Weeknight Cooking

The A-List Salad of B-List Spring Vegetables

April  9, 2015

Salad shouldn't be an obligation or an afterthought -- and it doesn't always have to be kale, either. Every other Thursday, Elizabeth Stark from Brooklyn Supper will help you make salads you actually want to eat. 

Today: You're waiting for asparagus and peas, we know, but don't forget about spring's lesser-known, lesser-appreciated celebrities—radishes, spring onions, and green leaf lettuce.

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It's no coincidence that the first time I hit "publish" we were right in the middle of cherry season. When I started writing about seasonal food, I was in love with all the stars: the tomatoes and peaches and corn. But now, it's the first foods of the growing season I love most: flashy ones like asparagus and strawberries, of course, but also quieter ingredients like lettuces, spring onions, and radishes.

Spring lettuce starts off faintly bitter and tasting of dirt (in the best possible way); it has an earthiness, but a grassy earthiness—not at all like winter roots. With just a little lemon, some good salt, and as much pepper as you care to use, these delicate leaves sing.

Admittedly, this salad is not new—it features torn green leaf lettuce, a vinaigrette, and salted radishes—but the novelty is in the timing. That first great salad bite is as wonderful and welcoming as a mild breeze on a pretty night or the first titter of spring peepers. 

Delicate lettuces bruise and collapse easily, and should be torn and dressed carefully. We can take them for granted soon enough, but for now, caution is the watchword. 

Green Leaf Lettuce with Radishes and Spring Onions

For the vinaigrette:

1 tablespoon minced spring onion
1 tablespoon freshly squeezed lemon juice

1/2 teaspoon medium-grain German mustard
1/4 teaspoon sea salt
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil

For the salad:

1 bunch radishes, leaves trimmed to 1/4 inch and quartered
Sea salt

1 bunch green leaf lettuce, torn, any thick stems removed
2 slender spring onions, minced
Ground black pepper

See the full recipe (and save and print it) here.

Photos by Elizabeth Stark

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A New Way to Dinner, co-authored by Food52's founders Amanda Hesser and Merrill Stubbs, is an indispensable playbook for stress-free meal-planning (hint: cook foundational dishes on the weekend and mix and match ‘em through the week).

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Elizabeth Stark, along with her husband Brian Campbell, chronicles her passion for simple, fresh recipes on the award-wining food blog Brooklyn Supper.

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