Olive oil, dijon mustard, salt, pepper.
Asklemmy
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
Search asklemmy ๐
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
- Open-ended question
- Not offensive: at this point, we do not have the bandwidth to moderate overtly political discussions. Assume best intent and be excellent to each other.
- Not regarding using or support for Lemmy: context, see the list of support communities and tools for finding communities below
- Not ad nauseam inducing: please make sure it is a question that would be new to most members
- An actual topic of discussion
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
- Lemmyverse: community search
- sub.rehab: maps old subreddits to fediverse options, marks official as such
- !lemmy411@lemmy.ca: a community for finding communities
~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de~
Same for me but with some apple cider vinegar
Usually a little bit of olive oil, salt, and balsamic vinegar OR fresh lemon juice.
Ave, true to Caesar.
Balsamic.
Caesar with anchovies, or a good vinaigrette for a non-caeser salad.
Cesar!
Depends on the kind of salad!
If you mean the leafy greens kind of salad, I'm pretty variable in that I don't have one specific favorite, and prefer to mix things up (bad pun intended).
Honey mustard, usually homemade if I have time and freedom to make it.
Russian and/or Catalina are pretty nice when used sparingly, particularly if there's egg in the salad.
Vinaigrettes are great when I have access to antacids lol. Love the taste, but the heartburn can be a barrier.
Caesar salads need caesar dressing.
And, in a pinch, some lemon juice, salt, pepper and a bit of olive oil will get the job done.
For other salads, like potato salad, I do blends as well usually. But it's going to be blends of Duke's, Hellman's and miracle whip. None of them are perfect by themselves for every combination of ingredients, so it comes down to tweaking each batch until it's right. But usually it'll start with a 2:1 of one of the two mayo brands to miracle whip. Sometimes it's all three in equal measures to start. Rarely it'll be the two mayos only, or miracle whip with either small amounts or none of the others.
That last is typically only going to be a specific egg salad that has no pickle relish, so it needs the bump of sweetness and acidity MW brings to the table that gets muddied with mayo added too.
It's all about creaminess, flavor balance, and the palates of who will be eating.
In a very small jar mix 1 teaspoon of miso paste (I like red, but yellow is a bit milder for most people), add some powdered ginger, granulated garlic and a little black pepper. Then add a 50/50 of olive oil and vinegar (white wine or rice are good, regular is fine, cider is too strong for this). With a spoon, smush the miso until it's mostly dissolved. Put a lid on the jar and shake it like it owes you money! You can also add 50/50 yellow/red miso for a different balance of taste. Do not add any salt, that comes from the miso.
I am trashy and stereotypical. It's unironically ranch for me.
for me as well and often times its X ranch where X can be things like salsa, barbecue, avacado, or just so many things.
~~simple~~ vinaigrette. Olive oil, French mustard, vinegar, salt, pepper (garlic, shallots). depending on the salad it's wine vinegar (red or white) or apple cider vinegar, Dijon or ร l'ancienne mustard. if i feel fancy I'll add some herbs (tarragon is great) or some egg yolk for extra creaminess.
Simple. Lists 14 ingredients.
Olive oil, balsamic vinegar, the not smooth kind of mustard, honey or syrup, onion, salt and pepper.
Or mostly the same but swap mustard for chilli paste (gochujang or samba olek) and the olive oil for toasted sesame oil, maybe also swap to different vinegar but balsamic still works.
Depends on the salad.
(But let's be honest, it's usually ranch.)
Dry with pickled onions and some chicken.
I absolutely hate salads, but that is what I ate 5 days a week when I worked for a chain of bike shops. It's how I lost my last bit of weight to get under 7% back when I was racing. Going from 350lbs to 220lbs wasn't super hard while just commuting to work, and training/racing casually. Going from 220lbs to under 190lbs was super hard for me. Eating something I could barely tolerate meant I only ate what I absolutely needed because I was freaking starving... So, to me, while I hate salads, if I'm eating one, it is for a specific reason, and if I'm objective about that reason, I'm going to fit my opinion to what best meets those goals. Therefore, my favorite salad is the one I can only barely tolerate and will eat, but only as much as I absolutely must. Like seriously, I brought my lunch into my office and would eat a few bites over the course of hours. That too is a major aspect of real weight loss. How much you eat at any given point in time is very important.
just olive oil and a bit of fresh lemon juice. I'm not that salad dressing kind of guy.
Roquefort from the now closed Apollo's Pizza and Pasta in Olympia, WA. Haven't had anything that came close since
Going to be the weird one and say none. Salads is fine without dressings
Not weird. I love naked salad. Sometimes I put it in a burrito and make a wrap.
Either the most classic, balsamic vinegar and olive oil, or lemon tahina. Either way with a bunch of spices.
Make a vinaigrette then crumble in blue cheese and shake it together. That might be my favorite, or at least the best one I'm usually willing to make.
I'm a simple man, just olive oil, salt and lemon
20% balsamic vinegar 30% olive oil 50% maple syrup As much mustard as is needed to keep it from separating
Takes 5 minutes to make and keeps for a long time
Love me some 50/50 lemon juice and maple syrup. Never thought to try with balsamic/oil, thanks for the tip!
Caesar vinagrette (no fish)
Catalina, honey Dijon, and balsamic vinaigrette
Orange Garlic
Orange segments and the juices, pressed garlic, olive oil, s&p.
Pumpkin seed oil
Somebody must like thousand island... Its not me but they keep selling it so someone's buying it
I didn't say dressings on sandwiches ๐คฃ