Before you turn up your nose or click away from this post, I ask you to at least consider trying a freshly-made spinach salad. This is still from the series of recipes from the family card file that I’m testing once again. Like usual, I’ve made some minor tweaks to it but really nothing drastic.
Like you, I was turned off from this vitamin-packed leafy green as a child. Poorly cooked, drained of all flavor, and lifeless, it was really not one of my favorite vegetables. I’m not sure that you could have paid me to eat this when I was growing up, and I remember it appearing only a couple of times at the dinner table. Now I realize that crisp, bright green, seasonal leaves make all the difference in this salad.
The Greenmarket did not fail to deliver when I was shopping there today, looking for something wonderful to pair with my leftover flank steak. Just see how amazingly fresh and full of life these leaves look. A few strips of meat alongside the lightly dressed spinach topped with toasted walnut pieces and a glass of red wine and I’m in iron-packed, anti-oxident heaven!
Spinach Salad*
Prep time: 15-20 minutes Servings: 4-5 adults
Ingredients: 4 cups loosely-packed and thoroughly cleaned spinach leaves (baby are best) 1/2 cup walnut pieces, dry toasted and cooled 2 Tbsp good white wine vinegar 1 medium garlic clove, crushed 1 Tbsp dijon mustard (not grainy mustard) 1/3 c. extra virgin olive oil salt and pepper to taste
Assembly: Place walnuts in a non-stick pan on low heat or on a baking tray in a 300 degree Fahrenheit oven. Let roast for about 5-10 minutes until lightly browned but not burned.
While the walnuts are roasting, prep the spinach leaves. Rinse completely, possibly several times, to remove all traces of dirt and grit. Trim off the woody ends (if using larger leaves). Run through a salad spinner or pat dry with paper towels and put into a serving bowl. Check the walnuts to see if they are done. Remove them from the oven and set aside to cool.
Stir together the white wine vinegar, garlic, and mustard. Whisk in the olive oil in a thin stream until the dressing is fully combined. Add salt and pepper to taste. Pour the dressing over the salad. Top with the walnuts, and toss everything together until it is fully incorporated.
*There are two things to add to this recipe. One is that my mother makes a version that omits the walnuts and, instead, takes sliced mushrooms, adds them to the dressing, lets them sit for about 30 minutes or so, and then pours everything over the spinach leaves. Why she didn’t then also add bacon to it is one of life’s culinary mysteries. This would make a good steakhouse type salad. The other addition is an attribution. My mother thinks that this recipe actually came from one of Julia Child’s newspaper columns. She’s going to do some research for me on this, as I couldn’t come up with anything online by way of substantiation. Aside from the tweaks I made about toasting the walnuts, which I think bring a heartier flavor to the salad, I am not going to claim that this is my own creation, rather it is something that found its way into our family card file, and I’ve decided needs to be kept in mine as well.
Buon appetito!
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