Showing posts with label Salads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Salads. Show all posts

Friday, 10 July 2015

Warm Butternut Squash Salad

It's no secret that I'm a big fan of salads. They are so easy to make, and you can create all sorts of flavour and texture combinations. And to top it all, they are healthy and good for you too. So here is one that I made recently, as a comforting treat after a busy week. 

Serves 2



½ butternut squash
4 carrots
a small bunch of fresh lemon thyme
4 shallots
2 cloves of garlic
125g baby button mushrooms
¼ iceberg lettuce
¼ red pointed pepper
½ courgette
100g umbrian lentils
100ml dry white wine
rapeseed oil
freshly ground black pepper
freshly ground sea salt

Preheat the oven to 180oC. 

While the oven gets warm, peel the butternut squash, slice and chop it into small squares. Wash the carrots and slice them into 2cm pieces. Place both butternut squash and carrots in a baking tray, drizzle with oil and use scissors to chop a bit of lemon thyme over them. Turn to make sure the oil is evenly covered, and place in the oven for 1 hour or so until the pieces are soft. 

Place the lentils in a saucepan with water and bring to the boil. Boil for 25 minutes or until soft. Drain.

Peel and finely chop the shallots and garlic, and sauté in a pan with oil. Add freshly ground pepper and salt to taste. Chop some lemon thyme over it to taste. When the onions are soft, add the white wine, and leave to reduce. Any wine is ok, but I find a dry or at least medium works better as they add more of an edge to the taste. Reduce the heat and leave to simmer, and add the lentils.  

Chop the lettuce and spread out on two plates. Finely slice the red pepper lengthways and spread over the lettuce. Use a julienne slicer and make the courgette into fine strips (if you don’t have a julienne slicer just finely slice it lengthways). Add the courgette to the plates.

Spoon the baked vegetables over the salad, and add the onion and mushroom mix to the top. Sprinkle a few drops of oil over the salad, and serve while it’s warm. 

Wednesday, 14 August 2013

Shaved Courgette Salad

As it has been very hot here recently, I fancied something quite light and refreshing for my lunch today. And it had to be something that was simple to assemble, as I was far too warm to have any energy for complicated cooking. A look in the fridge revealed that I had the ingredients for a salad, and a few minutes later I was ready to go back out into the sun with my plate of tempting greens.

Serves 1 as a main salad or 2 as a starter / side salad


a handful of spinach leaves
1 medium sized courgette
1/2 red pepper
a handful of tomberries or cherry tomatoes
1 tablespoon of pine nuts
the zest of ¼ lime
the juice of ¼ lime
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 tablespoon maple syrup

Place the washed spinach leaves on a plate or in a bowl. Use a mandolin slicer or similar device to finely slice the courgette lengthways and place the strips on top of the spinach leaves. Finely chop the red pepper, and scatter the pieces on top of the courgette. Add the tomberries, or slice a few cherry tomatoes in half and add these. Finally scatter a few pine nuts on top.

Zest a quarter of a lime, and also juice this quarter. Add to a small jar along with the olive oil and maple syrup. Shake well, and pour over your salad.

Wednesday, 10 July 2013

Purple Potato Salad

You don't necessarily need purple potatoes for this recipe, but I just couldn't resist them last time I went shopping. They are so beautiful and inviting, and so vibrant when you cut into them. Of course they lose a lot of their colour when boiled, but you still end up with thrillingly blue tatties.

I think a potato salad goes with most things; Sunday roast, boiled greens, juicy salad, barbecue, ... and the list goes on. I had mine with boiled asparagus and a salad, and it was delicious.

Serves 2


4 medium size potatoes
2 handfuls of broadbeans (frozen)
2 eggs
4 spring onions
2 tablespoons of sour cream
2 tablespoons of mayonnaise
a pinch of freshly ground pepper
a pinch of freshly ground sea salt

Wash your potatoes and cut them into bite size pieces (you're going to chop them up anyway, so you might as well save on cooking time by chopping them before boiling). Place in a saucepan, cover with water, and bring to the boil. Add the frozen broadbeans, and let the water get back to boiling. Boil until the potatoes are soft, about 10 minutes.

While the potatoes and broadbeans boil, also boil your eggs until they are hard-boiled but not green, about 6 to 7 minutes.

Finely chop the spring onions, and place with the rest of the cold ingredients in a bowl. Drain the boiled veg. and the egg, and shell the egg. Chop the egg into pieces, and mix all the ingredients together.

Friday, 5 July 2013

Asparagus & Samphire Salad

A warming salad can be just the thing to round off a warm summers day. It's light and delicate, easy and quick to make, and gently warms you while the temperature drops and the evening draws in. There are unlimited possibilities for ideas, but here's one which contains samphire, a salty march vegetable that's both tasty and nutritious. And being quite salty, it's perfect for a warm day when you need to replenish some of the salt you lost during the day.

Serves 2

20 cherry tomatoes
2 eggs
200g broadbeans (frozen)
2 bunches asparagus
80g samphire
a few salad leaves
4 stalks of spring onion

Turn your oven on to 180oC  and slice the tomatoes in half. Place them on a baking tray and roast for about 15 to 20 minutes then remove from the oven.

While the tomatoes are roasting, boil the egg to your preference. I like them hard-boiled but not green, so I boil them for 6 to 7 minutes. Shell your egg and leave it in hand-warm water until you need it.

At the same time as you start boiling the eggs, also bring a saucepan of water to the boil. Add the broadbeans and cook for 10 minutes. Then add the asparagus, leave to boil for 4 minutes, and finally add the samphire and cook for a further 4 minutes. (If you are using tinned broadbeans, drain them, and add them last when the sampire has only got one more minute to cook.)

Tear the salad leaves into pieces, and place on plates. Finely chop the spring onion and scatter then over the salad leaves. Drain the greens and add to your plates. Then divide the tomatoes evenly, and finally slice the eggs lengthways and place round the edge of the plates.

If you want you could add a little drizzle of olive oil, or even a vinaigrette. The Lemon and Maple syrup vinaigrette goes quite well.



Wednesday, 9 May 2012

Warm green and feta salad


The wonderful thing about a warm salad is that it is so quick and easy to make, and after a long day at work, when you really just want to get a takeaway and dive into bed, it is just the thing. There’s no need for accurate measuring, just measure out an amount that you think is suitable for how hungry you are. The amounts below are a suggestion only; really you can use whatever lurks in your fridge.

Serves 1


5 or 6 small potatoes (new baby potatoes are brilliant for this)
3 or 4 asparagus spears
6 or 7 sugar snap peas
6 or 7 mange touts
4 large cherry tomatoes
50g feta cheese
4 olives
2 half artichoke hearts (ready cooked, jarred and stored in oil, you can get them from most supermarkets)
1 egg
olive oil
balsamic vinegar
herbal salt

Wash the potatoes, and boil them in a little water. When they are nearly done, throw in the asparagus, mange touts and sugar snap peas, and simmer until these are tender.

Use a slotted spoon to fish out the vegetables. Keep the water boiling, and crack open the egg into it; to poach it. The poaching time depends on how well cooked you like your egg. You can use the flat side of a spoon to gently press the yolk to check the softness and thus the readiness.

While the egg poaches, arrange the vegetables on a plate. Slice the artichokes, feta cheese, tomatoes and olives, and sprinkle them over the vegetables.

Drizzle a bit of olive oil and balsamic vinegar over the food.

Use the slotted spoon to fish out the egg, and place it on top of the food.

Sprinkle a little bit of herbal salt over the top, serve and enjoy. 



Wednesday, 30 November 2011

Persimmon and Feta Salad

A small salad can be just the treat if you’re a bit peckish and fancy a small treat. Or it can be a delicious lunch or dinner if made a bit bigger. I never use exact measurements when making a salad, I don’t think they need it, and measuring everything just makes more work. It also means that every salad is slightly different even if using the same ingredients. This salad is quite fruity, but the saltiness of the cheese balances the flavours.

Serves 1 as a snack


a handful of lettuce leaves
5 thin slices of persimmon fruit
a handful of mango slices
7 cherry tomatoes
some feta cheese
a drizzle of olive oil
a drizzle of passion fruit vinegar
freshly ground black pepper

Tear the lettuce into bite-size pieces, and place in a small bowl or on a plate. Thinly slice the persimmon fruit and place over the lettuce. Chop the mango into small pieces, half the tomatoes, and place both with the lettuce. Crumble the feta cheese over the salad, and drizzle a bit each of the oil and vinegar over it. Finally grind some black pepper over the salad. 

Wednesday, 8 June 2011

Lunch Salad with Feta Cheese


When making salads I often don’t bother measuring things, a bit of difference from time to time just makes them more interesting. And also, salads are kind of the free spirits of the food world; they shouldn’t be too restrained by pre-prescribed rules. Find a salad box that is about the right size for your appetite, and fill it as full as you think you need. You can add the vinaigrette right away, or you can keep it in a separate small container and add it immediately before your meal.


Lettuce
Cucumber
Cherry Tomatoes
Radishes
Yellow pepper
Red onion
Olives
Feta Cheese
Fresh parsley
Sprouted seeds

Red wine vinegar
Olive oil
Freshly ground black pepper

Slice the vegetables and cheese, and place them all in a lunch-box or on a plate. Mix the vinegar, oil and black pepper, and add to the salad.