By Cal Orey
It is the new season for lighter foods, including fresh salads
Enter the garden salad. A wide variety of greens can be used, including arugula or baby spinach. A Garden salad is perfect for brunch, an appetizer, side dish or main entrée salad for a light dinner. And potatoes, especially French fries, can make slim-down rabbit food filling and fun meal.
It is the new season for lighter foods, including fresh salads
Enter the garden salad. A wide variety of greens can be used, including arugula or baby spinach. A Garden salad is perfect for brunch, an appetizer, side dish or main entrée salad for a light dinner. And potatoes, especially French fries, can make slim-down rabbit food filling and fun meal.
Salads in The Healing Powers of Vinegar and Olive Oil ebooks help you to lose winter weight |
Speaking
of joy, last time I was in the Pacific Northwest, I craved a spinach salad and
baked potato. The restaurant I chose served me a Garden salad with fresh fruit and
a basket of over-cooked curly fries. It wasn’t my fantasy. Memories of my hitchhiking
days in the Deep South haunted me. When I ordered yogurt and bagels for
breakfast I got the same treatment. My server looked at me like I was a
creature from another planet. She offered grits and sausage. I passed as I did
with the funny salad and taters. Both times I longed to be home where I could
eat and enjoy familiar Golden State food without being judged.
The
funny thing is, after I returned from my trip to Seattle, I began to crave the
Garden salad I was served. So, I put
together a salad with a California twist. I added a gift of heart healthy walnuts
from our central state. I learned that
you can acquire a taste for different foods —but sometimes mixing up the new
and old work best.
Garden Salad with Spring Fruit
2 cups Spring Mix (mix of baby lettuces, greens and
radicchio)
¼ cup cucumber, sliced
¼ cup fresh strawberries, sliced (other choices:
raspberries, plums)
¼ cup walnuts, chopped
½ cup premium blue cheese, crumbled
Balsamic vinaigrette (store bought)
In a bowl, toss vegetables, fruit with lettuce. Top with nuts and cheese. Drizzle with vinegar. Serve salad with fresh warm whole grain French bread slices dipped in extra virgin olive oil or spread with European style butter. Serves two.
Sweet Potato Skinny Fries
2 sweet potatoes, sliced thin (leave skins on)
1 tablespoon garlic, minced
2 tablespoons European style butter, melted
Sea salt and ground black pepper to taste
2 tablespoons chives, fresh, chopped
Ketchup or malt vinegar for dipping or drizzling
Place potato slices in a baking pan or on a cookie sheet. Top with garlic, butter, salt and pepper. Put in a 400 degree oven. Turn mixture three or four times. Bake for about 25-30 minutes so fries are golden brown but not overcooked. Top with chives. (As a kid I didn’t like mushy sweet potatoes but as fries with herbs they’re full of flavor and crispy texture.)
Place potato slices in a baking pan or on a cookie sheet. Top with garlic, butter, salt and pepper. Put in a 400 degree oven. Turn mixture three or four times. Bake for about 25-30 minutes so fries are golden brown but not overcooked. Top with chives. (As a kid I didn’t like mushy sweet potatoes but as fries with herbs they’re full of flavor and crispy texture.)
A Garden Salad, like this one, drizzled with balsamic vinaigrette instead of a blue cheese dressing or thousand island is different but in a good way. While it took me a while to warm up to fruit and nuts in my salad—it works. And crumbled blue cheese is nice switch. Of course, I included chamomile tea to complete the springtime recipes. It was a fresh delight to savor in the Sierra and tossed together just the way I like it.
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