KAREN WIGHT -- No Place Like Home
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“Main Dish Salads” was the name of the cooking class I took last week
at Sur La Table. It sounded like the perfect way the get ready for warmer
weather and outdoor dining.
Louise Fiszer, author of several cookbooks, including her latest
“Tradition with a Twist” was the guest chef of the day. She prepared five
hearty salads, all worthy of dinner on their own: fresh spinach and
salmon salad; curried couscous with smoked duck sausage and dried
cherries; a Tucson-style salad of pesto prawns, white beans and arugula;
composed salad of asparagus, papaya, and scallops with papaya seed
dressing; and triple mustard chicken salad with broccoli.
Louise is my kind of cook. She believes that you need to taste
everything as you go. This is also my personal philosophy. I think I
learned it from my grandmother.
Whenever she would cook, tasting was a big deal. She carried the
tasting enthusiasm into all areas of culinary serendipity. She would even
cut a piece of the “heart” out of every watermelon and eat it to make
sure we made a prudent purchase. Maybe that’s why I like to cook.
Louise has a very “hands on” philosophy. And I mean that literally.
Every salad that she made was hand tossed. She swears that this prevents
bruising. I’m a little more of a neat-nik, but I’m open to suggestion.
I’m not sure how my kids will feel about the mom literally getting her
hands on the dinner, but it’s worth a try.
I learned cool words like “chiffonade” and “rasp.” I feel like my
culinary vocabulary doubled. A chiffonade of basil is a beautiful way to
garnish to salad. You roll up basil leaves and slice them very thinly.
This leaves you with long, wispy strings of basil that you can arrange on
the top of your salad. I feel so clever to know that.
A rasp is a tool used to scrape the skin off of citrus, leaving the
bitter pith unscathed. I don’t have a rasp, but now that I know what it
is, I’ll add it to the wish list.
Louise is big on large serving platters. Toss the salad in a bowl,
then transfer the mixture onto a shallower serving piece. I have to say
her presentation was wonderful. And I heartily believe that aesthetics
count when serving a meal.
Most of the women in the cooking class could be spotted buying at
least one platter after the class was finished.
I’m a firm believer that you eat with your eyes before you put a bite
in your mouth. I plan on taking Louise’s philosophy a step further. I
think the first outdoor meal of spring is a cause for celebration.
Votives on the table; flowers for the centerpiece; a fresh menu.
I’m not sure my kids will go for an asparagus, papaya and scallop
“composed” salad, but I’m going to try. It’s time to retire the chicken
nuggets and quesadillas, at least for awhile.
This spring break I’ll be hand tossing, rasping, chopping and making
chiffonades. If the kids come to you begging for heartier fare, tell them
to eat some couscous, or better yet, send them home so they can clean the
pool and set the table.
We’ll be eating stylish fare, served from a platter, with our votives
glowing. We’ll be dining alfresco and celebrating spring with a few main
dish salads.
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