Posts Tagged ‘dressing’

Salad dressings

Saturday, August 1st, 2009

Salads are good, tasty, and most of all healthy! but what can offer us a better taste of the ingredients? What can combine best the vegetables in order to achieve an exquisite taste? the asnwer is THE DRESSING! don`t forget this (one may consider) small detail!!! It is the sprinkle of novelty that makes your salad one of a kind!

Here are some dressing ideas for making your salad the best! just choose the most appropriate!

1)Balsamic Vinaigrette

1/2 cup balsamic vinegar
3 tablespoons Dijon mustard
3 tablespoons honey
3 garlic cloves, finely minced
Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
1 cup extra virgin olive oil


Whisk together first 7 ingredients until blended. Gradually whisk in olive oil


2) Easy dressing (best for Caesar Salad)

1/2 cup freshly grated Parmesan
1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons olive oil
1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1/4 cup fresh lemon juice
2 garlic cloves
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste.

Combine all ingredients in blender or processor. Blend until smooth.Season to taste with salt and pepper.


3) Tsatsiki Dressing

3/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons nonfat plain yogurt
3 tablespoons fresh dill, chopped
2 teaspoons granulated sugar
1/8 teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon pepper
2 teaspoons lemon juice
1 cup cucumber, peeled and seeded.

Peel and seed cucumber and chop into very small chunks. In food processor blend half of the cucumber with all other ingredients. Stir in remaining half cup of cucumber. Chill or serve over green salad or chicken salad.

to be continued…

Salads, Different Purpose—Different Ingredients

Sunday, May 10th, 2009

The use for salads today actually goes far beyond the first course. We can break down today’s salads into four general types.

Appetizer salads —this is a light first course designed to stimulate the appetite. The body of this type of salad is greens in combination with other vegetables or fruit. The dressing is also light and tart.

A standard green salad with a light vinaigrette dressing is typical for this use. A fruit salad of tart fruits and a light, barely sweetened dressing is also appetite-stimulating. You may add a little seafood, since it isn’t filling in small doses. Nuts and cheese are heavier and you should use them in small amounts. If you’re disappointed in how your entrée turned out or there
isn’t enough to go around in generous servings, add more calorie-rich food to your appetizer salad to partially gratify, instead of just stimulate, the guests’ appetites.

You may also use a light salad as cleansing the palate, an old French tradition. In this case instead of a first course, offer it between two contrasting courses. The salad dressing literally cleanses the taste buds to prepare them for the next movement in your symphony of the meal. In this role, a salad should be especially light, usually nothing more than greens with a touch of dressing and a hint of pepper, and in minuscule portions to satisfy but a small bird’s meal.

Accompaniment salads—these can be heartier than appetizer salads since they accompany the main dish and complement its flavor as well as satisfy appetites. Marinated vegetables may also accompany the entrée and complement it. They go very well with a heavy, somewhat fatty meal. A sour marinade aids the digestion of oil and butter-rich foods. Remember how your stomach craves for pickle or sauerkraut to go with hamburger or a
Rueben sandwich? A fruit compote is also a good example of an accompaniment salad. It goes well with poultry or pork. Gelatin and aspic salads, although much less popular today than they used to be, are perfect examples of accompaniment salads. With the generous amount of sugar and
marshmallow that were so common in the 1950s and 1960s, they could do double duty on the menu—as salad and as dessert. But it is not fair to serve it as two different courses on the same meal. Some might notice it.
Main dish salads —these hearty salads can, and often do, take the place of the entrée. Main dish salads can include anything edible. Start off with simple tossed greens and just keep adding things. You traditionally serve these salads cold, but for improved flavor, serve them at room temperature. Some you may even serve warm. Many bean salads, for example, are best
when served warm.

Dessert salads —usually of sweet fruits or a mixture of sweet and tart fruits. Some cooks like to add gelatin for a firmer consistency. Sweetened whipped cream or toasted nuts are winning toppings. The expected presentation of dessert salads is chilled, even frozen, but their
flavor is far improved if you allow them to warm up to room temperature.

See more here: http://www.wizardrecipes.com/category/salads.html

What makes a salad a salad?

Saturday, May 9th, 2009
Salad

Salad

Salads consist of two parts. The body that can be any basic food, cooked or raw and the dressing (the fashionable term is sauce). The dressing is either applied just before serving or, if it is to marinate the ingredients, hours before. When you dress the salad just before serving, the dressing is meant to provide flavor and mouthfeel to the otherwise mild crunchy vegetables.

If the dressing is a marinade, it can take several hours or several days to alter the flavors, textures and consistency of the foods that make up the salad. Ordinary tossed green lettuce salads are considered passé in today’s food circles and
better restaurants. The trend is to mix unusual combinations or exotic, wild, even unheard-of ingredients. The new rule is, if no deaths have been directly attributed to a plant material and it looks out of the ordinary, add it to the salad bowl. Anything edible, from tiny flowers to furry twigs, flavorful to bland, bitter to sweet, has been, or at this very moment is being tried. Vivid colors, curly shapes and wispy, twisted textures are all in demand.
Some of the more established nouvelle cuisine ingredients include dried tomato, radicchio, chicory, fiddlehead ferns, all kinds of sprouts, arugula, mâche, dandelion, endive, sorrel, baby vegetables and baby greens, flowers and herbs.
Combined with the basic salad fixings, these ingredients create beautiful and appetizing plates with minimal additional work for the cook. But how to find them and how much they are going to set you back at the checkout counter is another problem. They are certainly not for the everyday meal.