eahanhan All American 21370 Posts user info edit post |
Well, more like dressings...Anyone have any good ideas for salad dressings? I'm mainly thinking vinagerettes, or something citrus-based. I have a pretty good variety of things to make something with, but I'm lacking ideas. I usually use allrecipes.com, mainly b/c you can search by what you have. But I'm looking for some personal/tried-and-true suggestions.
I know we have veg and olive oil, balsalmic & red wine vinegar, lemons, lime (maybe), oranges, grapefruits, garlic, onion, soy & teryaki sauce, mustard (brown and dijon), ketchup, worcester sauce, parmesan and cheddar cheese, plain yogurt, honey, most of the typical herbs and spices you'd find in a kitchen, and stuff like some strawberries, a full container of blackberries, etc.
my roommate has more culinary prowess than i do, so she'd usually be my suggestion source, but I offered to take care of dinner tonight since she's working late-ish. Help?] 5/25/2006 5:41:07 PM |
Smath74 All American 93278 Posts user info edit post |
ranch 5/25/2006 5:45:13 PM |
UJustWait84 All American 25821 Posts user info edit post |
ranch 5/25/2006 5:46:09 PM |
eahanhan All American 21370 Posts user info edit post |
no thx. and the point of this is to use what i have in my kitchen already.] 5/25/2006 5:46:24 PM |
miska All American 22242 Posts user info edit post |
poppyseed!
kinda sweet, very good with fruit 5/25/2006 5:48:05 PM |
eahanhan All American 21370 Posts user info edit post |
i've heard that (always see poppyseed salad w/strawberries, etc at places like panera)... but i don't think i have poppy seeds. 5/25/2006 5:49:44 PM |
bethaleigh All American 18902 Posts user info edit post |
raspberry vinagrette or citrus vinagrette. I don't have a recipe, but if you find one-make it. It's so good! 5/25/2006 5:52:19 PM |
eahanhan All American 21370 Posts user info edit post |
yeah i've been looking at some blackberry vinaigrette (sp? that's what i found on foodnetwork's website). or an orange dressing, since i know it'll have fresh spinach in it. but i still haven't found anything i'm really fond of. 5/25/2006 6:08:24 PM |
eahanhan All American 21370 Posts user info edit post |
cmon people 5/25/2006 6:40:58 PM |
buddha1747 All American 5067 Posts user info edit post |
buttermilk ranch 5/25/2006 6:43:30 PM |
Gøldengirl All American 3613 Posts user info edit post |
my mom makes a simple lemon and sugar mix for salads, really simple and good. 5/25/2006 7:12:07 PM |
EnderJRD All American 25300 Posts user info edit post |
ranch 5/25/2006 7:15:06 PM |
pinkpanther All American 7465 Posts user info edit post |
i <3 raspberry vinegerette mmmmmm
but you have to get the right brand because it comes in many different consistencies. the wholefoods brand is raspberry vinegerette is pretty darn good. 5/25/2006 7:16:47 PM |
Gøldengirl All American 3613 Posts user info edit post |
i want that new spritz dressing like i spritz is 10 calories 5/25/2006 7:16:59 PM |
phishnlou All American 13446 Posts user info edit post |
ranch dressing is fucking disgusting
that is all 5/25/2006 7:40:26 PM |
EnderJRD All American 25300 Posts user info edit post |
And don't forget to add some parmesan cheese to your salad with ranch. 5/25/2006 7:42:02 PM |
eahanhan All American 21370 Posts user info edit post |
I guess I should have said earlier the point of this thread was to avoid storebought dressings.
I found an Alton Brown recipe that I followed, somewhat. 2 cloves of garlic smushed up, some salt and pepper, 2 tsp mustard (I used one spicy brown, one dijon), olive oil, and his was a vinaigrette, but i used the juice of one lemon instead. Oh, and I added a small touch of honey. it's gonna be atleast 30 minutes before dinner, so I'm gonna let it sit, and taste it in a few, to see if I should add more oil, or vinegar (almost out of lemons).
we'll see. it's soooo frustrating b/c my mom makes a dressing 90% of the time we have salads that i love. it's lemon juice, olive oil, garlic, some oregano, salt, pepper, and some feta cheese. and she adds dried mint to the salad. she has this perfect balance that i cannot recreate at all. tried many times, and it's never quite right. >.< 5/25/2006 7:43:15 PM |
Scuba Steve All American 6931 Posts user info edit post |
I went to a high end restaurant in Michigan called Charlie's Crab and they had what was called The Martha's Vineyard Salad
It consisted of
Romaine Lettuce Red Onions Crumbled Blue Cheese Pine Nuts Raspberry Vinegar
The raspberry vinegar compliments the blue cheese very well.
[Edited on May 25, 2006 at 8:08 PM. Reason : .] 5/25/2006 8:07:43 PM |
skewfield All American 12616 Posts user info edit post |
don't tell us to eat cheese
we are FAT 5/25/2006 8:32:49 PM |
Str8BacardiL ************ 41754 Posts user info edit post |
ranch 5/25/2006 8:48:18 PM |
Spike All American 2249 Posts user info edit post |
cucumber ranch 5/25/2006 8:58:54 PM |
EnderJRD All American 25300 Posts user info edit post |
texas pete 5/25/2006 9:02:19 PM |
The Dude All American 6502 Posts user info edit post |
olive oil + balsalmic + pinch of salt and pepper = best dressing ever 5/25/2006 9:08:15 PM |
Restricted All American 15537 Posts user info edit post |
Green Goddess 5/25/2006 10:48:55 PM |
msb2ncsu All American 14033 Posts user info edit post |
I prefer red wine vinegar simply because balsamic gets to be too overpowering for frequent use. BUt yeah, no need to do too much. Only add like one herb or one fruit juice or its just too complex to really taste it.
These are my two favorite Caesar dressing recipes. They are pretty damn similar but the differences are substantial enough to not trash one of them. http://www.napastyle.com/kitchen/recipes/recipe.jsp?recipe_id=276&category_id=112 http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/cooking/recipe/0,,FOOD_9936_23416,00.html
Oh, and don't forget asian style dressings... sesame oil, peanut butter, soy sauce, etc. Makes for good change of pace. 5/25/2006 11:02:53 PM |
hammster All American 2768 Posts user info edit post |
make some of that italian dressing that comes in packets. i think its called good seasons. you buy the packets and the bottle for a couple of bucks and add oil, vinegar, and water. it is THE BEST italian dressing EVAR 5/25/2006 11:36:10 PM |
pinkpanther All American 7465 Posts user info edit post |
to make balsamic vinegar less overpowering, cook some of the water out of it by heating it in a saucepan. it makes its sweeter and this is really good as a salad dressing (just don't overdo it or you'll get a sticky mess stuck on your pan) i use it over baby spinach with oranges and bacon and it is really good 5/25/2006 11:38:50 PM |
eahanhan All American 21370 Posts user info edit post |
thx for all the suggestions. haha manda didn't even eat the salad (she didn't eat much. not hungry), so it was only me as judge. i was happy with what turned out, but i still want/like all of the suggestions. if i have time this weekend, i'm thinking about trying to make a few different dressings that i can keep in the fridge. even though it's not -that- hard to whip something up each day, it'd be nice to have some i know i'll like, and use. i definitely want to do something asiany, ginger or peanut, and other things.
i usually use spinach either in with my salad with romaine, or as the leaf as a whole in the salad. i <3 fresh spinach. so i'm gonna try out some of these balsamic ideas (i don't at all use this vinegar), and i also wanna find something citrusy, that's not just lemon or lime. we'll see what happens.
^question...wouldnt cooking water out of it do more concentrating of the flavors? so it's the same powerful balsamic punch in a smaller amt? I guess i'm comparing this to deglazing, etc. ] 5/25/2006 11:52:49 PM |
Lumex All American 3666 Posts user info edit post |
Balsamic is good stuff. Wont make your ass too fat either. 5/26/2006 12:44:38 AM |
skewfield All American 12616 Posts user info edit post |
it smelled really good, though! 5/26/2006 12:54:05 AM |
Skack All American 31140 Posts user info edit post |
I'm not big on store bought dressings, but the Kraft Greek Vinaigrette is the bomb. It's got a pesto'ish taste. 5/26/2006 1:45:42 AM |
eahanhan All American 21370 Posts user info edit post |
^^ 5/26/2006 2:16:56 AM |
slut All American 8357 Posts user info edit post |
[quote\]if i have time this weekend, i'm thinking about trying to make a few different dressings that i can keep in the fridge[/quote]
cook for me, kkthx 5/26/2006 2:25:15 AM |
msb2ncsu All American 14033 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "^question...wouldnt cooking water out of it do more concentrating of the flavors? so it's the same powerful balsamic punch in a smaller amt? I guess i'm comparing this to deglazing, etc." |
Yes, it would be intense flavor in a smaller amount. Its not deglazing, but it is reducing (which is what you usually do after deglazing so you were in the right area of thinking). If you buy a higher quality balsamic that is aged it will also have the sweeter, more intense flavor and have a slightly thicker consistency but it can get pricey so most people just have the grocery store variety.
Quote : | "i usually use spinach either in with my salad with romaine, or as the leaf as a whole in the salad. i <3 fresh spinach. so i'm gonna try out some of these balsamic ideas (i don't at all use this vinegar)" |
Oh, you are definitely missng out if you haven't tried balsamic based dressings. A great salad is baby spinach, sliced strawberries, roasted sweet pecans (brown sugar and butter on them then put in the oven), and a little goat cheese or parmigiano-reggiano with a balsamic vinaigrette for the dressing.
Oh, and for anyone who wants a really good vinaigrette from the grocery store that is relatively healthy try Maple Grove Farms Fat Free Balsamic Vinaigrette:
I'm also a big fan of Ken's Steakhouse Lite Caesar dressing.
5/26/2006 8:48:05 AM |
eahanhan All American 21370 Posts user info edit post |
^hmm, thanks for the advice. i think i've never really used it is b/c growing up, we never ate vinaigrette dressings. my father despises vinegar, and we usually had the olive oil/lemon/garlic dressing on salads at home. so now that i'm cooking day-to-day, i can try new things, experiment, etc. 5/26/2006 5:43:22 PM |
NCSUDiver All American 1829 Posts user info edit post |
Harris Teeter has a good Wasabi dressing that is naturally low fat. It's yummy too. 5/26/2006 7:14:55 PM |
eahanhan All American 21370 Posts user info edit post |
mmm wasabi! 5/27/2006 1:13:06 PM |