Ensalada mixta--a family-sized salad. |
Garden alert! The lettuce is bolting! Yikes! Make salad. Make two salads. Make more salads. Warm weather shoots the lettuce to flower, precipitating an onslaught of salad days.
No complaints, really. I happily eat a huge salad for lunch every day. Huge, as in a whole lettuce just for me. With additions of other vegetables, both raw and cooked, and a bit of tuna, cooked chicken, hard-cooked egg or cheese I turn salad into a complete meal.
The Spanish ensalada mixta, or mixed salad, is a big production, served as a starter for a family meal. This is a “table salad,” served on a big platter and meant to be shared amongst the diners round the table. In traditional style, everybody eats from the serving dish, rather than dish out individual servings.
Tuna in olive oil. |
Canned white asparagus. |
Someone at the table does the honors of dressing the salad—lots of extra virgin olive oil and a little white wine vinegar are drizzled over the salad. Salt. That’s it. No garlic and no herbs except for a hint of thyme and fennel in the home-cured olives. Unlike a Greek salad, no cheese. And, no, don’t toss the salad.
Dress salad with olive oil and vinegar. |
As much as I enjoy the simplicity of ensalada mixta, for my lunchtime salads I am more likely to make a slightly more complex vinaigrette. Here’s a recipe I like with a mixed vegetable salad—sliced new potatoes, cooked beans, tomatoes and greens.
Yogurt vinaigrette dressing. |
¼ cup no-fat plain yogurt
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
½ tablespoon wine or Sherry vinegar
minced garlic (optional)
chopped herbs (optional)
salt and freshly ground black pepper
Combine all the ingredients in a small bowl and whisk together. Makes enough for a large salad or two smaller ones. Dressing keeps, covered and refrigerated, up to 2 days.
Oh, happy salad days! |
Hi Janet -- How lucky to have so much gorgeous lettuce in your own garden! I love the shared salads, too, which are of course particularly refreshing this time of year. I find the more time I live in Spain, the more generous my hand becomes with the olive oil...and not just because it is delicious, inexpensive and abundant, but also in response to the generous spirit of the family meal. Thank you for sharing your yogurt recipe, too!
ReplyDeleteAnsley: The Spanish salad should be better known! I love to eat at a country venta with friends and share a big "centerpiece" salad.
ReplyDeleteHi Janet. I lived in Zaragoza in the early 80s, my favorite restaurant served the salad pretty much, identical to this. (Minus the tuna and a few more eggs) it was the best. Like you said, no one had a side plate, just all ate from the platter. It was so wonderful, I miss it so much. Thank you for reminding me
ReplyDeleteAnony: I'm pleased to hear that salad in Zaragoza was much the same as in AndalucĂa! It's still served like that, all eat from the platter, in family-style restaurants. And, no mystique about dressing--just good extra virgin olive oil and vinegar drizzled on top.
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