Home Restaurants Yard House Salad Yard House Wedge

Yard House · Salad

Yard House Wedge

The Yard House Wedge sits on the middle of the menu of Yard House's Salad section at 610 calories per serving. It pairs 15g of protein with 18g of carbohydrates and 52g of total fat, and contributes 1080mg of sodium toward the FDA's 2,300mg daily reference value.

Moderate · 610 cal 15g protein 18g carbs 52g fat

What's in the Yard House Wedge?

At 610 calories per serving, the Yard House Wedge represents about 31% of a 2,000-calorie daily intake. On the macronutrient side, roughly 10% of those calories come from protein, 77% from fat, and 12% from carbohydrates — a profile typical of Yard House's Salad section. Sodium is often the line to watch with sit-down chain entrees, and this dish delivers 1080mg, or about 47% of the FDA's daily reference value. If you're watching salt, pairing the Yard House Wedge with a side salad (dressing on the side) and water rather than a sweetened beverage is the standard mitigation. Like most items at Yard House, the dish is built for shareable portions and is plated at restaurant scale rather than a strict single serving. Boxing half of it before you start is one of the simplest ways to bring the per-meal calorie load down meaningfully without giving up the experience.

How this fits a 2,000-calorie day

One serving of the Yard House Wedge supplies 610 calories, which represents roughly 31% of a 2,000-calorie reference day. That is a moderate restaurant-portion meal — generous compared to a home-cooked plate but not at the upper end of the chain's menu. A side salad or a smaller appetizer can round it out without pushing the day over budget.

The macronutrient split lands at roughly 10% protein, 12% carbohydrate and 78% fat by calorie share — a useful frame because raw gram counts often understate how much of a dish's energy actually comes from fat. Protein content is modest at 15g, so the dish leans on carbohydrate and fat to do most of the calorie work. Pairing it with a protein-forward side helps balance the plate.

Sodium clocks in at 1080mg, or about 47% of the FDA's 2,300mg daily reference value. That is on the higher end for a single restaurant serving. It still fits a normal day if other meals are light, but two restaurant meals in a row at this sodium level will add up quickly. Saturated fat is the other line worth watching at 18g — about 90% of the daily reference value — primarily a long-term cardiovascular consideration rather than a single-meal one.

Protein
15g
30% of daily reference
Carbs
18g
7% of daily reference
Fat
52g
67% of daily reference
Sodium
1,080mg
47% of daily reference

Allergen profile

Milk Eggs

The Yard House Wedge is flagged for Milk and Eggs in the chain's posted allergen panel. The dairy component is most often in the sauce, the cheese topping or the butter used to finish the plate; an unsauced or sauce-on-the-side preparation can sometimes reduce — but rarely eliminate — the exposure. Egg appears most commonly in the pasta, the breading wash or the mayonnaise-based dressings rather than as a stand-alone ingredient. Cross-contact in a shared kitchen is always possible, so when in doubt, ask the floor manager.

How it stacks up against the casual-dining category

Across the 33 Salad entries we track in this category — averaging 609 calories and 1,222mg sodium per serving — the Yard House Wedge at Yard House sits roughly 0% heavier than the category average. It also delivers 142mg less sodium than the typical Salad item we list, which is the more useful number if you're cross-shopping menus on the way to a reservation.

For direct cross-shopping, here are the closest Salad matches we track at competing chains:

Ordering strategy

If the Yard House Wedge is the entrée you want, the highest-leverage adjustments are usually the ones that change the surrounding meal rather than the dish itself. Because the entrée itself is moderate, you have headroom for an appetizer or a starter side without dropping into restrictive territory — useful for a longer dinner where the goal is to stretch the meal rather than minimize it. Sauces, dressings and finishing oils are routinely the largest hidden source of calories on a casual-dining plate; getting them on the side gives you direct portion control without changing the dish you actually want to eat.

Ingredients summary

Iceberg, blue cheese, bacon, tomato, blue cheese dressing

The bottom line

The Yard House Wedge from Yard House is a moderate entry on the chain's menu at 610 calories and 1,080mg of sodium per serving. Protein content is on the lower side for an entrée — pairing with a protein-forward side or starter is the obvious adjustment. Anyone tracking sodium specifically — including most people on blood-pressure medication — should weigh this dish against the chain's lower-sodium options on the same menu before committing.