Frisée
Ribboned Zucchini Salad
Preparing the zucchini for this dish won't heat up your kitchen — simply salting thin slices is enough to tenderize them.
Active time: 30 min Start to finish: 30 min
Goat Cheese Souffles in Phyllo Cups with Frisée Salad
You can make the soufflés 4 hours ahead (keep at room temperature). Put in a 375°F oven for 8 minutes to reheat.
Active time: 45 min Start to finish: 1 hr
Roasted Beetroot (Beet), Blood Orange, Red Witlof (Belgian Endive) and Asparagus with Orange Oil
This recipe is from chef Peter Doyle from Cicada in Sydney. "This dish is a play on Maltaise sauce, but in a lighter, fresher version more conducive to our climate."
By Peter Doyle
Chicken with Honey-Mustard Sauce
Note that part of the honey-mustard sauce is also used as the marinade.
Frisée,watercress, and Mint Salad
By Deborah Madison
Foie Gras Toasts with Greens and Verjus Port Glaze
These toasts are also delicious without the foie gras or with a slice of country pâté substituted for the foie gras.
Mixed Lettuce Chiffonade with Gorgonzola-Herb Dressing
This recipe makes more dressing than you'll need. The remainder makes a great everyday dressing for any type of green salad, or a delicious dip for chicken wings or raw vegetables.
Frisée, Radicchio and Mixed Green Salad with Shrimp and Mushrooms
Tarragon brings its distinctive flavor to this salad. Serve it alongside the strata.
Chef's Salad
The chef's salad is a familiar yet fading star in the salad world. In delicatessens, diners, and airport snack bars everywhere, we find its faithful components: lifeless leaves of iceberg lettuce, suspiciously blue-hued slices of hard-boiled egg, wedges of pallid tomato, and rubbery chunks of cheese, ham, and turkey. To top it all off (or perhaps sitting alongside): gloppy, high-calorie dressing.
But this still-beloved salad may have had a noble beginning. Though nobody has ever stepped forward to claim the title of the chef in "chef's salad," the dish has been attributed by some food historians to Louis Diat, chef of The Ritz-Carlton in New York City in the early 1940s. He paired watercress with halved hard-boiled eggs and julienne strips of smoked tongue, ham, and chicken. (The concept of the chef’s salad dates still earlier; one seventeenth-century English recipe for a "grand sallet" calls for lettuce, roast meat, and a slew of vegetables and fruits.)
No matter how the salad has evolved, its underlying virtue remains unchanged. This is a no-cook meal that satisfies our cravings for greens and protein. And, in these dog days of summer-when cooking is sometimes the last thing we'd like to do-a main-course salad is especially appealing.
In our updated take on the classic recipe, we used a selection of lettuces (early chef's salads were not always made with iceberg alone), and, in a twist on the norm, small but flavorful amounts of sugar-cured ham and Parmigiano-Reggiano. Feel free to improvise with ingredients depending on what looks good at your farmers market. Summer savory or dill can flavor the dressing in place of the mixed herbs, and many kinds of ham and cheese will work well.