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The Beauty Of Raw Vegetable Salads

Friday, June 26th, 2009

DSC_9198 by you.

Raw vegetable salads lend simplicity, convenience, elegance and a good dose of vegetables to a meal all at the same time. The basic formula is easy: choose three or four different vegetables you’d eat raw (corn, tomatoes, cucumbers, fennel, carrots, radishes, cabbage, radicchio, endive, sweet or green onions), add in some cheese (feta, mozzarella, Swiss, cubed parmesan) and / or toasted nut or seed (pecans, almonds, pine nuts), and toss it all with any simple vinaigrette and some chopped fresh herbs (parsley, marjoram, chives, thyme).

Raw vegetable salads are especially good in summer when the garden and farmers markets are bountiful. They’re refreshing and light, contrast nicely with grilled meats and simply cooked grains (rice, couscous, quinoa), and can even serve as the main taste and flavor component of a meal. They can be made ahead and chilled so their flavors have time to meld, then brought out an hour or so before you serve dinner to come to room temperature. Cut the vegetables into large pieces for a more traditional “salad,” and into smaller pieces for more of a relish feel.

Recipe: Tomato, Corn, Cucmber And Feta Salad
Recipe: Greek Salad
Recipe: Moroccan Carrot Salad
Recipe: Grated Beet, Frisée, Walnut And Goat Cheese Salad
Recipe: Fennel And Orange Salad With Pecorino
Recipe: Tomato, Mozzarella And Basil Relish

Master Recipe: Roasted Winter Squash

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008

winter_squash by you.

This time of year, a variety of autumn-colored winter squash show up at the markets. At my Whole Foods and local farmers market we find butternut, acorn, red kuri, hubbard, kaboch, spaghetti and delicata squash, among others.

There are lots of ways to prepare them, but I usually turn first to simply roasted winter squash. By keeping a few key steps in mind, it’s an easy master recipe to put together even on a weeknight and can be eaten on its own, as a side dish or thrown into pastas, salads or soups.

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