Salade composée, also known as composed salad, is a classic French dish that combines various ingredients to create a colorful and flavorful meal. This versatile salad can be customized to include a wide range of ingredients, but typically features a base of leafy greens, such as lettuce, arugula, or spinach, topped with a variety of vegetables, proteins, and sometimes fruits. Common additions include tomatoes, cucumbers, bell peppers, carrots, radishes, hard-boiled eggs, cheese, croutons, and nuts. The salad is often dressed with a simple vinaigrette or a more elaborate dressing, such as a creamy mayonnaise-based dressing. In this article, we will explore three delicious variations of salade composée: a classic Salade Niçoise, a hearty Salade Lyonnaise, and a refreshing Salade de Chèvre Chaud. Each recipe offers a unique combination of flavors and textures, showcasing the versatility and appeal of this classic French dish.
Check out the recipes below so you can choose the best recipe for yourself!
COMPOSED SALAD PALOISE
Steps:
- Make the vinaigrette by whisking together ingredients. Set aside. Drizzle the asparagus and celery root with the vinaigrette, just before serving. Place the lettuce leaves around the edges of the salad platter. Arrange artichokes, asparagus and celery root over lettuce. Dribble vinaigrette over all and sprinkle with herbs.
TUNA SALAD COMPOSéE
This recipe is a far departure from the mayonnaise-based tuna concoctions that Americans expect. Tuna (packed in olive oil, please) is mixed with peppers, fresh herbs and nuts and dressed in olive oil, balsamic vinegar, lemon juice and two types of mustard. It can sit in the fridge for up to three days, making it excellent picnic food or just a departure from the usual sad desk sandwich.
Provided by Toby Cecchini
Categories easy, lunch, quick, salads and dressings, side dish
Time 5m
Yield About 2 cups
Number Of Ingredients 11
Steps:
- Mix all the ingredients well with a fork in a medium-size, nonreactive bowl. Taste and adjust the lemon juice and pepper. The salad can be made up to 3 days in advance and refrigerated.
Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 228, UnsaturatedFat 14 grams, Carbohydrate 2 grams, Fat 17 grams, Fiber 1 gram, Protein 16 grams, SaturatedFat 2 grams, Sodium 383 milligrams, Sugar 1 gram, TransFat 0 grams
FRENCH SALAD- SALADE COMPOSEE
Julia Child says, "A handsomely arranged combination salad can be the solution for what to serve at an informal spur-of-the-moment meal. The trick is to toss all of the elements separately in vinaigrette, letting some marinate for 10-20 minutes if they need to take on flavor. Then ... arrange your work of art, each part of it is perfectly seasoned."
Provided by Caroline Cooks
Categories Lunch/Snacks
Time 30m
Yield 4 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 11
Steps:
- Marinate kidney beans, zucchini, and mushrooms in vinaigrette for 20- 30 minutes.
- At serving time, toss mixed salad greens in a bowl with vinaigrette and arrange around edges of a large serving dish.
- Mound beans in center, and decorate base with groups of marinated mushrooms and zucchini interspersed with hard-boiled eggs, tomatoes, olives, anchovies, and chunks of tuna.
- Pour a bit more vinaigrette over all, sprinkle with chopped parsley, and serve.
- Cooking time is marinade time.
- Delicious with grilled olive-oiled French bread and a chilled rosé wine.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 316.4, Fat 10.2, SaturatedFat 2.6, Cholesterol 247.7, Sodium 816.1, Carbohydrate 22.3, Fiber 6.7, Sugar 6, Protein 34.2
SALADE COMPOSEE (MIXED SALAD)
Provided by Bryan Miller
Categories salads and dressings
Time 10h15m
Yield 6 servings
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- The day before, mix heavy cream and buttermilk. Leave it at room temperature (approximately 70 degrees Farenheit) covered with a cloth until it thickens (10 to 15 hours). Place in refrigerator.
- Wash and tear lettuce. Wash and slice celery, tomatoes and radishes.
- Peel apples and slice into thin wedges. Coat with lemon juice to prevent discoloring.
- Mix all ingredients in a bowl.
- In separate bowl, mix mustard, cream, vinegar and sal t and pepper. Pour dressing over portions before serving.
Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 324, UnsaturatedFat 16 grams, Carbohydrate 18 grams, Fat 28 grams, Fiber 5 grams, Protein 5 grams, SaturatedFat 10 grams, Sodium 610 milligrams, Sugar 11 grams, TransFat 0 grams
SOUS-CHEF SALAD
Following the model of a classic French salade composée, this satisfying salad, packed with cooked and raw vegetables, as well as canned best-quality tuna and hard-boiled eggs, presents beautifully and eats like a meal. It builds upon a traditional salade niçoise, but a true niçoise uses no lettuce, often has anchovies, would want cracked black niçoise olives and would not have artichoke hearts and basil. So let's call this a sous-chef salad - and dodge the whole argument while picking up another: It is definitely the best meal salad you will eat all summer. Take care to arrange it so there's some of each component wherever your eye lands. Try to nestle and fluff the ingredients to allow them all to be seen, rather than piling layer atop layer and thus obscuring the beauty of everything below. This makes the salad very attractive and, most important, ensures that everyone gets some of everything in each bite.
Provided by Gabrielle Hamilton
Categories salads and dressings, vegetables, main course
Time 30m
Yield 2 servings
Number Of Ingredients 15
Steps:
- Bring a large pot of water to boil over high heat. Add plenty of salt to taste of the sea.
- Add potatoes, and boil until the thin tip of a knife can pierce a potato as if going into soft wax, 8 to 9 minutes. Retrieve potatoes with a spider, and let cool and drain on a baker's rack set into a sheet pan nearby.
- Add green beans to still-boiling water, and boil until the color transforms from raw and dusty to saturated deep green, 4 to 5 minutes. Remove with a spider, and set out to drain and cool on the baker's rack.
- Add the eggs directly from the refrigerator into the boiling water, and boil for 8 minutes. Dump eggs and boiling water into the sink, letting the shells crackle as they land hard. Peel eggs while submerged under cold running water, which helps to stop the cooking and release the shells easily. Set peeled eggs to rest on the rack.
- While eggs boil, wash and spin-dry lettuce.
- Remove green leafy tops from radishes, and save for another use, if desired. Wash and carefully rinse radishes, taking care to remove any grit or sand.
- On a large rimmed platter, begin to assemble the salad by tearing the clean, dry lettuce and arranging it as the bed.
- Use a sharp paring knife to split the green beans in half crosswise. Scatter them artfully around the bed of lettuce.
- Split the potatoes in half and arrange artfully.
- Split artichokes, if whole, into quarters and arrange artfully.
- Repeat with cherry tomatoes, followed by radishes, split into quarters, then eggs, quartered into wedges.
- Remove tuna from the jar with a fork. Break it into chunks, and nestle it into the mound of salad. Drizzle the tuna oil over the salad.
- Finish with scattered red onion and split olives.
- Microplane the garlic into a small bowl. Add red-wine vinegar and 3 to 4 long glugs of olive oil (about 1/4 cup), and stir together briskly. Season with salt and a lot of freshly ground pepper.
- Just before dressing the salad, tear the basil leaves to release their fragrance. Scatter them around the whole salad.
- When ready to serve, drizzle dressing evenly and thoroughly over salad. When ready to eat, toss to dress, and don't worry about messing up the beauty.
Tips:
- Use fresh, seasonal ingredients: This will ensure that your salad is flavorful and packed with nutrients.
- Choose a variety of colors and textures: This will make your salad more visually appealing and interesting to eat.
- Don't be afraid to experiment: There are endless possibilities when it comes to making a composed salad, so don't be afraid to try new things and find what you like best.
- Make sure your salad is well-dressed: The dressing is what brings all the flavors of the salad together, so make sure you use a dressing that you enjoy.
- Serve your salad immediately: Composed salads are best enjoyed fresh, so serve them as soon as possible after they are made.
Conclusion:
Composed salads are a delicious and healthy way to enjoy a variety of fresh ingredients. They are perfect for a light lunch or dinner, and they can also be served as a side dish. With so many different variations to choose from, there is sure to be a composed salad that everyone will enjoy.
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