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Friday, 1 February 2013

Broccoli Salad

One of my 101 Things challenges that I've been surprisingly lax on is having a dinner party with a theme every six months. So just before Christmas I decided to hold a "red and green" themed dinner party in honour of the traditional Christmas colours.
 
Okay, so it was more "shades of red and green", which meant that pink and burgandy and purple and very pale green were all acceptable colours.
 
I'll eventually post a couple of other recipes, including a beetroot and goat cheese salad, a roasted vegetable salad, and an orange polenta cake covered in pink rose-flavoured buttercream and sprinkled with pistachios. Such pretty colours!
 
In the meantime, here is a salad that sounds utterly revolting, but which I promise is not. It really, really isn't. In fact, I could eat rather a lot of this and not get sick of it. I think. But it's red and green (sort of) and I made it for this red-and-green dinner party as well as for another Christmas potluck lunch.
 
It's adapted from a recipe on Simply Recipes and I have basically played around with the quantities, including eliminating half the dressing (because it was absolutely drowning in it the first time I made it for a pre-Christmas BBQ the weekend before the dinner party). I can't really claim it as my own, but I have added a couple of steps that I think were quite important for the success of the salad.
 
2 medium-large heads of broccoli
1/2c toasted slivered almonds
3 middle rashers of bacon (i.e. the full length, not the short cuts), rind & outer fat removed
A little oil
1/3 red onion, diced
1c frozen peas, thawed
1/2c mayonnaise (I used whole egg mayo - much nicer than that 97% fat free garbage)
1tbsp apple cider vinegar
1 tbsp honey
 
Thaw peas on paper towel and pat dry. You will want to use fairly new peas and not the ones from the back of your freezer, otherwise they'll be all wrinkly and manky.
 
Chop onion and set aside.
 
Dice bacon into 1-1.5cm pieces and fry in a little oil (you won't need much as the bacon releases fat) until lightly browned. Remove from heat and drain on paper towel. Set aside.
 
In the same pan, toast the slivered almonds and keep them moving until lightly browned. Remove them from the pan immediately that this happens, otherwise they will keep cooking and burn. Set aside.
 
Remove florets from broccoli heads. If you wish, you can also chop some of the stalk up and use that (I didn't). Bring a large pot of water to the boil, and prepare a large bowl with iced water. Place broccoli florets in water that is at a rolling boil and leave them only until they turn green (no more than 1-1.5 minutes) then lift out with a slotted spoon and plunge them into the iced water to arrest cooking. They should be bright green and still crunchy, but not repulsively so. You just don't want them to be soggy. You may need to do this in two batches. Drain broccoli thoroughly then pop in the refrigerator until you're ready to dress and serve it.
 
Mix the mayonnaise, apple cider vinegar and honey until thoroughly and evenly combined. Keep refrigerated until ready to use it.
 
Shortly before serving, combine broccoli, almonds, onions and bacon in a large bowl. Pour dressing evenly over salad and toss to combine.

This is a shot without my favourite ingredient - bacon - because I am an awesome friend and didn't put it in until after the vegetarians had taken a serving. And bacon is why I will never be a vegetarian!

13 comments:

  1. Hehe good idea adding in the bacon at the last minute! That's one item that prevents me being a vegetarian too! :)

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    1. Come to think of it, I actually know a couple of vegetarians who won't eat meat, except for fish and bacon. They say that bacon doesn't count as meat! I guess if it's the flavour or texture of meat they don't enjoy it kind of makes sense, but not if it's about animal rights or global footprints...

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  2. I think bacon and broccoli go so well together. What a lovely looking dish xx

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    1. Cabbage and bacon also go well together. My mum makes this strange fried cabbage dish, and I think it also contains onion and bacon and a little bit of vinegar and brown sugar. Weird but good (probably because of the bacon!)

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  3. My mother in law makes a similar broccoli salad that I just can't get enough of. Looks delish!

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    1. It really is very moreish! I like the fact that the salad dressing kind of slides off it, so it's not overwhelming mouthfuls of creaminess like in potato or pasta salad.

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  4. One word (x3): Nom. Nom. Nom.

    I loooooove this one! I'm pretty sure if I had a party at this very moment, it would have to be a "salad" party where people make different kinds of salads to share. I would name off a couple, but I'm afraid it would turn into a sort of "Forest Gump" moment by naming so many. I was really wanting 7 layer salad, which has many of the same components that this salad has.

    Thanks for the recipe!

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    1. You've just given me an idea - I have a list of 101 challenges to complete in 1001 days, and one of those is to hold a dinner party with a theme every six months. Maybe I should make one of them a salad-only party!

      You've also reminded me of Marshall's 7-layer-salad from How I Met Your Mother, which I'm pretty sure included gummy bears and cheese doodles. Sounds about as healthy as ambrosia salad (which I have also yet to try, and which I doubt should hold the title "salad"...)!

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  5. This looks and sounds so delicious! I can't wait to try it. I've been trying to think of other ways to get broccoli in our diets without just the usual steaming... this will do the trick! Thanks for the great idea, Ness.

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    1. Thanks Carole :) Yes, I have to say I was quite surprised how much everyone enjoyed it. I made it for a Christmas pot-luck first, which I knew would be dessert- and finger food-heavy, and sometimes you just want to eat your greens! I think that anything with bacon in it will be polished off, truth be told.

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  6. Haha - I'll have to add evggie bacon ;) not as bad I thought it would be - but def not bacon lol.

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    1. Haha well the good news is that the vegetarians said it actually tasted good without the bacon anyhow. I imagine adding something salty and something smokey might do the same thing, like smoked paprika and a little salt.

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