Salad Dressing
Radicchio, Grapefruit and Spinach Salad
Light, refreshing and beautiful.
Chinese Noodle and Chicken or Turkey Salad
Leftover roasted chicken or turkey makes this rendition of a popular salad a snap to prepare. It's made spicy by combining chilies with linguine, green onions, snow peas, cilantro and a peanut dressing.
Roquefort Dressing
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Cucumber, Radish, and Red Onion Salad
This recipe was created to accompany Grilled Cheese with Smoked Turkey and Avocado.
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Bacon and Lettuce Salad
Active time: 20 min Start to finish: 20 min
Papaya Seed Dressing
Subscribing to the theory that epicurean cooking should, ideally, be easy and inexpensive, I submit this recipe, which I obtained during the summer I taught school on Guam. It's for a dressing of mine that is excellent on fruit salads and even makes an outstanding dressing for coleslaw as part of a summer picnic.
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Fresh Fig, Prosciutto, and Arugula Salad with Parmesan Shavings
This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Potato, Corn, and Cherry Tomato Salad with Basil Dressing
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Easy Caesar Dressing
This recipe was created to prepare Bacon and Blue Cheese Salad with Caesar Dressing .
This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Herbfarm Vinaigrette
When you compose a gorgeous salad brimming with the freshest greens, herbs, and flowers, the best choice of dressing is a simple vinaigrette with a fairly neutral flavor that gently blends with the flavors of the salad ingredients instead of overriding them. The key is to use good-quality vinegar and olive oil. I use two kinds of vinegar: a good red wine vinegar or aged sherry vinegar for crispness, and a smaller amount of balsamic for its full body and touch of sweetness. You don't need to use the precious old balsamico tradizionale, but its best to stay away from the very low priced brands. This recipe has a slightly higher than average proportion of vinegar to oil to help balance assertively flavored greens. When it comes to choosing the right oil, try to find a first-rate extra-virgin olive oil with a mild flavor, not a brand that's powerfully fruity. You don't want the oil to jump out as the predominant flavor. The exception is when many of your greens are very bitter or hot, like mustard, radicchio, peppercress, or endive, in which case a very fruity olive oil will balance and tone down their aggressiveness.
If you're using this vinaigrette on a salad of many varied and distinctively flavored greens and herbs, like the Herbfarm Garden Salad, I suggest you not add more herbs to the dressing. However, if you are making the vinaigrette for a simpler salad of lettuces and other greens or vegetables, try blending in one of the herbs listed in the variations that follow. The vinaigrette also presents an excellent opportunity to use an herb-infused vinegar.
Blue Cheese and Chive Dressing
Use this dressing on crisp lettuce or omit the buttermilk and serve it as a dip with crudités.
The Rainbow Room's Carrot and Peanut Salad
This salad, or some approximation of it, was on [the Rainbow Room's] menu and my mother loved it and made her own version at home regularly. I do, too. Its ingredients list may sound odd, but this is a combination that not only works but becomes addictive. Don't be alarmed at the amount of vinegar: the astringency of the dressing, against the fulsome oiliness of the nuts and, in turn, nutty sweetness of the carrots, is the whole point.
Vinaigrette
French Dressing for Green Salads, Combination Salads, and Marinades
The basic French dressing of France is very simple indeed — oil, wine vinegar or lemon juice, salt, and pepper; mustard, herbs, and garlic are optional. Although dressing will keep for a day or two, it is usually best when freshly made.