Restaurant menus are a constant source of inspiration for my home cooking. This recipe was inspired by a recent lunch at a local gastropub. I ordered a hearty ramen noodle salad with tofu, and even as I took the first couple of bites, I knew I had to recreate it- which would be easy enough. The salad had mixed greens and shredded carrot, a soy-sesame vinaigrette, and lots of tasty toppings- pickled onions and jalapeƱos, green onions, fried wonton strips, crushed raw ramen noodles, and some grilled tofu.
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Ramen salad with tofu |
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Veggie Reuben sandwich with fries |
There was another reason to try making this chopped Asian-style salad: I had the perfect dressing for it waiting in my pantry. A few months ago, V got us a really fun holiday gift- the "By Jing" box of Sichuan flavor essentials from the gourmet Sichuan spice company, Fly by Jing.
V is a huge fan of spicy chili crisp- an absolute essential in our pantry- and I think he came across this fancy set and thought it would be fun to try. It came with a bunch of chili oils, chili crisps, a spice powder, and a chili crisp vinaigrette that I had been waiting to use.
I started by making a batch of this beautiful, colorful
salad mix:
- Romaine lettuce, shredded
- Red cabbage, shredded finely on a mandoline slicer
- Carrots, shredded
- Cucumber, cut in medium dice
- Cilantro
- Green onions
Meanwhile, I made some quick pickled onions: Slice onions thinly and place in a mason jar. Boil water, vinegar (white+ apple cider vin), salt and sugar, pour into the mason jar, and refrigerate.
When we were ready to eat, I cooked a few vegetable potsticker dumplings, from Trader Joe's and pan-fried a block of tofu.
To serve: Place salad mix in a bowl, top with tofu and dumplings, and crunchy chow mein noodles (optional; sold in the Asian section of supermarkets), and drizzle with the chili crisp vin. A fantastic dinner!
Days later, I got a chance to make this salad again, when the middle school parents were asked to bring in salads for a teacher appreciation potluck dinner. This time, I made the same salad mix, skipped the tofu and dumplings, and made my own version of the vinaigrette with chili crisp, soy sauce, maple syrup, canola oil, and sesame oil. I sent the salad mix in a box, and sent the vinaigrette "on the side", in a squeeze bottle.
Using red cabbage and shredding it finely on a mandoline makes all the difference here, in my opinion. It tastes and looks just beautiful. The mandoline I own is a very basic one, purchased from an Indian cookware store decades ago. I should really use it more than I do!
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The second dish I took to the teacher dinner was a potato salad. Instead of the usual American-style mayo-based potato salad (which I also love), I tried a long-pinned recipe, Vaishali's potato and peas salad in a turmeric coconut dressing. I followed the recipe quite closely, adding a few chopped fresh curry leaves to the tempering. The salad was terrific and I will definitely make it again in the coming warmer months.
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I am on a neighborhood email list of a thousand or so people. Among the workaday emails flying back and forth all day- strollers for sale, recommendations for plumbers, lost cats, cranky complaints about traffic- there is one neighbor who sends along poems once a week or so. Every so often, one of the poems strikes a chord with me.
Happy Spring Equinox 2024. Coming up in the next post: a classic Spring pasta recipe. Can you guess what it is?
What a wonderful recipe. Makes me want to buy a mandolin shredder now! I love Asian salads and order it regularly!
ReplyDeleteI think a mandoline slicer is a really fun tool and makes salads more appealing. (I am particularly a fan of chopped salads). But a sharp knife will do the trick too :)
DeleteLovely poem, Nupur. Thanks for sharing! The salad looks refreshing. I love my mandoline even though years ago I sliced the tip of my pinky on it. Needed a trip to the ER and some surgical glue. I still use it though because nothing else is quite as effective on cabbage for salads. I did buy cut resistant gloves and wear one now when I have to use the mandoline. The cut was totally my fault. I was distracted and not focused on what I was doing. The perils of multitasking!
ReplyDeleteAnu
Anu- Ouch! That's an unfortunate injury. I don't wear gloves but will think of you and go slowly and carefully on the mandoline :) It is really great for cabbage. For bigger projects I bust out my food processor shredding blade but this is perfect for a salad.
Deletefrom Johanna @ https://gggiraffe.blogspot.com/
ReplyDeleteI love that poem - really beautiful and hopeful. And great salads. I am so happy Sylvia has really embraced salads so we are eating them more. The potato salad looks delicious and I love how you are using some of the crunchy noodles in your ramen salad. I've never heard of chilli crisp before so I had to look it up - not sure it is sold widely in Australia.
Hi Johanna- Australia has a vibrant Chinese community so I feel sure that you will find chili crisp (Lao Gan Ma is the most popular brand) in Asian stores there. It is truly a wonderful condiment if you like heat. The flavor is real.
DeleteWe ate a similar salad for dinner today- cabbage slaw, tofu, spicy peanut dressing. So good.