Sous-Chef Salad

Published July 25, 2021

Sous-Chef Salad
Linda Xiao for The New York Times. Food stylist: Sue Li. Prop stylist: Nicole Louie.
Total Time
30 minutes
Rating
4(1,023)
Comments
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Following the model of a classic French salade composée, this satisfying salad, packed with cooked and raw vegetables, as well as canned best-quality tuna and hard-boiled eggs, presents beautifully and eats like a meal. It builds upon a traditional salade niçoise, but a true niçoise uses no lettuce, often has anchovies, would want cracked black niçoise olives and would not have artichoke hearts and basil. So let’s call this a sous-chef salad — and dodge the whole argument while picking up another: It is definitely the best meal salad you will eat all summer. Take care to arrange it so there’s some of each component wherever your eye lands. Try to nestle and fluff the ingredients to allow them all to be seen, rather than piling layer atop layer and thus obscuring the beauty of everything below. This makes the salad very attractive and, most important, ensures that everyone gets some of everything in each bite.

Featured in: A Salad So Good You Can Eat It for Breakfast

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Ingredients

Yield:2 servings
  • Coarse kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 5ounces marble potatoes
  • 6ounces green beans, stems removed, tails intact
  • 4large eggs (refrigerator cold)
  • 1small head soft lettuce, such as butter or red-leaf lettuce
  • 1bunch radishes
  • 4ounces artichoke hearts in brine
  • 3 to 4ounces ripe cherry tomatoes (red, yellow or mixed)
  • 1(6.7-ounce) jar high-quality tuna packed in oil
  • ½small red onion (about 2 ounces), halved and thinly sliced
  • 1ounce pitted Kalamata olives, halved (about ¼ cup)
  • 3garlic cloves, freshly peeled
  • 1 to 2tablespoons red wine vinegar
  • Extra-virgin olive oil (about ¼ cup)
  • 2large, leafy basil sprigs (2 to 3 ounces)
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (2 servings)

763 calories; 47 grams fat; 9 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 28 grams monounsaturated fat; 8 grams polyunsaturated fat; 39 grams carbohydrates; 11 grams dietary fiber; 9 grams sugars; 50 grams protein; 1764 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

    Bring a large pot of water to boil over high heat. Add plenty of salt to taste of the sea.

  2. Step 2

    Add potatoes, and boil until the thin tip of a knife can pierce a potato as if going into soft wax, 8 to 9 minutes. Retrieve potatoes with a spider, and let cool and drain on a baker’s rack set into a sheet pan nearby.

  3. Step 3

    Add green beans to still-boiling water, and boil until the color transforms from raw and dusty to saturated deep green, 4 to 5 minutes. Remove with a spider, and set out to drain and cool on the baker’s rack.

  4. Step 4

    Add the eggs directly from the refrigerator into the boiling water, and boil for 8 minutes. Dump eggs and boiling water into the sink, letting the shells crackle as they land hard. Peel eggs while submerged under cold running water, which helps to stop the cooking and release the shells easily. Set peeled eggs to rest on the rack.

  5. Step 5

    While eggs boil, wash and spin-dry lettuce.

  6. Step 6

    Remove green leafy tops from radishes, and save for another use, if desired. Wash and carefully rinse radishes, taking care to remove any grit or sand.

  7. Step 7

    On a large rimmed platter, begin to assemble the salad by tearing the clean, dry lettuce and arranging it as the bed.

  8. Step 8

    Use a sharp paring knife to split the green beans in half crosswise. Scatter them artfully around the bed of lettuce.

  9. Step 9

    Split the potatoes in half and arrange artfully.

  10. Step 10

    Split artichokes, if whole, into quarters and arrange artfully.

  11. Step 11

    Repeat with cherry tomatoes, followed by radishes, split into quarters, then eggs, quartered into wedges.

  12. Step 12

    Remove tuna from the jar with a fork. Break it into chunks, and nestle it into the mound of salad. Drizzle the tuna oil over the salad.

  13. Step 13

    Finish with scattered red onion and split olives.

  14. Step 14

    Microplane the garlic into a small bowl. Add red-wine vinegar and 3 to 4 long glugs of olive oil (about ¼ cup), and stir together briskly. Season with salt and a lot of freshly ground pepper.

  15. Step 15

    Just before dressing the salad, tear the basil leaves to release their fragrance. Scatter them around the whole salad.

  16. Step 16

    When ready to serve, drizzle dressing evenly and thoroughly over salad. When ready to eat, toss to dress, and don’t worry about messing up the beauty.

Ratings

4 out of 5
1,023 user ratings
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Comments

In salad recipes, for a milder taste, I use scallions or chives instead of onions, including red onions. For the same reason, when preparing vinaigrettes I do not add grated or chopped onions; I cut a garlic clove in half and let it soak in the vinaigrette for a few minutes, for flavor, removing the garlic before adding the dressing to the salad.

I have been making this salad for years, though I tend to use pickled red onions, which I keep as a refrigerator staple. Sometimes I sear a piece of tuna, sometimes I just use a good tuna in oil. If I can get my hands on some beautiful white anchovies, I throw those in too. Guests can eat what they like. That's the beauty of this salad. It's like a salad bar on a platter. Serve with a good, crusty bread, a crisp bottle of white wine, and a good friend.

Instead of tossing salads like this, I separately toss potatoes, green beans and lettuce with a little dressing first then arrange everything else and drizzle on more dressing. That way it stays pretty and everyone can take what they want.

made a big batch of the mixed veggies and then mixed it up at work for a super tasty work lunch; fed me 3 times! No notes; it was delicious.

V good. Boiled potatoes and eggs together to save time and kept green beans raw. Did have radishes and didn't miss them. Works well to arrange on everyone's plate to make it look pretty.

I made this with some modifications for a vegan potluck dinner at my church. Brined red onions were new to me but I followed the directions from another comment (slice thinly, salt, cover with water and ice for a couple hours) and it worked brilliantly. I added a pinch of sugar and a teaspoon of dijon to the dressing. I personally would have preferred it with the sliced hard boiled eggs, anchovies and/or tuna but I followed the guidelines otherwise and the salad was a hit with the vegans.

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