Many times, when we cook a meal, we pay much more attention to the main dish. This may seem logical since the other dishes function as side dishes, so we think that they do not deserve much preparation.
The matter changes if, instead of the cooks, we are the ones who consume the dishes. In this case, we can give the same attention to the accompaniments, and if they are not very elaborate, at least we demand that they should be tasty and suitable for the main course. Here we will tell you about the star of side dishes—salad.
Salad is not a dish with a single presentation or preparation. In fact, it is a whole family of dishes with very varied ingredients and preparations, which makes them very versatile and can serve multiple purposes at a table. In a salad, ingredients that are usually seen and eaten separately can be mixed to form a delicious combination that can be served not only as a side dish, but also as a main course. Such is the case with this excellent shrimp salad with rice that you can find at riceselect.com/recipe/bangkok-rice-shrimp-salad.
Since there are so many kinds of salads that they cannot be reduced to a single type, we can find them made with the most dissimilar ingredients to please the most diverse and even opposite tastes.
However, all salads have these three features in common:
Everything else that salads can contain makes them different. Therefore, it is difficult to find some order in the “chaos” of salad flavors. However, we can attempt a classification without pretending to be definitive.
Due to their simplicity, raw salads are perhaps the most frequently prepared salads. They have at least one raw vegetable, such as lettuce, cabbage or spinach, as a main ingredient. A typical raw salad is the lettuce-and-tomato salad, an example of the so-called “green salads”.
Cooked salads, on the other hand, have their vegetables cooked, although they may also have some pieces of raw vegetables—parsley, coriander—, generally as a complementary dressing or garnish. The typical raw salad is the Russian salad or Olivier salad, which contains cooked potatoes and carrots.
Increasingly popular, salads with grains or seeds can contain cooked grains, such as rice or wheat, or cooked seeds, from legumes—beans, broad beans, green beans, etc. Among seeds, we must also include nuts, which can be eaten raw—walnuts, peanuts, pistachios, cashews, etc.
It is also very frequent to add croutons —pieces of toasted or fried bread— to salads. Other salads may contain cooked pasta, especially the varieties called “short pasta”— rigatoni, farfalle, sedani, penne…
Isn’t it a contradiction to say “salad” and “non-vegetarian” in the same phrase? Actually, it is not. Salads can have chunks of meat among their ingredients. There are also fish salads, such as the very popular tuna salad, or salads with seafood, such as shrimp or prawn salads.
Even green salads, which can be considered undoubtedly vegetarian, may contain ingredients of animal origin. For example, Caesar salad may contain some chicken breast, fried bacon or canned anchovies. Russian salad, in turn, is often mixed with slices of hard-boiled egg, and its original version even included some lobster or crab.
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