Huy Vu Updated 3/16/22 Jump to Recipe
This is aneasy 3-ingredient green papaya salad recipe (Gỏi Đu Đủ Khô Bò) you can throw together in a few minutes. There’s no cooking required, just easy prepso you can get to snacking.
Green papaya and beef jerky salad is a lightappetizer, a great choice for a snack or appetizer. My mom says used to buy this from food carts in Vietnam. Students would swarm the food carts during lunch break. It was popular because of its affordability and great taste, even if students didn’t get as much beef jerky as shown above.
You can find this appetizer at some Vietnamese restaurants, but it’s easy enough to make at home. I really enjoythis version and the vegetarian version of this salad too.
Đu đủ by any other name (papaya)
If you don’t speak Vietnamese it might be a strange ifsomeone asksyou to eat someđu đủ.It’s just papaya though! My family has a joke with the same idea: whenever they getunappetizing papaya it’s inevitably dubbedđi đỉ, which is exactly what you thought đu đủwas.
How to buy green papaya
Green papaya is the unripened version of the orange papaya you see often in American markets. Buying green papaya is easy. A fresh one is green, with smooth skinand very firm to the touch. Older papayaswon’t be as shiny, and the flesh will be kind of soft, which we don’t want.
Green papaya does not ripen ifyou let it sit around. It’s picked green and meant to be eaten as is so if you wait too long it just goes downhill.
I found this papaya at a local Indian market for$1.50 per pound, which is about the same priceas ripe papaya. Sometimes you can find it for as low as $0.80 per pound. During the off-season, green papaya’sflavor is about80% there for double the cost.
You can find this in Southeast Asian markets. Vietnamese is a good bet, but Thai and Lao folks commonly eat raw green papaya like this so you can try at those markets too.
Above is the inside of a green papaya with the little seeds removed. My mom recently gave me a new slicer that she and a bunch of her aunties have been raving about. The one shown in the above picture is the Benriner Japanese Mandoline Slicer. Mymom has been using thissame one for over 20 years, all the way back since her restaurant days and its still sharper than the Swissmar slicerI’ve been using.
It cuts through green papaya like butter. It’s so sharp, in fact that a few of my aunties gave up mandoline slicers from fear of cutting themselves. This is nonsense, probably because they don’t know you can just throw on some cut-resistant gloves and you’re golden. You can use both the gloves and the cutting guard if you really want, but there’s no reason to avoid mandoline slicers altogether! If you have a boxed grater, you can also use this too.
Green papaya salad in other countries
This Vietnamese salad is thought to have originated in Laos, but is also popular in other Southeast Asian countries like Thailand and Cambodia. Many variations of this dish exist, even subbing out the papaya for other fruits including banana flower, pomelo, cucumber, and green mango.
There’s a popular Vietnamese version of the green mango salad with shrimp too (recipe coming soon!).
American beef jerky vs. Asian
If you live near a Vietnamese community, the easiest place to find the specific jerky for this recipe is in Vietnamese supermarkets. Some take-out only foodplaces near me in Southern California’s Little Saigon carry this too. This is often eaten as beer snacks, or to nhau.
Another place you can find this is in those Vietnamese-Chinese stores that sell preserved foods. The store setups look similar to American taffy stores, with large barrels side-by-side, covering the entire floor. You want the dry and red-ish looking one. There’s a sticky version, and a curry version of the beef jerky, which are good too, but not what you want for this salad.
If you don’t have Viet markets nearby you can get the kind of beef jerkyCostco carries too. The flavor is good, but the sheets of jerky are pretty thick, so you can cut the strips thinner to compensate. By comparison, the Vietnamese/Chineseversion is sold pre-cut, and has a slightly sweeter taste.
If you want more salad recipes, you can check out green goddess salad, Vietnamesemango salad (gỏi xoài), Asian sesame salad dressing, and Chinese cucumber salad.
Green Papaya Salad w/ Beef Jerky – Gỏi Đu Đủ Khô Bò
4.89 from 9 votes
This super simple salad of green papaya and beef jerky carries an intense flavor punch from the jerky and the dressing. Great as a side dish or a light snack.
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BY: Hungry Huy
Prep: 10 minutes mins
Cook: 0 minutes mins
Total: 10 minutes mins
SERVINGS: 8
Ingredients
- 1 green papaya ~2 pounds, shredded
- 1/3 pound beef jerky
- Thai basil cut into strips
Salad Dressing
- 1/2 cup regular sodium Kikkoman soy sauce
- 3/4 cup sugar
- 3/4 cup vinegar
- 1 cup water
- 5 garlic cloves thinly sliced
- sriracha chili paste, or sliced bird’s eye chiles (optional)
Tools Used
- Vietnamese peeler I’ve only seen this in Vietnamese markets
- Benriner mandoline slicer
- cut-resistant gloves
Instructions
Peel, de-seed, and shred the papaya.
Toss shredded papaya with basil.
Combine all dressing ingredients in a bowl and mix.
Top with beef jerky strips and dressing, to taste.
Boom!
Nutrition Facts
Green Papaya Salad w/ Beef Jerky – Gỏi Đu Đủ Khô Bò
Serving Size
0 g
Amount per Serving
Calories
182
% Daily Value*
Fat
5
g
8
%
Saturated Fat
2
g
13
%
Cholesterol
9
mg
3
%
Sodium
1209
mg
Potassium
220
mg
6
%
Carbohydrates
26
g
9
%
Fiber
1
g
4
%
Sugar
24
g
27
%
Protein
8
g
16
%
Vitamin A
361
IU
7
%
Vitamin C
24
mg
29
%
Calcium
19
mg
2
%
Iron
1
mg
6
%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.
Course: Salad
Cuisine: Vietnamese
Keyword: papaya salad
Did you cook this recipe?Tag @HungryHuy or #hungryhuy–I’d love to see it!