Arguments for cooking the escarole are well known:
- Braised escarole is one of the best things in the world.
- Raw escarole is bitter.
- Raw escarole is hard to chew.
- You are going to get another seventeen pounds of greens from your CSA tomorrow whether you cook this week's greens or not.
The overwhelming iron-clad logic of these arguments, however, wilts into a soggy heap on days like today when our very brains are fricasseed in the 90-degree heat. Of course you can make salads, but just as you need
raw salads even in the coldest days of winter, you need vegetables in some way relaxed, if not quite cooked, even in the hottest days of summer. Viana La Place has a recipe for Smashed Salad, for which you put your salad greens in a clean pillow case, and then smash them against the side of your counter,
bang, boom, whap! I would love to try this some day, but I was not quite up to that today. What I did was combine two processes for relaxing raw greens. I rubbed them between the palms of my hands with kosher salt to break down the cell walls, and then let them marinate a while in olive oil and cider vinegar. The resulting dish is pleasantly mellow, but with the live vital flavor of raw food. I learned about marinating raw greens, even the really tough one like collards, from Lillian Butler, founder of
Raw Soul. I will have to tell you more about Raw Soul soon, no solemn vow implied.
OH, and don't be scared about
washing your greens. It is
easy-peasy-lemon-squeezey.
This is my submission for
Haalo's Weekend Herb Blogging, founded by our fearless leader
Kalyn, and hosted this week by Anh at
A Food Lover's Journey.
Non-Cooked Escarole1 bunch escarole
kosher salt
olive oil (be liberal)
about 3 teaspoons apple cider vinegar
1 small onion, finely diced
3 cloves garlic, finely minced
black olives or tapanade (optional)
orange juice or zest or both (optional)
lemon juice or zest or both (optional)
sun-dried tomatoes (optional)
a pinch of cumin (optional)
fresh or dried chiles (optional)
a tiny bit of sugar or agave (optional)
Wash the escarole and spin dry. sprinkle the leaves with kosher salt. using your hands, massage the salt into the leaves. Chop the kneaded leaves as soarsely or fine as desired. Drizzle a liberal amount of olive oil over the leaves and mix well. add the vinegar and minced onion and garlic and optional aroamtics and mix well again. Taste for seasonings. You can serve it right now if you just can't wait, but it will be even better in half an hour
Labels: A garden deriv'd and defin'd שהחינו וקימנו והגיענו לזמן הזה, pareve פּאַרעװע, peysekhdik פּסחדיק, vegan װעגאַן