Caesar Salad

Caesar Salad
Jessica Emily Marx for The New York Times
Total Time
45 minutes
Rating
4(2,401)
Comments
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Making the dressing for Caesar salad is an exercise in the art of layering salty ingredients to build flavor; there are anchovies, Parmesan and Worcestershire sauce, in addition to the salt itself. (There is also garlic, which is pounded with a pinch of salt using a mortar and pestle to make a smooth paste.) Since a delicious balanced dressing depends on working in the right amounts of each of those ingredients — and the other, unsalted elements — refrain from adding the salt crystals until you’ve added the right amount of everything else. This recipe is adapted from "Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat" by Samin Nosrat, and it's absolutely worth making the torn croutons — store-bought croutons can’t compete, and you'll have leftovers for another salad.

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Ingredients

Yield:6 to 8 servings

    For the Torn Croutons

    • 1-pound loaf day-old country or sourdough bread
    • cup extra-virgin olive oil
    • Salt, to taste

    For the Salad

    • 1egg yolk at room temperature
    • ¾cup neutral oil, such as grapeseed
    • 3 to 4tablespoons lemon juice, more if needed for mayonnaise
    • 8anchovy fillets
    • 1garlic clove, finely grated or pounded with a pinch of salt
    • 1teaspoon white wine vinegar
    • 13-ounce chunk of Parmesan, finely grated (about 1 cup), plus more for serving
    • ¾teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
    • Salt and ground black pepper
    • Romaine lettuce, Little Gem lettuce, chicories, raw or blanched kale, shaved brussels sprouts or Belgian endive
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (8 servings)

505 calories; 36 grams fat; 6 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 21 grams monounsaturated fat; 7 grams polyunsaturated fat; 31 grams carbohydrates; 1 gram dietary fiber; 3 grams sugars; 14 grams protein; 750 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Make the torn croutons: Heat oven to 400 degrees. Remove the crusts from the bread, then cut into inch-thick slices. Cut each slice into inch-wide strips, and tear each strip into inch-size pieces. Toss with olive oil to coat them evenly, then spread pieces out in a single layer on a baking sheet. (Use a second sheet if needed to prevent crowding.) Toast for 18 to 22 minutes, checking them after 8 minutes. Rotate pans, switch their oven positions and use a metal spatula to turn the croutons so they brown evenly. Bake until they’re golden brown and crunchy on the outside, with just a tiny bit of chew on the inside. Season with a light sprinkling of salt if needed. Use immediately; store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 2 days.

  2. Step 2

    Meanwhile, make mayonnaise: Place the egg yolk in a deep, medium metal or ceramic bowl. Dampen a tea towel and roll it up into a long log, then form it into a ring on the counter. Place the bowl inside the ring; this will hold the bowl in place while you whisk. (And if whisking by hand is simply out of the question, use a blender, stand mixer or food processor.)

  3. Step 3

    Use a ladle or bottle with a nozzle to drip in the neutral oil a drop at a time, while whisking the oil into the yolk. Go. Really. Slowly. And don’t stop whisking. Once you’ve added about half the oil, you can start adding a little more oil at once. You want the mayonnaise to be stiff, but if it thickens so much that it’s impossible to whisk, add a teaspoon or so of lemon juice to help thin it out.

  4. Step 4

    Prepare the dressing: Coarsely chop the anchovies and then pound them into a fine paste using a mortar and pestle. The more you break them down, the better the dressing will be.

  5. Step 5

    In a medium bowl, stir together the anchovies, mayonnaise, garlic, lemon juice, vinegar, Parmesan, Worcestershire and pepper. Taste with a leaf of lettuce, then add salt and adjust the acid (the lemon juice and vinegar) as needed, or add a little of each salty ingredient (Worcestershire, anchovies, Parmesan) to the dressing, bit by bit. Adjust the acid, then taste and adjust the salty ingredients until you reach the ideal balance of salt, fat and acid.

  6. Step 6

    Use your hands to toss the greens and torn croutons with an abundant amount of dressing in a large bowl to coat evenly. Garnish with Parmesan and black pepper and serve immediately. Refrigerate leftover dressing, covered, for up to 3 days.

Ratings

4 out of 5
2,401 user ratings
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Comments

Nicole, I make caesar salad dressing literally once a week, using these same ingredients, and always make it in a small Cuisinart food processor.

With the utmost respect to chef/author Nosrat, spare yourself the tea towel and double bowels, and just follow instructions using a processor. Voila! The time-cost-benefit-taste ratio of making your own dressing > store-bought.

Do follow her tips about slow oil pour, finely pulverizing the garlic-anchovy and only adding salt at the end, though.

Do not be afraid of the anchovies. Use good quality salt-packed anchovies that you rinse well. You will be rewarded with a depth of flavor that is not "fishy".

Everyone,do yourself a favor. Go back and look at the original recipe by Craig Claiborne in the New York Times cookbook published in the 1960s. Easiley has the best Caesar salad recipe by far.

This was absolutely delicious dressing. I made the croutons in a pan with olive oil, garlic, and salt; they were so good, we fried up the crusts. Delish. The 1 cup of cheese in the dressing seems like a lot, which is exactly the type I like. Also doubled the Worcestershire.

I enjoyed this recipe, but IMO there is too much oil. I whisked by hand and had a beautiful mayo but the amount of oil thinned it out way too much.

@Aisha how much mayo would you use to substitute in?

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Credits

Adapted from "Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat" by Samin Nosrat (Simon & Schuster, 2017)

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