When I was in elementary school, my family vacationed in France
(mostly around Paris) many, many times. But it wasn't until I traveled
there on my own during my undergraduate and graduate school years that I
really developed an appreciation for the food there. Yes, the pastries
are délicieuses, the baguettes are incroyables, and the cheeses, mon
dieu! But funny enough, one of the dishes that I most fondly recall is
the salade composée.
A salade composée literally
translates to a composed salad. It is a dish of fresh produce,
un-tossed, arranged into a beautiful, colorful display. There is no
"right" or "standard" version, the salad is made with whatever the cook
has fresh on-hand that day, and the best ones come from the tiny 5-table
mom-and-pop eateries tucked down the small cobblestone alleys. Crisp
lettuce, juicy tomatoes, sweet corn, crunchy cucumbers, shaved carrots,
snappy haricots verts, creamy baby potatoes, thin slices of salty salami
or ham, hardboiled eggs, the variety is endless. It is then drizzled
with a simple, light vinaigrette. During my travels if an eatery had a
salade composée on their menu, that's what I'd order.
With
these beautiful memories in mind, I am going to embark on a 1-week
salade composée vacation in my kitchen. For each of the next 7 days, I
will be making a salade composée for lunch. Each version different than
the last. I want to show you that a satisfying salad does not have to
be boring or tossed in some heavy goopy dressing. Think fresh, and
think flavorful. I'm drooling. Let's get started!
Salade Composée, Day 1, Roast Beef and Tomato
Ingredients:
- deli roast beef slices
- steamed asparagus, chilled
- cubed cantaloupe, chilled
- mozzarella ovals, halved
- grape tomatoes, halved
- steamed green beans, chilled
- Newman's Own Light Balsamic Vinaigrette
Directions:
- Arrange ingredients onto a plate and drizzle sparingly with vinaigrette.