Category: Salads

Hail Caesar!..Salad That Is

Hail Caesar!..Salad That Is

Is your family like mine?  Are you met with a chorus of “Yuks or Ewwws” whenever you serve a salad?  Do you have to stop yourself from saying “eat it, it’s good for you” which would only make it worse anyways. Or you return home from the Farmer’s Market with basketful of kale or frisee’ or arugula (it looked so pretty at the market) and just as you are about to put it in the crisper you have that epiphany “what was I thinking, no one is going to eat this”.

Thank goodness for Caesar Salad.  It is quite possibly the only salad my kids and hubby will eat aside from Taco Salad or Chinese Chicken Salad.  Which, lets face it, are only called salads because of the tiny bit of greens at the bottom of the bowl usually buried by tortilla chips, cheese and guacamole or fried won ton skins and shredded chicken.

Do you use a bottled Caesar dressing or wait to you dine out to have a Caesar Salad?  If so, give this a try instead.  The recipe comes from the now defunct Gourmet Magazine (though it still exists online).  Caesar Salad Mitchell was a hidden gem I came across in the You Asked For It column. You won’t need raw or coddled eggs or anchovies.  It is really easy, promise, and has been my go to Caesar Salad forever.  Over the years I have tweaked the recipe by adding Vietnamese Fish Sauce and more recently, Shiro Dashi a Japanese fish sauce/stock.  Both pump up the flavor or “umami” of the dressing without having to add actual anchovies.  The Shiro dashi adds an extra element of smokiness that is delicious.

Ceasardressing

No eggs to coddle!  The dressing contains sour cream and mustard that add the creaminess and tang to the dressing.  I think you will like it.

The beauty of Caesar Salad is its versatility.  In its simplest form, romaine, croutons, Parmesan cheese, dressing, finished with a couple of  twists of black pepper, bingo done.  But for a more substantial salad add avocado, chicken or seafood such as shrimp or crab.  I have transformed it into a delicious pasta salad by tossing in some cooked penne.  Done, drop the mic and serve.  The dressing can be made in advance.   It comes together quickly if you use a hand blender but really doesn’t take much more time even if you whisk it by hand.

Ceasar

A Twist on Caesar Salad Mitchell

A delicious riff on Caesar Salad dressing that doesn't use anchovies!
Course Salad
Cuisine American, Mexican
Keyword Caesar Salad, cucumber salad, romaine
Prep Time 15 minutes

Ingredients

The Dressing

  • 1 large clove of garlic minced and mashed to a paste with a pinch of salt
  • 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice or to taste
  • 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 teaspoon Dijon-style mustard
  • 3 tablespoons sour cream
  • 1/2 cup olive oil
  • 1/4 teaspoon fresh ground black pepper
  • 1 tablespoon Vietnamese fish sauce optional but highly recommended
  • 1/3 cup Parmesan cheese grated or shredded

The Greens

  • 8 cups Romaine lettuce

The Toppings

  • Croutons as much as you like! homemade is nice, great way to use up that day old baguette
  • 2 tablespoons shredded Parmesan cheese for garnish
  • 1 avocado, sliced or cut into chunks

Instructions

  • In a bowl stir together garlic, lemon, Worcestershire, mustard, sour cream, pepper and fish sauce (your choice).
  • Slowly add the oil in a stream, whisking constantly until the dressing is emulsified
  • Stir in grated cheese
  • Add to Romaine and toss well.
  • Add any additional toppings, diced avocados, poached chicken or seafood..use your imagination!

The dressing will keep in the fridge for approximately 1 week.

    Summertime, summertime..Watermelon Tomato Salad

    Summertime, summertime..Watermelon Tomato Salad

    One of the best things about summer, besides long lazy days and warm evenings for leisurely walks; is the abundance of fantastic produce.  Juicy sweet peaches, nectarines, sun ripened tomatoes, all sorts of melons and berries so sweet they taste like sugar. Farmer’s markets are literally bursting at the seams with crates filled and with summer’s bounty.  The other day I came home with heirloom tomatoes with one thing on my mind, a recipe from my weekly NYT Cooking newsletter, Tomato Watermelon Salad with Feta Cheese.    When the kids are home, a watermelon lasts a day at most, cut and consumed just like that. Poof, gone.  But with just two of us at home, a creative twist is needed to help us finish an entire melon.  This salad is the perfect answer.  Juicy chunks of watermelon, tomatoes, cucumbers, slivers of red onion, salty feta cheese, a basil and a balsamic dressing, hmmm,  a perfect summertime salad.  Enjoy!

    **Don’t FREAK Out!**  The recipe does not have actual measurments!  Its pretty fast and loose.  Use a ratio of 1:1 watermelon to tomatoes.  4:1 for the watermelon to cucumbers (1/4 amount of cucumbers) and 8:1 for the red onion.  Really its to your taste and the amount you make depends on how many you are are serving.  The vinagrette is probably enough for a salad composed of half of a watermelon and 6-8 tomatoes. Crumble as much or as little feta as you like, it provides a nice tang and saltiness to the salad.  Variations:  Use mint instead of basil or a combination of the two.  Green onions instead of red onions or ricotta salata instead of feta.

    Adapted from the New York Times

    Summertime, summertime..Watermelon Tomato Salad

    Course Salad
    Cuisine American
    Keyword watermelon

    Ingredients

    • 1 seedless watermelon cut into 1 inch cubes
    • 4-6 ripe assortment of ripe tomatoes seeded and cut into 1 inch pieces
    • cucumbers peeled, seeded, cut into 1 inch pieces
    • red onion diced or thinly sliced
    • feta cheese of ricotta insalata crumbled
    • basil julienned

    Dressing:

    • 2 tbsp Sherry vinegar or balsamic vinegar
    • 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
    • salt and pepper to taste

    Instructions

    • Combine watermelon, tomatoes, and cucumbers in a large bowl. Sprinkle 1 teaspoon kosher salt and mix. Let stand 5 minutes. Meanwhile make the dressing. Pour vinegar into a small bowl, whisk oil into vinegar into emulsion forms. Salt and pepper to taste.
    • Drain excess liquid from tomatoes and watermelon mixture. Add onions and julienned basil. Mix lightly. Crumble feta cheese on top of salad and drizzle with vinagrette. Serve.