Salad
Toasted Barley Salad with Red Bell Pepper, Corn and Grilled Portobello Mushrooms
Dry-toasting the barley adds a nutty taste and helps the barley retain its texture in this excellent meatless dish.
Curried Chicken, Green Bean and Almond Salad
The almonds and crisp green beans lend good crunch. For a light lunch, serve this with French bread and a fruit salad.
Fuyu Persimmon and Avocado Salad
The miso dressing — which has the body of an egg yolk dressing without all the fat — lends depth of flavor to sweet persimmon and creamy avocado.
Parmesan Chicken with Mixed Baby Greens
Serve with: Steamed broccoli and roasted potatoes. Dessert: Baked apples.
Shrimp Veracruz with Brown Rice, Corn, and Olives
Make the components of this salad early in the day, then toss in the shrimp just before serving. (Buy cooked shrimp, if you like, to save a little time.) Offer cold Mexican beers and Margaritas alongside.
Crab Salad with Sun-Dried Tomato Louis Dressing
It’s unclear just who the Louis of Crab Louis salad fame was; perhaps he was affiliated with the Olympic Club in Seattle, where opera star Enrico Caruso, who visited there in 1904, is said to have fallen in love with the crab salad. San Francisco also claims the dish, which reached its zenith there in the teens, as a specialty at Solari’s restaurant and at the St. Francis Hotel.
Sweet Potato Salad with Chili-Lime Dressing
This is a great summer salad, perfect with all kinds of barbecue and grilled foods. It's also a wonderful way to brighten up a winter dinner of broiled chicken or beef.
By Lauren Chattman
Lobster, Avocado, and Grapefruit Salad
If you don't want to cook a live lobster for this recipe, buy 2/3 pound cooked lobster meat from your seafood shop.
Active time: 45 min Start to finish: 2 3/4 hr (includes chilling)
Julia's Caesar Salad
When Caesar Cardini first served his famous salad in the early 1920s, he used just the hearts of the romaine lettuce, the tender short leaves in the center, and he presented them whole. The salad was tossed and dressed, then arranged on each plate so that you could pick up a leaf by its short end and chew it down bit by bit, then pick up another. However, many customers didn't like to get their fingers covered with egg-and-cheese-and-garlic dressing, and he changed to the conventional torn leaf. Too bad, since the salad lost much of its individuality and drama. You can certainly serve it the original way at home — just provide your guests with plenty of big paper napkins. And plan to be extravagant.
By Julia Child, Jacques Pépin, and David Nussbaum
Finger Caesar Salads
Caesar Cardini, the Tijuana restaurateur who originally served his namesake salad sans utensils, obviously knew what generations of romantics have always known — food eaten by hand is sexy. Start things off with the best caviar you can find. What to drink: A brut, or dry, Champagne or sparkling wine (the 1995 Domaine Carneros Le Rêve Blanc de Blancs is an excellent choice if you want to splurge).
Beet and Walnut Salad
This salad has changed the minds of many who previously found beets overpowering. The Sherry vinegar provides a nice accent, though balsamic vinegar also will work. The walnuts may be replaced with pine nuts, pecans, or slivered almonds.