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So, I have this baby-lettuce fantasy and then for Mother's Day my daughter gave me:
200 Super Salads by Alice Storey. I want to make every salad in the book! I also want to grow all the ingredients but I will spare you that obsession. It's enough I try to fulfill my baby-lettuce-dream.
I made a grand start on fixing the salads. Four today! And as far I am concerned - it's all Italian - even when it says it's Greek. The hallmark of Italian cooking? Fresh! And these all are!
There's the green salad. (You can see why I need a terrace of baby lettuces.) It's your basic - anything you please. Since I don't have a terrace of baby lettuces (yeah, I'm harping on that again), I turned to my fridge. I had spinach, "live lettuce," (you do understand that if I had my own terrace of baby lettuces - this lettuce would have a name), and watercress. Mixed 4 T olive oil with 2 T Chardonnay vinegar, 1T Dijon mustard for dressing and was done. This was a good start in making a dent in the book. When spring starts, I like green. It has been months since I looked at anything - so Mother-Nature green!
I also served the Greek Salad. It's basic but bears repeating:
Chopped chunks of: 1 tomato, 1 cucumber, 1 red bell pepper, 1 green bell pepper, a whole mess of kalamata olives (I never was an exacting person), feta cheese cut in chunks and a little parsley and oregano. Dressing? A dash of olive oil and a squirt of lemon.
And the next salad caught my eye.
And the next salad caught my eye.
Daikon, Carrot and Red Bell Pepper Salad. I shredded four carrots and thinly julienned the red pepper. I substituted Daikon sprouts for the daikon - because that's all they had in the store. I toasted 1 T of sesame seeds and threw it all together. For the dressing: 1t sesame oil, 1t mirin, 1t rice vinegar. Heat gently over low flame to combine. Cool and toss with the salad. Sprinkle with scallion and cilantro. (I used parsley.) There's little in the way of dressing which was actually very nice. It just moistened the salad. And that's all it needed.
And then the American requisite Potato Salad.
2 lbs. new potatoes, 4 oz bacon, 1t vegetable oil, 6 scallions. 3/4 cup mayonnaise (I used less), salt and pepper.
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Halve the potatoes and cook in lightly salted water till tender (about ten minutes). Rinse under cold water and allow to cool. Cook bacon till crisp. Slice some scallions thinly. Season with salt and pepper. Toss all (again - when cool) with the mayo. Top with some scallions, adjust seasonings and serve.
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Now, all I need is a villa with a terrace filled with baby lettuces. A fig tree would be nice.... and an olive grove....
Now, all I need is a villa with a terrace filled with baby lettuces. A fig tree would be nice.... and an olive grove....
Hi Claudia
ReplyDeletePerfect timing as these are all wonderful salads to eat during the hot summer! I grow herbs, tomatoes and peppers in large flower post so maybe lettuce would easily grow that way too? Maybe towards the end of summer I'll try .. it might be too hot now.
Have a good Memorial Day weekend!
Oh, this looks wonderful...but I completely understand your obsession! Every time I read something by Frances Mayes I long to be, do, travel, experience and just live her life...if only for a little while :)
ReplyDeleteFour salads in one day?! That's incredible. I want a terrace full of baby lettuces, too!! First I need to get a terrace :)
ReplyDeleteTerrace? Who has a terrace? I don't!
ReplyDeleteClaudia - your salad looks delicious!
ReplyDeleteOh I am totally liking the Greek Salad! Usually I do a simple green salad and, when in season, sprinkle some fresh berries in. I absolutely agree you need a "salad garden" :)
ReplyDeleteWonderful salads! I especially would love to try the one with daikon!
ReplyDeleteThey all look great, but that daikon-carrot salad really caught my eye. I love using unusual vegetables like daikon in everyday dishes.
ReplyDeleteoh man, I hear you. how wonderful it would be to have your own salad garden. and haha! high five on the fig groves!
ReplyDeleteThese salads all look just right with the warm weather approaching. There's no reason NOT to have a lettuce garden on your patio or porch or stoop. You can easily grow them in containers. What I'd like is that villa in Tuscany.
ReplyDeleteClaudia, all of your salalds sound and look delicious. The book sounds delightful. And a terrace full of baby lettuce sounds so serene.
ReplyDeleteI'll take a fig tree! OK, and an olive grove as well :)
ReplyDeletexox
All of these salads look great! I especially love the potato salad with bacon...yum!
ReplyDeleteOMG I have my eye on 2 of these salads, the second one and the last one! These look perfect for the summer, lucky you having a whole book full of salads!
ReplyDeleteLove it Claudia... a few figs, olives, maybe even a lemon tree. It's all Italian because you're making it! Happy Memorial Day.
ReplyDeleteLooks delicious! I love salad, lately I've been buying a mix of baby greens that also has fresh dill, cilantro and parsley in it. So good!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful salads, Claudia. I think I am part bunny, in my love for greens!
ReplyDeleteYes, a villa with fig trees would be a dream come true. =)
your salads look great! i love them in this warm weather. thanks for the inspiration.
ReplyDeleteoh, yum! your salads look delicious!
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