Crispy Rice Salad With Halloumi and Ginger-Lime Vinaigrette
Published Aug. 23, 2022

- Total Time
- 30 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- ½medium red onion (about 2½ ounces), very thinly sliced from tip to tip
- ¼packed teaspoon finely grated lime zest
- 3tablespoons lime juice (from 2 limes)
- 1teaspoon finely grated fresh ginger
- ¼teaspoon finely grated fresh garlic (one small clove)
- ½cup extra-virgin olive oil
- Salt and black pepper
- ½teaspoon ground turmeric
- 2½packed cups (about 10 ounces) day-old cooked rice, preferably sushi rice
- 8ounces halloumi, chilled (Vegan? See Tip)
- 1(5-ounce) package mixed baby greens
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the ginger-lime vinaigrette: In a large bowl, stir together the sliced red onion, lime zest, lime juice, ginger, garlic and ¼ cup olive oil. Season to taste with salt and pepper and set aside, letting the red onion marinate and tenderize.
- Step 2
Prepare the rice: Heat 2 tablespoons olive oil over medium-high in a large nonstick skillet. Stir in the turmeric. Add the rice and cook, stirring quickly to coat the rice evenly, about 1 minute. (No need to break it up entirely; clumps are encouraged for texture.)
- Step 3
Season generously with salt and pepper, and let rice sit, undisturbed, until crispy underneath and toasted in spots, 2 to 3 minutes. Gently turn the rice with a spatula, trying to preserve any clumps, and cook another 3 minutes, until crispy on the second side. (The rice should be almost equal parts crispy and chewy, and evenly stained by the turmeric.) Transfer to a large, paper towel-lined rimmed baking sheet, set in an even layer and let cool.
- Step 4
Prepare the halloumi: Chop the halloumi into ¾-inch cubes, then pat them dry using a kitchen towel or paper towels. Wipe out the skillet, then heat the remaining 2 tablespoons oil over medium-high. Add the cubed halloumi in an even layer and cook, stirring frequently, until golden at the edges, 2 to 3 minutes. (Sturdy but delicate, halloumi needs to cook quickly at a high temperature so it sears without fully melting down and losing its shape. Stir attentively!) Transfer to a paper towel-lined plate and season with pepper.
- Step 5
When ready to eat, add the greens to the vinaigrette, toss to coat and season with salt and pepper. Transfer to a wide, shallow bowl or dish. (You want a big surface area to accommodate the toppings.) Scatter with the crispy rice clusters and hot halloumi. Serve immediately.
- If you don’t eat dairy, sliced or chopped avocado is a suitable substitute for the halloumi. It’s not quite as textural, but it will provide great richness and heft to the salad.
Private Notes
Comments
If you don’t eat dairy, twice-frozen and thawed tofu (not silken) is also a suitable substitute for the halloumi. Freezing and thawing makes it firm and chewy.
BEST DINNER EVER! Added baked salmon for protein - exquisite! When we have salad for dinner my husband will inevitably ask, “is this all we are having?” Tonight that question was never posed, and in fact he declared, “this is delicious!”
This was a great way to repurpose leftover rice. I swapped into a cast iron for the rice bc the high heat required to get a true crunch would have been iffy in nonstick. Otherwise, made it as written and it was a hit. Chicken , tofu or beef could easily be swapped for the halloumi .
This was disappointing despite my love of grilled haloumi. I followed the recipe exactly as written but found the flavor a bit one dimensional and flat. I do wonder if adding fish sauce to the dressing and some sliced citrus would make it more complex.
Amazing, delicious whole-meal salad! Made as written, with leftover sushi rice, but reduced the amount of onion a little. Would be good with some fresh orange slices and avocado. The crispy rice with turmeric is so good that I occasionally make it as a side dish with other meals.
This salad is having a little bit of an identity crisis for me. I love all the components in their own right, but the combination together is not making my greatest hits list for crispy rice salads. The Mediterranean Halloumi and turmeric scented rice with the more south Asian-style dressing was a bit confusing. In all fairness, I added some other veggies to the salad (cucumber, radish, cherry tomatoes, avocado) which may have muddied things further. All of these additions could swing either way - south Asian or Mediterranean - so the choices were reasonable. I don’t know. It’s just OK. My husband said it felt like a salad where you just kind of cobble something together vs a more cohesive idea. We both devoured ours, so it wasn’t a total fail by any means.
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