Add a Bit More Green to Your Fall Diet
This salad puts hearty spinach leaves to work alongside marinated tofu and a dressing that takes cues from Japan.
Baked marinated tofu tops this spinach salad, which is hearty enough for a full meal.CreditKarsten Moran for The New York Times
It’s
November, and snow has already fallen in parts of the country. Usually
those first snowflakes have people reaching for comforting soups and
stews, but some, myself included, may still yearn for lighter fare.
Personally, I always want a salad, whatever the weather.
There are many interesting cool-weather salad ingredients.
Pleasantly bitter greens, like endive, frisée, radicchio and their
colorful chicory cousins, are lovely combined with fruit (apples, pears,
citrus) and toasted walnuts. You’ll find them at them available now, at
farmers’ markets and in the produce departments of most supermarkets.
But
the other day, one of my favorite market stands was offering gorgeous
spinach with medium-size crinkled, curly leaves. Freshly picked, this
spinach had enough body to stand up to a forceful vinaigrette. You
certainly can’t say that about the ubiquitous packaged baby spinach that
more or less wilts on contact with dressing. I prefer the larger leaves
for a chewy salad with crunch.
Cucumber, daikon, spinach, edamame, as well as pumpkin and sesame seeds, add crunch and flavor.CreditKarsten Moran for The New York Times
If
you can’t find hearty spinach leaves like that, choose another kind of
green with texture, such as Japanese jagged-edged mizuna, a member of
the mustard family; Napa cabbage, sliced into wide ribbons; or large
arugula leaves. A mix of several kinds of sturdy greens is another
possibility.
I
considered what kind of salad to make: Of course, there’s the classic
spinach salad tossed with crisp sizzled bacon and a hot dressing made in
the skillet with bacon fat and cider vinegar. I often serve a spinach
salad dressed with a zippy mustard vinaigrette, chopped hard-cooked egg
and shavings of Gruyère cheese or Provolone. With or without bacon, it
makes a great first course or light lunch. Delicious as those may be, I
craved something with a fresher feel.
The marinated tofu bakes in a 375-degree oven until slightly crisped.CreditKarsten Moran for The New York Times
On
this particular day, I wanted a salad substantial enough to be a main
course, and came up with this one, which takes cues from Japan. I
enhanced the gingery, garlicky dressing with miso, toasted sesame oil,
soy sauce and splash of sake for good measure. For texture, I added
chopped cucumber, thinly sliced daikon radish and edamame beans, along
with a shower of sesame seeds, pumpkin seeds and peanuts. To make it
even more of a meal, I tucked in slices of baked marinated firm tofu.
The
hearty, handsome salad fulfilled the urge for something green, healthy,
vegetarian and light, even with a chill in the air. For that matter,
though, this exceedingly satisfying spinach salad could easily be served
year round.
Add a Bit More Green to Your Fall Diet
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