Posted May 21, 2009
Rachel Cly Vincent is a “salad freak.”
She usually has at least one a day, either as an appetizer or entree.
“They are easy to throw together, and you don’t have to heat up the kitchen,” said Vincent, food and nutrition services manager for St. John Medical Center in Owasso.
Plus, salads can be eaten before a meal to fill you so you don’t overeat, she said.Or it can be a delicious, filling meal of fewer than 500 calories.
Or, if you drown it in your favorite, full-fat ranch, it can be filling in areas you’d rather not be full. But Vincent, along with several local salad-eaters, shared their delicious and healthy dressing recipes with us.
“I refuse to ruin a perfectly healthy salad with a calorie-laden dressing,” said Vincent, who will ask for Caesar dressing on the side. She dips her fork in it, then her salad. “It is the difference between eating tablespoons of dressing and teaspoons. You can save hundreds of calories that way.”
Amanda Viles and her boyfriend, David R. Wagoner, frequently eat salads, but they have to have “flair.”
“We’re over the iceberg salads with shredded carrots and ranch,” Viles said. “I like to use more interesting lettuces, as each really does taste differently.”
Like escarole, which has a hardy, buttery taste, she. They like it with their Warm Turkey Bacon Vinaigrette that uses turkey bacon instead of pork.
“I would really like to try to add a poached egg to the salad,” Wagoner added. “The yolk would work well
with the bacon in the dressing. I know that takes away the low-cal part, but the versatility of the recipe is part of its charm.”
WARM TURKEY BACON VINAIGRETTE
8 cups of escarole leaves cut into ribbons
4 slices of uncooked turkey bacon
3 medium shallots, halved and thinly sliced
1/4 cup red wine vinegar, divided
1/4 cup water
4 teaspoon extra virgin olive oil
1/4 teaspoon table salt
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
1. Cook the bacon until crisp; set aside.
2. Add shallots and the vinegar in the same skillet over medium heat. Add remaining ingredients, stirring frequently.
3. Add bacon after 1-2 minutes, and pour directly on your salad. “It’s groovy,” Wagoner told us.
Mark Dodson, who makes his own dressings frequently, shared his idea for a “lightened-up” Caesar.
“Olive oil is full of nothing but good-for-you fats, and you avoid any egg with this recipe,” he said. “The balsamic will add a touch of sweetness.”
Light Caesar Dressing
1/3 to 1/2 cup olive oil
2 cloves of garlic
1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
3 tablespoons Balsamic vinegar
1-2 teaspoons anchovy paste
Fresh cracked black pepper
1/4 cup Parmesan-Reggiano cheese
1. In a blender, add the mustard, garlic, vinegar, paste and pepper. Turn the blender on, and stream in the olive oil to your desired consistency.
2. Add the cheese, and taste the dressing before adding any additional salt.
Kim Little of Tulsa suggested Red Kennedy’s dressing, which has a kick.
“I can remember being a little girl and my mom making the Red Kennedy’s dressing,” she said. “I think my dad got it from Red in the 1950s.”
RED KENNEDY’S DRESSING
1 cup fat-free mayo
3/4 cup ketchup (“You can use sugar-free,” Little said.)
1/4 cup lemon juice
1/2 teaspoon prepared horseradish
Salt and pepper to taste
1. Whisk mayo and ketchup until smooth; add more of either one to taste. The color should be a light pink-orange.
2. Add remaining ingredients, mixing well with each addition.
You can also add chopped fresh basil, dill, pickle relish and a dash of Tabasco, said Little, who recommends it on green salads and cold, fresh shrimp.
Little also gave us a sweet offering, a fruit dressing she came up with herself “in a rare moment of domesticity.”
Yogurt and Honey Dressing
1 8-ounce container of low-fat vanilla yogurt
1/4 cup honey
1 teaspoon curry powder
4 tablespoons lime juice
1. Simply mix, then serve.
Top that Salads can be healthy dishes, or they can clog your arteries with fistfuls of bacon, egg, cheese and dressing.
To keep it healthy, Rachel Cly Vincent, food and nutrition services manager for St. John Medical Center in Owasso, has some salad-topping suggestions.
“You can have some higherfat items on your salad,” she said, “as long as you don’t go crazy with the portions.” The base of your salad — the greens and vegetables — don’t have many calories at all, Vincent said. Normally, 3 cups of greens are about 25 calories, so that leaves a little wiggle room for toppings.
A piece of bacon (note the singular), an egg and some feta cheese, which she and her husband use on all their salads, will add up to about 180 calories. With the veggies, it’s going only a smidge past 200.
So if you use a low-fat dressing and add lean meat, you can stay below 500 calories.
If there are veggies you don’t like by themselves, cut them up small and hide them in a salad, she said. This way, you can get nutrients you may otherwise miss.
For a Mexican or Tex-Mex salad, use salsa instead of dressing, she said otherwise, she suggested light Balsamic or raspberry vinaigrette. If a restaurant’s menu doesn’t offer reduced-calorie dressings, order vinegar.
Add fresh or dried fruit, she said, and a tablespoon of nuts. “It gives you the sweet and salty plus great texture.”
Instead of croutons, use walnuts, almonds or pecans for added crunch, Vincent said. “Toasting the nuts gives them a more intense flavor, so you can use less and still have a great salad.”
Jason Ashley Wright 581-8483 jason.wright@tulsaworld.com
Date: May 20, 2009
To see more of the Tulsa World, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.tulsaworld.com.
Copyright © 2009, Tulsa World, Okla.
Rachel Cly Vincent is a "salad freak." She usually has at least one a day, either as an appetizer or entree. "They are easy to throw together, and you don't have to heat up the kitchen," said Vincent, food and nutrition services manager for St. John Medical Center in Owasso. Plus, salads can be eaten before a meal to fill you so you don't overeat, she said.Or it can be a delicious, filling meal of fewer than 500 calories. Or, if you drown it in your favorite, full-fat ranch, it can be filling in areas you'd rather not be full. But Vincent, along with several local salad-eaters, shared their delicious and healthy dressing recipes with us. "I refuse to ruin a perfectly healthy salad with a calorie-laden dressing," said Vincent, who will ask for Caesar dressing on the side. She dips her fork in it, then her salad. "It is the difference between eating tablespoons of dressing and teaspoons. You can save hundreds of calories that way." Amanda Viles and her boyfriend, David R. Wagoner, frequently eat salads, but they have to have "flair." "We're over the iceberg salads with shredded carrots and ranch," Viles said. "I like to use more interesting lettuces, as each really does taste differently." Like escarole, which has a hardy, buttery taste, she. They like it with their Warm Turkey Bacon Vinaigrette that uses turkey bacon instead of pork. "I would really like to try to add a poached egg to the salad," Wagoner added. "The yolk would work well with the bacon in the dressing. I know that takes away the low-cal part, but the versatility of the recipe is part of its charm." WARM TURKEY BACON VINAIGRETTE 8 cups of escarole leaves cut into ribbons 4 slices of uncooked turkey bacon 3 medium shallots, halved and thinly sliced 1/4 cup red wine vinegar, divided 1/4 cup water 4 teaspoon extra virgin olive oil 1/4 teaspoon table salt 1/4 teaspoon black pepper
1. Cook the bacon until crisp; set aside.
2. Add shallots and the vinegar in the same skillet over medium heat. Add remaining ingredients, stirring frequently.
3. Add bacon after 1-2 minutes, and pour directly on your salad. "It's groovy," Wagoner told us.
Mark Dodson, who makes his own dressings frequently, shared his idea for a "lightened-up" Caesar.
"Olive oil is full of nothing but good-for-you fats, and you avoid any egg with this recipe," he said. "The balsamic will add a touch of sweetness."
Light Caesar Dressing
1/3 to 1/2 cup olive oil 2 cloves of garlic 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard 3 tablespoons Balsamic vinegar 1-2 teaspoons anchovy paste Fresh cracked black pepper 1/4 cup Parmesan-Reggiano cheese
1. In a blender, add the mustard, garlic, vinegar, paste and pepper. Turn the blender on, and stream in the olive oil to your desired consistency.
2. Add the cheese, and taste the dressing before adding any additional salt.
Kim Little of Tulsa suggested Red Kennedy's dressing, which has a kick.
"I can remember being a little girl and my mom making the Red Kennedy's dressing," she said. "I think my dad got it from Red in the 1950s."
RED KENNEDY'S DRESSING
1 cup fat-free mayo 3/4 cup ketchup ("You can use sugar-free," Little said.) 1/4 cup lemon juice 1/2 teaspoon prepared horseradish Salt and pepper to taste
1. Whisk mayo and ketchup until smooth; add more of either one to taste. The color should be a light pink-orange.
2. Add remaining ingredients, mixing well with each addition.
You can also add chopped fresh basil, dill, pickle relish and a dash of Tabasco, said Little, who recommends it on green salads and cold, fresh shrimp.
Little also gave us a sweet offering, a fruit dressing she came up with herself "in a rare moment of domesticity."
Yogurt and Honey Dressing
1 8-ounce container of low-fat vanilla yogurt 1/4 cup honey 1 teaspoon curry powder 4 tablespoons lime juice
1. Simply mix, then serve.
Top that Salads can be healthy dishes, or they can clog your arteries with fistfuls of bacon, egg, cheese and dressing.
To keep it healthy, Rachel Cly Vincent, food and nutrition services manager for St. John Medical Center in Owasso, has some salad-topping suggestions.
"You can have some higherfat items on your salad," she said, "as long as you don't go crazy with the portions." The base of your salad -- the greens and vegetables -- don't have many calories at all, Vincent said. Normally, 3 cups of greens are about 25 calories, so that leaves a little wiggle room for toppings.
A piece of bacon (note the singular), an egg and some feta cheese, which she and her husband use on all their salads, will add up to about 180 calories. With the veggies, it's going only a smidge past 200.
So if you use a low-fat dressing and add lean meat, you can stay below 500 calories.
If there are veggies you don't like by themselves, cut them up small and hide them in a salad, she said. This way, you can get nutrients you may otherwise miss.
For a Mexican or Tex-Mex salad, use salsa instead of dressing, she said otherwise, she suggested light Balsamic or raspberry vinaigrette. If a restaurant's menu doesn't offer reduced-calorie dressings, order vinegar.
Add fresh or dried fruit, she said, and a tablespoon of nuts. "It gives you the sweet and salty plus great texture."
Instead of croutons, use walnuts, almonds or pecans for added crunch, Vincent said. "Toasting the nuts gives them a more intense flavor, so you can use less and still have a great salad."
Jason Ashley Wright 581-8483 jason.wright@tulsaworld.com
Date: May 20, 2009 To see more of the Tulsa World, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.tulsaworld.com.
Copyright © 2009, Tulsa World, Okla.
Tags: Cold, Food
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