjustment to the recipe if you use pre cooked chow me in noodles?
How many servings are in the chicken chow mein and how much is a serving size?
Hi Erin, this recipe serves 8 people. So 1/8th of the recipe.
NEVER, Repeat NEVER use Olive oil in a Chinese recipe of ANY kind, it will taste wrong (Chinese cuisine most definitely would not use it as it cant be used at such high temperatures required & would taste burnt).
Only ever use Vegetable oil for frying and only Sesame oil as a seasoning.
Thank you for the reminder and suggestion, Jezza.
We feed about 50-60 people at our home every sunday. I made this for the crew in Aug. 2021. it was a huge hit! Very delicious!! The computer did the math on how to mulpitply the ingredients :). I too added more veggies, broccoli,purple cabbage, celery etc. It is a favorite now. Thank you
I’ve been cooking asian cuisine for 16 years in a restaurant, and I must say her technique is quite good. Granted you’re cooking at home so certain things would be different than cooking in a restaurant but every step is correct. I thought we were gonna have a Gordon Ramsey situation.
Thank you for your good comments and feedback!
I have to say, when I first mixed the sauce and tasted it, I was skeptical, but after mixed in with everything it turned out so DELICIOUS! This was amazing and got the vote as a keeper from the family. We will definitely put this in our rotation. I did add fresh ginger to the sauce and loaded it up with veggies.. celery, cabbage, carrots, water chestnuts and baby corn. Yum, thank you! I just deleted all my other chow main recipies!
Thank you for trying the recipe, Janene. I’m happy to know that you enjoyed it!