Transcript ppt_21

Chapter 21
Salads and Salad Dressings
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Chapter Objectives
1. Identify and describe five different salad types, and select
appropriate recipes for use as an appetizer, accompaniment,
main course, separate course, or dessert salad.
2. Identify a dozen popular salad greens; list six categories of
other salad ingredients, and recognize several examples from
each category.
3. Judge the quality of fruits and complete the pre-preparation
procedures for fruit.
4. Identify the four basic parts of a salad.
5. Prepare and arrange salads that achieve maximum eye
appeal.
6. Set up an efficient system for producing salads in quantity.
7. Prepare the following types of salads: green, vegetable,
bound, fruit, combination, and gelatin.
8. Set up a successful salad bar and buffet service.
9. Identify the major salad dressing ingredients.
10.Prepare the following: oil and vinegar dressings, mayonnaise
and mayonnaise-based dressings, cooked dressings, and
specialty dressings.
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Salads and Salad Dressings
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Before refrigeration, the pantry was
where food products were kept before
going into the kitchen.
It was especially suited to production of
cold foods.
It was called Garde Manger.
Garde manger chefs have to master a
wide range of cooking techniques and
have artistic judgment.
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The Salad
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The definition of a salad: A single
food or a mixture of foods
accompanied or bound by a dressing
A salad can contain meat, grains,
nuts, or cheese and contain no
lettuce
It can be an appetizer, entrée, side
dish or dessert
The color, texture, and flavor should
compliment each other
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Appetizer Salads
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Many establishments serve salads as a
first course.
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Takes pressure off the kitchen
Satisfies the customer with something to eat,
quickly
Appetizer salads should stimulate the
appetite with tangy, flavorful dressings
and look good.
Appetizer salads should not be too filling
Attractive arrangements and garnish are
important.
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Accompaniment Salads
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Salads served with the main course
Serve the same function of other
side dishes (vegetables and
starches)
Must be harmonious with the rest of
the meal
Light and flavorful, not too rich
Heavy salads with macaroni or
potatoes are less appropriate
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Main-Course Salads
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Cold salad plates are popular with
luncheon and diet-conscious
customers.
They should be large enough to be
a full meal and contain sufficient
protein.
They should offer variety and a
balanced meal in terms of flavors,
textures, and color.
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Separate-Course Salads
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The European version of a salad.
A refreshing salad after a wonderful
entrée to cleanse the palate and get
ready for the dessert.
It should be in no way filling.
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Dessert Salads
Usually sweet and may contain
fruits, sweetened gelatin, nuts, and
cream.
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Salad Greens
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Lettuce
 Bibb or limestone
 Boston
 Iceberg
 Leaf
 Romaine
Escarole
Chicory or Curly Endive
Frisée
Belgian Endive
Radicchio
Chinese Cabbage or Celery Cabbage
Spinach
Dandelion Greens
Watercress
Arugula
Mesclun
Tatsoi
Mâche
Microgreens or Baby lettuces
 Brune d’Hiver
 Lola Rosa
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Salad Greens
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Lettuce
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Bibb or limestone
Boston
Iceberg
Leaf
Romaine
Escarole
Chicory or Curly Endive
Frisée
Belgian Endive
Radicchio
Chinese Cabbage or
Celery Cabbage
Spinach
Dandelion Greens
Watercress
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Arugula
Radicchio
Mesclun
Tatsoi
Mâche
Microgreens or Baby
lettuces
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Brune d’Hiver
Lola Rosa
Red Sails
Pirate
Sprouts
Edible Flowers
Fresh Herbs
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Vegetables Raw
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Avocado
Bean Sprouts
Broccoli
Cabbage
Carrots
Cauliflower
Celeriac
Celery
Cucumbers
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Jerusalem artichokes
Kohlrabi
Mushrooms
Onions
Peppers
Radishes
Scallions
Tomatoes
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Vegetables, Cooked, Pickled, and Canned
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Artichoke hearts
Asparagus
Beans
Beets
Carrots
Corn
Cucumber pickles
Hearts of palm
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Leeks
Olives
Peas
Peppers, roasted
Pimentos
Potatoes
Water chestnuts
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Starches
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Dried beans
Potatoes
Macaroni Products
Grains
Bread (croutons)
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Fruits, Fresh, Cooked, Canned, or Frozen
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Apples
Apricots
Bananas
Berries
Cherries
Coconut
Dates
Figs
Grapefruit
Grapes
Kiwi Fruit
Kumquats
Mandarin oranges and
tangerines
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Mangoes
Melons
Nectarines
Oranges
Papayas
Peaches
Pears
Persimmons
Pineapple
Plums
Pomegranates
Prickly pears
Prunes
Raisins
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Protein Foods
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Meats – All
Poultry – All
Fish and Shellfish
Salami, prosciutto
Bacon
Eggs, hard-cooked
Cheese, cottage
Cheese, aged or cures
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Miscellaneous Salad Ingredients
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Gelatin (plain or flavored)
Nuts - all varieties
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Arrangement and Presentation
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The Structure of a Salad
 There are Four basic parts of a
salad:
Base
or underliner
Body
Garnish
Dressing
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Guidelines for Arranging Salads
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Use a cold plate
Keep the salad off the rim
Strike a good balance of colors
Height keeps a salad attractive
Cut ingredients neatly
Make salad ingredients identifiable
Keep it simple
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Preparing Salad Greens
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Washing
Draining
Crisping
Tearing and cutting
Mixing
Plating
Garnishing
Dressing (immediately before service)
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Vegetable Salads
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Vegetable salads are those whose
main ingredient are vegetables other
than lettuce or other leafy greens.
Some vegetables can be raw like
celery, cucumbers, radishes,
tomatoes, and green peppers
Sometimes cooked pasta or a protein
item is used along with cheese.
Remember height makes the salads
interesting.
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Bound Salads
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Bound salads are mixtures of foods
that are held together with a thick
dressing, such as a mayonnaise type.
Popular choices for cooked salads are:
• Chicken
• Turkey
• Lobster
• Eggs
• Potatoes
• Pastas
• Rice
• Ham
• Tuna
• Crab
• Shrimp
• Mixed Vegetables
• Salmon
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Gelatin Salads
Principles:
 The history of gelatin salads started with
aspics, the highly ornamented appetizers
and elaborate pieces made with fish stocks
in natural gelatin. Aspics are part of
classical cuisine and part of modern buffet
work.
 Purified granular gelatin and gelatin sheets
are available for use in the pantry
 You need to know how to prepare these
salads using unflavored gelatin with fruit
juices and other ingredients for flavor.
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Composed Salads
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Composed salads are made by arranging two
or more elements attractively on a plate.
Guidelines:
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Observe the guidelines for each of the salad
components, such as greens, vegetables, cooked
salads, and fruit salads
Prepare each component separately
Arrangements may be plated in advance if the
components will hold well
Prepare and add hot or warm components
immediately before serving
Observe general guidelines of salad arrangement and
presentation
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Salad Bars and Buffet Service
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Salad bars have become standard fixtures in
restaurants
They are popular with operators and customers.
Customers like them because they can select from
a large number of items and choose exactly what
they want.
To be successful with salad bars you should keep a
few points in mind
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Keep salad bar attractive and well stocked
Keep the components simple but attractive
Provide a variety of condiments for the customers to
select from
 Simple ingredients
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Prepared salads
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Salad Bars and Buffet Service (cont’d)
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Arrange the salad bar using the following
format (see p. 720)
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Plates
Mixed greens
Condiments (the expensive last)
Dressings
Crackers, breads, ect., if desired
Make sure you adhere to the health code
Choose the right size plates and serving
pieces to allow for some portion control.
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Salad Dressings
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Salad dressings are liquids or semi
liquids used to flavor salads
The basic salad dressings can be
divided into three categories
 Oil and vinegar dressings
 Mayonnaise-based dressings
 Cooked dressings
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Ingredients
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Because the flavors of most salad
dressings are not modified by cooking,
the quality of the dressings depends
on the quality of the ingredients
Most dressings are an oil and acid like
vinegar or citrus juices
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Oils
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Kinds
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Corn oil
Cottonseed, soybean, canola and safflower
oil
Peanut oil
Olive oil
Walnut oil
Quality Factors
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All purpose oils have a mild, sweet flavor
Winterized oil should be used for dressings
that will be refrigerated
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Salad Dressing Ingredients
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Vinegar
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Cider Vinegar
White or distilled vinegar
Wine vinegar
Flavored vinegars
Sherry Vinegar
Balsamic vinegar
Others specialty vinegars
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Lemon Juice
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Malt
Rice
Fruit flavored like raspberry
Fresh lemon juice may be used in place of vinegar in
some preparations
Egg yolk
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An essential ingredient in mayonnaise
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Seasoning and Flavoring
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Nearly any spice or herb can be used in salad
dressings
Dried herbs and spices need extra time to
release their flavors
Most salad dressings should be made 2-3
hours before serving
Other ingredients added for flavoring are
mustard, catsup, Worcestershire sauce and
various types of cheese
Remember if you use a Roquefort cheese
dressing it has to be made with Roquefort
cheese
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Emulsions in Salad Dressings
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Temporary Emulsions
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Simple oil and vinegar dressings are called
temporary emulsions because they will
always separate after shaking
The negative side of temporary emulsions
are they have to be shaken or stirred
before each use
Permanent Emulsions
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Mayonnaise is a mixture of oil and vinegar
but the two are bound together by egg
yolks which act as a emulsifier
Commercial emulsifiers are gums, starches,
and gelatins
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Oil and Vinegar Dressings
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Basic vinaigrette or basic French dressing
is a mixture of oil, vinegar, and
seasonings
FYI, the thickened, sweet tomato-based
dressing often served as “French
Dressing” is unknown in France
The ratio of oil and vinegar in basic
vinaigrette is 3 parts oil to 1 part vinegar
Some chefs use a 2 to 1 ratio, others 4 to
1 ratio. The more vinegar or acid used the
more tart the dressing will be.
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Emulsified Dressings
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Mayonnaise is the most important
emulsified dressing. It can be served by
itself or added to make a new dressing
Emulsified French Dressing is similar to
basic French dressing, except egg yolk
has been added to keep the oil and
vinegar from separating.
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Mayonnaise
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You can make your own mayonnaise but
remember it is not as stable as
commercially produced mayonnaise and
would not have as long a shelf life
The general ingredients are pasteurized
egg yolk, oil, vinegar, and seasonings
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Other Salad Dressings
Cooked salad dressing is similar to
mayonnaise, but it has a more tart
flavor. It is made with little or no oil
and thickened with a starch
thickener.
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Copyright ©2007 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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