The first time I tasted strawberries warm from the sun, still dusty with field dirt, I understood why people fall hard for summer fruit. That memory hit me last Tuesday at three in the afternoon, when I needed something substantial but refused to turn on my oven in ninety-degree heat. That’s how my Strawberry Pecan Grilled Chicken Salad was born — out of pure stubbornness and a crisper drawer full of possibilities.
My grandmother kept a strawberry patch behind her toolshed in Ohio, and every June she’d send me out with a dented colander. I’d eat half before making it back to her kitchen, where she’d already have chicken marinating and pecans toasting. She never wrote anything down. I think she’d approve of where I’ve taken her rough blueprint.
This salad bridges that gap between her simple country cooking and the way I actually eat now — quick, intentional, never boring. If you’re craving more fresh combinations, my sweet apple broccoli salad carries that same unexpected harmony between crisp and creamy.
What You Need to Make This Recipe
The chicken matters more than you’d think — I use thighs marinated in buttermilk because they stay juicy even when I inevitably walk away from the grill to answer a text. Strawberries should smell like something, not just look red; if they don’t perfume your kitchen when you slice them, wait. The pecans get a quick toast in butter and brown sugar until they nearly burn, creating these sticky, craggy clusters that shatter against the greens. For another fruit-forward option, my cinnamon apple grape salad plays with similar sweet-savory tension.

How to Make Strawberry Pecan Grilled Chicken Salad
I start the chicken early, letting it sit in buttermilk and garlic while I prep everything else. The grill needs to be hot enough that the meat sizzles immediately — that sound tells you the exterior will char before the inside dries out. While it cooks, I whisk together something sharp and bright: usually Dijon, honey, and enough vinegar to make my eyes water slightly.
The strawberries get sliced thick so they don’t weep into nothing, and I always toast the pecans in a dry skillet first, then add butter and sugar at the end when they’re already fragrant. The greens go into a wide bowl — I use my hands to toss everything gently, feeling for when the dressing just barely coats without pooling at the bottom. The warm chicken gets sliced and arranged on top so it slightly wilts the spinach underneath. If this combination speaks to you, my simpler strawberry pecan salad skips the protein for lighter days.
Pro Tips
Slice strawberries just before serving. They release water within twenty minutes of cutting, and that juice dilutes your dressing into something sad and pink. I keep them whole in a separate container until the last moment.
Rest your grilled chicken under foil, not on the cutting board. Those five minutes let juices redistribute instead of running out onto your counter. The meat stays plump and actually absorbs some marinade flavor back in.
Toast pecans in a skillet, not the oven. You can smell exactly when they cross from golden to burnt, and you control the pace. Oven timing lies — I’ve lost too many batches to a distracting phone call.
My Secret Trick: I save a tablespoon of the pecan-butter mixture while it’s still warm and whisk it directly into the dressing. It emulsifies into something creamy and nutty that clings to every leaf instead of sliding off.

How to Store Strawberry Pecan Grilled Chicken Salad
- Store components separately in airtight containers in the refrigerator for up to 3 days — never assemble ahead
- Keep dressed greens no longer than 4 hours refrigerated; they wilt and weep beyond saving
- Grilled chicken stays moist for 3 days at 40°F or below; slice only what you’ll use immediately
- Toasted pecans hold at room temperature in a sealed jar for 5 days, or freeze for 2 months
- Reheat chicken gently in a covered skillet with a splash of water, or cold straight from the fridge — microwaving toughens it
- Do not freeze assembled salad; strawberries turn mushy and greens collapse upon thawing
Nutritional Benefits
This Strawberry Pecan Grilled Chicken Salad delivers serious protein without heaviness — the chicken provides sustained energy while the pecans contribute magnesium and healthy fats that actually satisfy. Strawberries bring more than sweetness; they’re packed with vitamin C and antioxidants that feel especially welcome during summer when my skin takes a beating from sun and chlorine.

FAQs
Can I use chicken breast instead of thighs?
Yes, but pound them to even thickness first and pull them off the grill at 160°F — they carry over to 165°F and stay juicier than if you cook straight to temperature on the heat.
What greens work best in this salad?
Baby spinach holds up to warm chicken without collapsing, and arugula adds peppery bite that cuts the sweetness. Avoid delicate butter lettuce; it wilts instantly.
How do I keep the pecans from getting soggy?
Cool them completely on a wire rack before storing, and never add them until serving. The sugar coating creates a barrier, but moisture still finds a way eventually.
Is there a dairy-free option for the dressing?
Swap the buttermilk marinade for coconut milk with a splash of lemon, and use olive oil instead of any butter in the pecans. The flavor profile shifts slightly tropical, which works beautifully.

Strawberry Pecan Grilled Chicken Salad
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Pat chicken dry and pound to an even 3/4-inch thickness so it cooks evenly. Rub with olive oil, then sprinkle evenly with garlic powder, 3/4 teaspoon salt, and black pepper. Let sit at room temperature while you prep the rest.
- Heat a dry skillet over medium heat. Add pecans and toast for 3-4 minutes, shaking the pan occasionally, until fragrant and a shade darker. Transfer to a plate to cool.
- In a small bowl or jar, combine olive oil, balsamic vinegar, honey, Dijon mustard, and remaining 1/4 teaspoon salt. Whisk or shake until emulsified. Taste and adjust - add more honey if your berries are tart, more vinegar if you want punch.
- In a large bowl, combine greens, sliced strawberries, toasted pecans, and red onion. Hold off on dressing until the chicken is ready.
- Heat grill or grill pan to medium-high (about 400 degrees F). Grill chicken 5-6 minutes per side until grill marks form and internal temperature hits 165 degrees F. Transfer to a cutting board and rest for 5 minutes - this keeps it juicy.
- Slice chicken against the grain into 1/2-inch strips. Drizzle half the dressing over the salad and toss gently. Arrange chicken on top, scatter feta over everything, and serve with remaining dressing on the side.
Notes
Conclusion
This Strawberry Pecan Grilled Chicken Salad has become my answer to every summer dinner invitation — impressive enough for guests, simple enough for Tuesday. The balance of warm and cold, sweet and sharp, never fails to surprise people who think they don’t like salad. For more grilled protein inspiration, my grilled chicken salad collection keeps expanding with whatever looks good at the market.
