Honestly, I don't know. Why make anything? You can buy almost anything now. Just stop by the local giant-sized retailer and they will have it there. I make things because I'm just stuffy enough to like my own stuff better. I also believe, in the words of one of my favorite contemporary folk songs, "There's only two things money can't buy. True love and homegrown tomatoes." Many people think John Denver wrote the song, but it was actually written by Guy Clark and I much prefer his version. Maybe that's part of my "purity thing" about needing to go back to the original source. Researching on wikipedia can be remarkably unreliable and so can just about anything else unless you can find the original in some form. Even then, research is a risky business. And so is salad dressing.
Do you really need xantham gum in your dressing? How about polysorbate 60? Or any of the other tasty ingredients such as potassium sorbate and EDTA? Never mind the salt.
Herewith are some of my favorite salad dressings. I am posting them because once I make them for people they always ask me for the recipes. And, it also gives me an opportunity to climb on my soap box about making food from scratch. Do I do this all the time? Of course not. But I do eat very little prepared food and hardly ever darken the door of a fast food place. I love food and eating though, and there isn't much I won't try. I trust I am not a food snob. People like different things and eat different ways. I love that and am always willing to try something new. And just to prove that, although I think traditional southern-style Pimento Cheese leaves a lot to be desired, I recently had some smoked Gouda pimento cheese that was very good.
The Recipes
Measurements are approximate. Feel free to add salt if you
are not watching your sodium intake. Adjust recipes to your own taste. I dunk a
lettuce leaf in the dressing as one good way to see how it will taste on your
salad. Other people like to dip in a finger. You choose.
"T" means tablespoon. "t" means teaspoon. This is for those who don't cook much. Every discipline has it's own language devotees have to learn.
Miso Tahini Dressing
Combine:
¼ cup tahini
1 T white Miso
1 T lemon juice
Freshly ground pepper
Mix with a spoon until smooth paste
Add warm water gradually – about ¼ cup or more
May need to add more warm water once it has been refrigerated,
as it will thicken.
Miso Dressing
Mix together until smooth:
¼ cup rice vinegar
3 T white Miso
Gradually whisk in:
½ cup olive oil
1 T sesame seeds
¼ t sesame oil
¼ t sugar
Pinch cayenne pepper
Lemony Yogurt Dressing
Combine:
½ cup plain or Greek yogurt
2 T olive oil
2 T lemon juice
½ t grated lemon zest
½ t Dijon mustard
Cayenne pepper to taste
Carrot-Ginger Dressing
Place all ingredients except oil in blender or food
processor and process until finely chopped.
4 medium carrot, peeled and roughly chopped
1 inch knob of fresh ginger, peeled and roughly diced
1 shallot sliced
3 to 6 T rice vinegar
1 T sesame oil
1 t soy sauce
3 T white Miso
1 ½ T honey
When well combined, slowly add ¼ cup olive oil.
May be thinned with water.
Sherry-Shallot Vinaigrette
Soaking the shallot in vinegar gives it a nice pickled
flavor.
For a tarter flavor, let the shallot soak for a couple of
hours.
1 large shallot, thinly sliced
1 ½ T sherry vinegar
Freshly ground pepper
¼ cup olive oil
In a small bowl, toss the shallot with the vinegar, and
pepper. Let stand 15 minutes, the whisk in the oil.
Sorta-Caesar Dressing
½ cup mayonnaise
2 oil-packed anchovies
1 garlic clove, chopped
1 T capers, drained
1 T lemon juice
1 T water
1 t Dijon mustard
2 T freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese
Freshly ground pepper
In a food processor, combine the mayonnaise, anchovies,
garlic, capers, lemon juice, water and mustard and process until smooth.
Add the cheese and pulse to blend. Mix in pepper to taste.
Honey Mustard Dressing
1/3 cup honey
3 T Dijon or country Dijon Mustard
¼ cup rice or white wine vinegar
1/8 cup olive oil
Freshly ground back pepper to taste
Whisk together the honey, mustard, and vinegar. Slowly whisk
in the oil, then add black pepper.
Creamy Dill Dressing
¼ cup finely chopped fresh dill, or more to taste
1 t Dijon mustard
¼ cup rice or white wine vinegar
6-8 T mayonnaise
2 T olive oil
Freshly ground white or black pepper
Whisk together the mustard, vinegar, and olive oil. Add
mayonnaise and dill. Then add pepper to taste.
Pomegranate Dressing
¼ cup pomegranate molasses (sometimes Whole Foods has this in
the honey & molasses section, it’s also generally available at Middle
Eastern markets)
½ cup rice vinegar
3 T Dijon mustard
¼ cup olive oil
Freshly ground black pepper
Whisk together the molasses, vinegar, and mustard. Gradually
add in the olive oil. Add pepper to taste.
Viennese Red Wine Vinegar Dressing
(Great on summer tomatoes)
6 medium tomatoes (Early Girls are great for this)
1 T olive oil
¼ cup red wine vinegar
1 T water
2 t sugar
Freshly ground pepper
½ t mild prepared mustard or ground mustard
¼ t sweet Hungarian paprika
2 t chopped parsley
Slice tomatoes. Put in a shallow serving bowl. In separate
receptacle, mix together oil, vinegar, water, sugar, pepper, mustard, and
paprika.
Pour over tomatoes. The Austrians would chill their tomatoes
about ½ an hour prior to serving, but since I’m only half Austrian I prefer
mine room temperature. Either way, let the tomatoes sit for about 30 minutes.
Just before serving sprinkle on the fresh parsley. If you don’t have fresh
parsley, I’d recommend leaving it off. Dried parsley just doesn’t bring the
tomatoes to life the way the fresh parsley does.
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