Archives for posts with tag: salad


Springtime rains mean that the earth is just bursting with green goodness.  Enjoy your leafy greens with this simple salad, enhanced with bright hints of purple cabbage, carrot and daikon and combined with an easy, tangy asian dressing for a big hit of fresh flavour.

Salad Ingredients

1 bunch rainbow chard, chopped
1 bunch spinach, chopped
1/4 red cabbage, finely sliced or grated
1 carrot, grated
1/3 daikon, thinly sliced into half moons
1/2 avocado, cut into cubes
1/2 bunch coriander, finely chopped

Dressing Ingredients

1 Tbsp tahini
1/4 cup olive oil
1/4 cup tamari
1 Tbsp apple cider vinegar
2 cm piece of ginger, grated
1 garlic clove, grated

Method

  • Combine all salad ingredients in the biggest mixing bowl you can find.
  • Mix dressing ingredients by hand in a small bowl or in a blender to get it really smooth. Add a squeeze of lime when they’re in season!
  • Toss salad and mix dressing through.

salad and vinaigrette by reya. on flickr

The Culprit: Salad Dressing

Stop what you’re doing right now, and go check that inner door of your fridge.  Have you got anything that looks like this hanging out there?  Now listen carefully.  Grasp it carefully between your thumb and index finger, and toss it in the rubbish bin.

A fresh green salad is a beautiful thing, and there’s no reason to douse it in a concoction of water, cane sugar, white vinegar, food acids (citric and #332), salt, fresh garlic, vegetable gums (#407, 410, 415 and 440), parsley and natural flavour. (Ingredients from Praise Fat Free French Dressing.)

A simple vinaigrette takes less than 2 minutes to make, and can pop with any flavors that you fancy.  The basic recipe is below, but please go ahead and experiment with different types of vinegars, oils, herbs and spices.  The possibilities are endless, the labor is minimal, and the taste is leagues above that of bottled dressing.  Vinaigrette is easier than instant.

Ingredients & Equipment:

  • 1 Tbsp mustard (dijon, seeded, honey mustard, etc.)
  • 2-3 Tbsp vinegar (white wine, red wine, balsamic, champagne, etc.)
  • 1/4 cup oil (olive, flax, sesame, avocado, walnut, etc.)
  • any herbs, spices or flavorings that you fancy
  • a medium sized mixing bowl
  • a whisk
Making vinaigrette steps 1-3
Making vinaigrette: Start with mustard, add vinegar, whisk in oil

Step by Step:

  1. Plop the mustard into a medium sized bowl.
  2. Add vinegar and whisk together with the mustard.
  3. Slowly drizzle in oil while whisking constantly with the other hand.  Stop periodically and whisk until well combined and thick, then add more oil.
  4. Mix in any other flavors you like – dried or fresh herbs, minced shallots or garlic, a bit of honey, a little tamari, etc.  The possibilities are endless!
  5. Toss with your green salad and enjoy!  This is not a hard and fast recipe, so adjust the quantities to suit your taste and the volume of salad you’re making.

Here’s a great use for those salad dressing bottles once you’re rinsed the contents down the drain:

 

I’ve been having a clandestine affair with spirulina. Just look at those curvy spirals! How could a curly-girl like me resist?

I thought the secret was safe from my long-time superfood lover, cacao, until I returned home from the office with a telltale smear of green on my cheek. Luckily cacao is a generous lover – she’s okay with my girl-on-the-side green goddess. So now I’m dosing my body and my tastebuds with both of these phenomenal food-medicines, and life is just one big dance of ecstatic pleasure. Who would have thought that algae could be so racy!

Look, I’m not letting cacao go. I’m still drooling over her gorgeously bitter flavor, her delectable rich oils, her tantalizing way of potentiating other superfood partners. I’m blissing out on her feel-good chemicals: her love-inducing phenylethylamine, chill-creating anandaminde, brain-balancing tryptophan and serotonin, and satisfyingly stimulating theobromine. And as a woman, I appreciate the way her massive dose of magnesium soothes my sensitive soul.

But I’m just not a one-superfood kinda gal. And green is my favorite color. So spiraly spirulina is my new lover, superfood extraordinaire. The number one reason I’ve fallen for her is an absolutely amazing protein content – we’re talking over 65%, which blows animal products out of the water. Not to mention this is a slaughter-free way of getting my protein, and is much more absorbable by my body. So don’t ask me again where I get my protein! Or my iron, for that matter. Spirulina gives me super-power energy, balances my brain chemistry, and innundates me with antioxidants, and then some. If that’s not sexy, I don’t know what is.

This little firecracker is not just for adding to green smoothies or juices anymore, either. I’m eating it for breakfast, lunch and dinner. I got a little inspiration from the fabulous video here: Courtney Pool of Tree of Life talking Spirulina Salad on Tim VanOrden’s Raw Running Project.

Spirulina salad! Who knew? I’ve been making awesome green cacao yummies for my darling for a while now, and sneaking teaspoons of the stuff into my own smoothies and juices, but on salad? Whoa now. Green on green. That’s madness.

Luckily I adore madness! So I gave it a try. Yeah, it’s freakin’ good. So good that I’ve been eating it at least once a day ever since. I even had a simple spirulina salad with chard, sesame oil and himalayan salt for breakfast one morning instead of my usual green juice! And I’ve discovered an even better variation: adding some maca. Wow. The possibilites are endless. Here’s my favorite recipe so far:

Maca-Spirulina Salad

Big bowl of iceberg/cos/romaine lettuce, torn into bite-size bits
Good drizzle of Olive Oil
Good sprinkle of Himalayan salt
Big heaped Tbsp Spirulina
Big heaped tsp Maca
1/2 Avocado, cut into small chunks
1 small tomato, diced

Mix it all up and enjoy the salty/sweet/creamy/tangy/umami/refreshing pure joy.

And yes, just like Courtney says, your teeth get all green and you get a lovely little green moustache. A bit dangerous to eat on my lunch break at the office, but they all know me as health freak girl anyway! Which they don’t mind, because I bring in lots of treats that they all agree taste way better than the usual lollies and baked goods, and they love the way these foods make them feel.

But raw superfood desserts are an easy sell. You’re just going to have trust me (and gorgeous Courtney) on the spirulina salad. Go try it. Right now. Life will never be the same.

Just make sure to thoroughly wipe your face after – or risk your new romance being discovered.

Isn’t it funny how many idioms in the English language have something to do with food? I suppose this linguistic phenomenon exists because food is such a central aspect of our lives. Not only do we, as animals, need to eat frequently to obtain the nutrients that we require for survival, but we, as humans, need to assign value to our foodstuffs and apply our creativity to nature’s produce. So here and there, food words have crept into our daily speak. People, objects and events are “worth their salt,” “sweet as honey,” or “the spice of life.” An unpleasant experience “leaves a bitter taste,” and gossip girls “share the juicy details.” We’ve got projects “on the back burner,” and, hopefully, clients “eating out the palm of our hands.”

It’s with the utmost appreciation of the possibility for irony that the quirks of the English language provide that I venture to share with you “what’s cooking” in my raw kitchen.

First of Spring Asparagus with Pink Pasta and Pesto

When the first asparagus of spring appeared at the farmer’s market, I nearly did a dance of joy right there among the roaming chickens and beautiful hippie children. What I actually did was snatch up a bunch of the slender stalks and danced a mental jig. I brought the beautiful babies home and did absolutely nothing to them – they were just too perfect and sweet and crunchy to adulterate in any way. I took some inspiration from Raw Chef Russell James’ gorgeous Purple Pasta and topped them with some zucchini fettucine dyed with beetroot juice and a great big mound of ad-hoc pesto, consisting of just about everything green I could find in my garden mixed with walnuts, olive oil, garlic, lemon juice, himalayan salt and nutritional yeast. The dish was not only beautiful, but also really fresh and comforting at the same time, and pretty easy to whip up.

Primavera Celebration

Also known as This is Totally Not Lasagne. I have a real problem with calling this raw dish lasagne, even though clearly some the inspiration comes from the baked pasta classic. But come on, what do layers of zucchini, fresh tomatoes, living marinara, nut cheeze, and vibrant pesto have to with the stodgy casserole? I don’t want to serve this dish and have my guests expect lasagne, and I don’t want you to anticipate any similarity except in structure. This is a rich raw dish, but it’s a celebration of fresh spring vegetables, not layers of starchy noodles and cheese and meat cooked into oblivion (no offense to lasagne – I used to love you). I made this dish because juicy, local tomatoes are finally back, as are the first of spring’s local zucchinis. And because I had brazil nut pulp left over from making the most creamy, amazing nut mylk to pour over my grawnola.

Middle Eastern Salad

Sometimes the best inventions just kind of happen. Yesterday was one of the first long, warm, sunny afternoons, the kind that really feel like summer. After taking the dogs to the park, I just really felt like bright, sunny Mediterranean flavors, and this dish seemed to create itself from there. The base is chopped beetroot leaves, but I’ve added almost as much fresh coriander (cilantro), lots of chopped tomato and cucumber, some grated beetroot, fresh spring onions, and a fantastic mix of ground brazil nuts with cumin, coriander, turmeric and tamari, all dressed with lemon juice and olive oil. The garnish is the eggplant bacon recipe from Matthew Kenney‘s book Everyday Raw. I could eat this all summer long.

Quinoa Sprouts

Not too much to explain here! It turns out that quinoa is incredibly easy to sprout. I followed a really basic method – soaked the grains overnight, then left them suspended in a fine-mesh collander for a couple of days, rinsing twice daily. By the third day they had these lovely tails and I stored them in the refrigerator, where they kept for about a week (I’d eaten them all by then). I ate them in just about every salad I had during this time, and they were delicious.

Sauerkraut

This is perhaps my best discovery in ages. A head of cabbage costs less than AUD$4, and it makes two big jars of sauerkraut that last for ages. It takes about ten minutes to make, and all it requires is salt and caraway seeds. Furthermore, it’s fantastic for encouraging healthy bacteria to flourish in the gut and really improves the ecology of the body. My inspiration came from watching Donna Gates on the Renegade Health Show – though I haven’t tried her method yet. The technique I used here is simple: finely chop a head of cabbage, massage in two tablespoons of himalayan salt and one teaspoon of caraway seeds until the cabbage releases a great deal of moisture (about 2 minutes), and then pack it all tightly into jars. I then left it to ferment for about a week, after which I stored the living sauerkraut in the refrigerator. Jayson says it tastes like the real thing, and he’s half Aussie German! Oh yeah, it’s pink because I added in a little bit of purple cabbage that I had left over, and it colored the whole batch. Amazing.

I love the great tradition of the French composed salad. The composed salad is about compartmentalization, about showing off the gorgeous simplicity of good quality ingredients without a lot of fussy tossing. Think the classic nicoise: lettuce, boiled potatoes, hard boiled egg, black olives, tuna and green beans, everything in its right place. The composed salad is to the tossed salad what Vermeer is to Jackson Pollock. It’s a detail thing: one about order and exactness, the other about explosive bursts of creativity.

As a lover of Japanese food, it occurred to me that the clean, sexy and somewhat restrained flavors of this cuisine lend themselves incredibly well to the composed salad form. What I’m talking about is more or less a nori roll, deconstructed. A gorgeous bed of greens, slightly wilted and lightly dressed in sesame oil, tamari and a touch of chilli, supporting an artful array of vegetables, finished with a mound of spicy ginger pate.

Don’t be alarmed by the seeming complexity of this recipe. It’s simple, really. Dress the greens, make the pate, and arrange. Done.

Just resist the urge to toss.

Salad a la Japonaise

Serves 2

Salad

6-8 large chard or spinach leaves, finely chopped (about 2 cups)

1 bunch bok choy, finely chopped

1/2 tsp himalayan salt

1/3 cup wakame (dry), soaked in water to cover for 10 minutes and drained

2 Tbsp sesame oil

2 Tbsp tamari

pinch of red pepper flakes

Ginger Pate

1/2 cup brazil nuts

1/2 cup sunflower seeds

1 cm square piece of fresh ginger

1 small clove of garlic

1/2 tsp himalayan salt

juice of 1 lemon

1/4-1/3 cup water

Toppings*

2 medium swiss brown or white mushrooms

1 Tbsp tamari

1/2 Lebanese cucumber, julienned

1/2 carrot, shredded

1 medium tomato, cut into small wedges

2 small handfuls sprouts, any kind
4 radishes, thinly sliced

For mushrooms:

Slice each mushroom in half, then into 1cm slices. Place in a shallow bowl and toss with 1 Tbsp tamari. Set aside to marinate for 10 minutes.

For salad:

Combine chopped chard or spinach and bok choy in a large bowl. Add a pinch of himalayan salt and massage for about 30 seconds, until the greens just begin to wilt. Add rehydrated wakame, sesame oil, tamari and red pepper flakes, and toss to coat. Set aside while you make the pate.

For pate:
Combine brazil nuts, sesame seeds, ginger, garlic and salt in food processor and pulse until grainy. Add lemon juice and water as needed, and process until fairly smooth (similar to hummus texture).

For assembly:

Divide salad into 2 large shallow bowls. On top of the greens, place a large scoop of the ginger pate in the center. Surround with individual piles of carrots, cucumber, tomato, sprouts and marinated mushrooms. Serve immediately.

*Use any vegetables you have on hand for the toppings. Thinly sliced red capsicum, snow peas, broccoli, daikon, gobo, or many other vegetables would go just as well here.