Thai Green Papaya Salad
Discover this authentic Thai Green Papaya Salad (som tam) featuring crisp shredded papaya, roasted peanuts, and a bold lime-chili dressing that brings street-food flavors to your kitchen.
The first time I made Thai Green Papaya Salad, I nearly doubled the chilies because I thought I could handle the heat. Spoiler: I couldn’t, and my eyes watered through the entire meal. But even through the tears, I couldn’t stop eating it—the crunch, the tang, the way every bite hit sour, sweet, salty, and spicy all at once.
Have you ever tasted something so vibrant it made everything else seem boring? That’s som tam for you. Honestly, this salad has become my go-to whenever I need to wake up my taste buds. It’s perfect for summer cookouts, Fourth of July gatherings, or any Tuesday when you’re craving something bold and refreshing.
The shredded green papaya stays impossibly crunchy, the roasted peanuts add a toasty richness, and that dressing—sticky with palm sugar and punchy with fish sauce—ties everything together in a way that’s almost addictive.
Table of Contents
Thai Green Papaya Salad Ingredients

| Category | Ingredient | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dressing | Garlic | 2 tbsp, roughly chopped | About 10 normal or 4 large cloves |
| Dressing | Bird’s eye chilies | 6, roughly chopped with seeds | Use 2-3 for mild heat |
| Dressing | Dried shrimp | 6 tbsp | Adds umami depth |
| Dressing | Palm sugar | 1 cup, grated and loosely packed | Light brown sugar as backup |
| Dressing | Lime juice | 1/2 cup | Fresh only, about 4-5 limes |
| Dressing | Fish sauce | 1/2 cup | Red Boat or Squid brand work well |
| Salad | Roasted peanuts | 1 cup | Unsalted, for crushing |
| Salad | Snake beans | 20, cut into 5cm pieces | Green beans substitute fine |
| Salad | Grape tomatoes | 3 cups, halved | About 400g |
| Salad | Green papaya | 500g / 4 cups shredded, tightly packed | 1 medium or 2/3 large papaya |
| Garnish | Thai basil leaves | 1/2 cup | Regular basil in a pinch |
Instructions
- Crush the peanuts. Place your roasted peanuts in a mortar and pound them lightly until they break into rough, craggy pieces. You want chunky bits that’ll add crunch, not peanut powder. Transfer to a small bowl and set aside.
- Build the garlic-chili paste. Add the roughly chopped garlic and bird’s eye chilies to your mortar. Pound them together until they form a rough, fragrant paste that makes your kitchen smell like a Bangkok street stall. Toss in the dried shrimp and pound just enough to crush them—you want texture, not mush.
- Make the dressing. Stir the grated palm sugar, lime juice, and fish sauce into the mortar until the sugar completely dissolves. The mixture should look glossy and smell intensely sour-sweet. Pour everything into a large mixing bowl.
- Bruise the snake beans. Working in batches, add the raw snake bean pieces to your mortar and pound them firmly. You’ll hear them crack and split—that’s exactly what you want. In my testing, I found that properly bruised beans absorb the dressing beautifully and lose their raw toughness. Add them to the dressing bowl.
- Crush the tomatoes by hand. Grab handfuls of your halved grape tomatoes and squeeze them gently over the bowl, letting them burst and release their juices into the dressing. This messy step is essential—the tomato juice mingles with everything and creates that signature som tam slurry.
- Combine everything. Add the shredded green papaya and three-quarters of your crushed peanuts to the bowl. Using two wooden spoons or tongs, toss everything together until every strand of papaya glistens with dressing. The papaya should look like tangled ribbons of pale jade wrapped in a shiny, speckled sauce.
- Serve immediately. Pile the salad high onto plates and spoon over any remaining dressing from the bowl. Scatter Thai basil leaves and the remaining peanuts on top. Serve right away while the papaya is still impossibly crisp.

Substitutions & Variations
Green papaya can be tricky to find, but don’t let that stop you. Shredded green mango delivers a similar crunch with extra tartness. Kohlrabi, jicama, or even shredded cabbage work in a pinch, though they won’t have quite the same neutral sweetness.
For a vegetarian version, swap the fish sauce for soy sauce or vegan fish sauce, and skip the dried shrimp entirely. Add extra crushed peanuts or some toasted coconut flakes for texture. After making this dozens of times, I’ve found that a tablespoon of miso paste helps replace some of that lost umami depth.
Can’t find snake beans? Regular green beans work perfectly. Just cut them into similar lengths and give them a good pounding. Long beans from Asian markets are another excellent option.
Want to add protein? This Thai salad pairs beautifully with grilled shrimp, crispy tofu, or sliced grilled chicken. Try serving it alongside a seared scallop citrus salad for an impressive seafood spread.
Expert Tips & Troubleshooting
Choosing green papaya matters. Look for papayas that are completely firm with dark green skin and white flesh inside. Any yellowing means it’s starting to ripen and will turn mushy when dressed. Asian grocery stores usually stock them near the tropical fruits.
Shred it properly. A julienne peeler gives you perfect thin strands, but a box grater works too. The traditional tool is a sharp knife used to score the papaya before shaving—Serious Eats has an excellent technique guide if you want to try the authentic method.
Mortar and pestle isn’t optional. The pounding technique is what makes som tam special. A clay mortar and wooden pestle bruise ingredients instead of pureeing them, releasing flavors while keeping textures intact. Food processors just don’t create the same magic.
Balance is everything. Thai cooking hits four flavor pillars: sour, sweet, salty, and spicy. Taste your dressing before adding the papaya and adjust until all four notes sing. Too sour? More sugar. Too sweet? More lime. My family’s favorite variation leans heavy on the lime with just a touch less sugar.
Control the heat wisely. Start with two chilies if you’re heat-shy. You can always pound in more, but you can’t take them out. Removing seeds reduces intensity significantly.
Storage & Meal Prep
| Component | Storage Method | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Shredded papaya | Airtight container, submerged in cold water, refrigerated | 2-3 days |
| Dressing | Sealed jar, refrigerated | 5 days |
| Crushed peanuts | Room temperature in sealed jar | 1 week |
| Assembled salad | Cannot be stored | Serve immediately |
Here’s the truth: dressed som tam doesn’t keep. The papaya turns soggy within an hour, and the magic disappears. For meal prep, keep all components separate and toss together just before eating.
If you’re prepping for a party, you can make the dressing up to five days ahead—it actually improves as the flavors meld. Shred your papaya the morning of and store it in cold water to keep it crisp.
Serving Suggestions

Som tam shines as part of a larger Thai spread. Serve it alongside sticky rice, grilled chicken, or larb for an authentic Isan-style meal. It’s also fantastic as a refreshing side to rich, heavy dishes—the acidity cuts through fat beautifully.
For a complete bowl meal, pair this Thai green papaya salad with your favorite protein. A chimichurri steak power bowl makes an unexpected but delicious fusion combination. Or go sweeter with a roasted sweet potato with pecan and maple on the side for a contrast of temperatures and textures.
FAQs About Thai Green Papaya Salad
What is Thai papaya salad made of?
Thai papaya salad combines shredded unripe green papaya with tomatoes, snake beans, peanuts, dried shrimp, garlic, and chilies, all dressed in lime juice, palm sugar, and fish sauce. The ingredients are pounded together using a mortar and pestle to release flavors while maintaining texture.
What is green papaya salad called in Thai?
It’s called som tam (ส้มตำ), which translates to “sour pounded.” Regional variations include som tam Thai (with peanuts and dried shrimp) and som tam poo (made with salted crab). Each region of Thailand has its own spin on this beloved dish.
Is Thai green papaya salad healthy?
Yes, it’s incredibly nutritious. Green papaya is low in calories but high in fiber, vitamin C, and digestive enzymes like papain. The fresh vegetables and herbs add antioxidants, while the peanuts provide protein. Just watch the sugar and sodium if you’re monitoring those.
What makes Thai papaya salad so unique?
The pounding technique creates a texture you can’t achieve any other way—ingredients are bruised rather than chopped, releasing juices while staying crunchy. Plus, the balance of sour, sweet, salty, and spicy flavors hitting simultaneously makes every bite exciting.
Can I make som tam without a mortar and pestle?
You can try, but it won’t be quite the same. In a pinch, use a heavy rolling pin to crush ingredients in a zip-lock bag, then mix everything in a bowl. The flavors will be there, but you’ll miss some of the texture that makes authentic som tam special.
Well, there you have it—a Thai green papaya salad that tastes like you grabbed it from a street vendor in Bangkok. If you give this recipe a try, I’d love to hear how it turned out in the comments below. And don’t forget to save this to Pinterest for your next summer gathering—your taste buds will thank you later.

Thai Green Papaya Salad
Equipment
- Mortar and pestle
- Julienne peeler or box grater
- Large mixing bowl
- Sharp knife
- Cutting board
- Wooden spoons or tongs
Ingredients
Dressing
- 2 tbsp Garlic roughly chopped, about 10 normal or 4 large cloves
- 6 Bird’s eye chilies roughly chopped with seeds, use 2-3 for mild heat
- 6 tbsp Dried shrimp adds umami depth
- 1 cup Palm sugar grated and loosely packed, light brown sugar as backup
- ½ cup Lime juice fresh only, about 4-5 limes
- ½ cup Fish sauce Red Boat or Squid brand work well
Salad
- 1 cup Roasted peanuts unsalted, for crushing
- 20 Snake beans cut into 5cm pieces, green beans substitute fine
- 3 cups Grape tomatoes halved, about 400g
- 500 g Green papaya shredded, tightly packed, 1 medium or 2/3 large papaya
Garnish
- ½ cup Thai basil leaves regular basil in a pinch
Instructions
- Crush the peanuts. Place your roasted peanuts in a mortar and pound them lightly until they break into rough, craggy pieces. You want chunky bits that’ll add crunch, not peanut powder. Transfer to a small bowl and set aside.
- Build the garlic-chili paste. Add the roughly chopped garlic and bird’s eye chilies to your mortar. Pound them together until they form a rough, fragrant paste that makes your kitchen smell like a Bangkok street stall. Toss in the dried shrimp and pound just enough to crush them—you want texture, not mush.
- Make the dressing. Stir the grated palm sugar, lime juice, and fish sauce into the mortar until the sugar completely dissolves. The mixture should look glossy and smell intensely sour-sweet. Pour everything into a large mixing bowl.
- Bruise the snake beans. Working in batches, add the raw snake bean pieces to your mortar and pound them firmly. You’ll hear them crack and split—that’s exactly what you want. Properly bruised beans absorb the dressing beautifully and lose their raw toughness. Add them to the dressing bowl.
- Crush the tomatoes by hand. Grab handfuls of your halved grape tomatoes and squeeze them gently over the bowl, letting them burst and release their juices into the dressing. This messy step is essential—the tomato juice mingles with everything and creates that signature som tam slurry.
- Combine everything. Add the shredded green papaya and three-quarters of your crushed peanuts to the bowl. Using two wooden spoons or tongs, toss everything together until every strand of papaya glistens with dressing. The papaya should look like tangled ribbons of pale jade wrapped in a shiny, speckled sauce.
- Serve immediately. Pile the salad high onto plates and spoon over any remaining dressing from the bowl. Scatter Thai basil leaves and the remaining peanuts on top. Serve right away while the papaya is still impossibly crisp.
