Category Archives: Salads

A New Project Afoot: Winter Salad {CtBF}

WinterSalad

Last June, I finished a multi-year project of cooking through a cookbook (Dorie Greenspan’s Around My French Table).  Through the process, my cooking skills and recipe repertoire expectedly expanded.  Unexpectedly, as I compared notes with the other participants week after week about the recipes we prepared, my circle of friends expanded.  Through our shared experience, I met others from around the world who shared my passion for cookbooks and food and home cooking.  Even more unexpectedly, we found occasions to meet in person, bringing these friendships from the virtual world into the real one.

It’s been more than seven months since that project ended.  The friendships continued.  A handful of us joined Andrea, the Kitchen Lioness, in her Cottage Cooking Club, but many of us found that we missed sharing a common project and cooking together more regularly.  As 2016 kicked off, Katie, the Prof Who Cooks, jumped in to lead the charge and rally the troops to embark on a new project this week.  With “Cook the Book Fridays”, this group of cooking friends will start working our way through David Lebovitz’s My Paris Kitchen.  I am thrilled to have a regular date scheduled with my blogging friends again.

This week, we start off with a Winter Salad.  For this simple recipe, bâtons of Belgian endive are tossed with a thick Roquefort dressing.  Roquefort, a sheep’s milk blue cheese, has a strong yet smooth flavor.  It lacks the metallic aftertaste I find with many blue cheeses.  The bitter greens contrast with the creamy dressing for an interesting salad for this time of year.

I had some trouble envisioning how to cut the endive.  Cut it lengthwise, then lengthwise again?  I was assuming that all the layers would have fall apart with the first set of cuts. Fortunately, it made more sense as I went along.  Even with the root trimmed off, the first cut yielded slabs that could be cut lengthwise again to create the requisite bâtons.  Voilà!

Belgian Endive Batons

For the dressing, you mash the Roquefort into Greek yogurt, adding some zip with fresh lemon juice and some color with minced chives.  The recipe makes a generous amount.  I halved the entire recipe and still had half the dressing left over.

Roquefort Dressing

You really need to make this salad right before you eat it.  We didn’t finish it all, so I ate the rest for lunch the next day.  Not so good.  The endive became soft, and without its crisp texture, didn’t have the same appeal as the freshly made salad.

It might be sacrilege to suggest it, but this salad (and/or the leftover dressing) would be perfect alongside Buffalo chicken wings to enjoy while watching Sunday’s Super Bowl:  a French twist to an all-American event.  (Admittedly, the game won’t be tuned in at our house, though we will be enjoying chili and other Super Bowl appropriate snacks.  It’s not because the New England Patriots aren’t playing.  I’m just anti-football.)

If this salad sounds good to you, check out what my friends thought of it here.  Stay tuned every two weeks for my experience with another new recipe.  Due to copyright considerations, I don’t share the recipe on my blog.  You can find it on page 98 of David Lebovitz’s My Paris Kitchen.  Or feel free to drop me a line and I’ll share it with you.

salmon tartare {ffwd}

Salmon Cocktail Anyone?

The calendar says it’s spring. Outside, not quite, but I remain optimistic. Actually, it’s a little better than that. Howard planted peas in the vegetable garden last night, and this morning, I noticed the tarragon and chives have started to emerged from the ground.

Waiting for warmer weather means that I no longer crave the hearty comfort food of winter. There still aren’t any local vegetables available, but lighter meals are what appeal. This week’s recipe for French Fridays with Dorie gets a big check mark on that count. The challenge this week is Salmon Tartare, a savory parfait, where the presentation is almost as satisfying as the taste.

Salmon Mixture

Salmon Mixture

To start, three complementary “salads” are prepared. The first is sliced grape tomatoes tossed with oil and herbs. The second is diced raw salmon tossed with olive oil, more herbs, lime zest, scallion, and Tabasco. Finally, diced avocado is tossed with lime juice and zest, herbs and Tabasco. The final touch is the addition of supremed lime segments to the salmon mixture along with some more lime juice. (And, if you don’t mind supreming that citrus, try my mother’s famous Fruit Salad!)

Naked Lime, ready to be supremed!

Naked Lime, ready to be supremed!

The herbs called for were mint and chives, but because of the tomatoes and avocado, this dish screamed “Cilantro!” to me, so that’s what I used.

Tomato Mixture

Tomato Mixture

To serve, the layers can be formed in a ring that gets removed or a ramekin that gets flipped over. I chose to serve this in extra-large martini glasses. When I bought them, I didn’t realize that these festive glasses are larger than any cocktail that I can drink responsibly, so I was glad to have an opportunity to pull them out of the cabinet.

I served the salmon tartare for dinner. We both really enjoyed it. I made half the recipe, and the portions seemed generous for a meal, at least for us. In smaller glasses, this would make a fun appetizer alongside cocktails also served in smaller glasses than these.

To see what my Dorista friends did this week, check out their links here. To make it yourself, you can find the recipe in Dorie Greenspan’s book Around My French Table.