Classic Tuna Salad Sandwich

Classic Tuna Salad Sandwich
Rikki Snyder for The New York Times
Total Time
5 minutes
Rating
5(3,224)
Comments
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Here is Craig Claiborne’s version of the classic lunchbox staple. Celery, red onion and red bell pepper add crunch; capers and lemon juice lend a little tang. —The New York Times

Featured in: Salads, Sandwiches, Sauces

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Ingredients

Yield:4 to 6 servings
  • 2(6-ounce) cans solid, waterpacked tuna
  • ½cup mayonnaise, preferably homemade
  • ½cup finely diced celery
  • 3tablespoons finely diced red onion
  • 3tablespoons finely minced red bell pepper
  • 2tablespoons drained capers
  • 2teaspoons lemon juice
  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
  • Sliced sandwich bread of choice
Ingredient Substitution Guide

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    In a medium bowl, combine the tuna, mayonnaise, celery, onion, bell pepper, capers and lemon juice. Mix with a fork until thoroughly combined. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Serve on the sandwich bread of your choice.

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Ratings

5 out of 5
3,224 user ratings
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Comments

For those financially strapped people in the world I find that if you rinse the tuna with cold water in a fine mesh strainer takes away most of the salt in the tuna. Also a trick that I learned while working at a deli is to grab the tuna by the handful and squeeze out the water. This makes the tuna dryer which will allow the flavors in the recipe like the lemon juice and mayo soak into the tuna without making it soggy.

I completely agree. Everyone has a tuna salad recipe. This one belongs to Craig Claiborne, who certainly knew his stuff. Let's save all the ad-libbing and over-tweaking of a classic recipe for another forum. Let's talk about THIS recipe.

i'm ok with the Claiborne contents, except:

Canned tuna is loaded with salt. Therefore, kill the capers and don't add salt.

Perfect tuna salad requires solid light tuna in olive oil, not drained.

grated carrot adds sweetness. kalamata olives add to a Mediterranean flavor. scallions are milder that red onion. finally adding a tablespoon of hummus, and a teaspoon of Dijon mustard takes the whole project from good tuna salad to heavenly.

When I was in high school, Fridays meant fish for lunch. The school’s tuna salad was really good. I once asked the kitchen ladies what they put in it that gave it that je ne sais quoi. The answer was minced sweet gherkins. I still make my tuna salad that way, and it’s a blast from the past that stands up.

my normal tuna sans include finely diced slice white onion,slice of tomato diced, hellmans, tuna in oil, 2 or 3 diced jalapeno stuffed olives, celery, lemon juice on whole wheat with T of mayo and couple grinds of black pepper. . but next time i am trying the caper and red pepper addition.

I didn’t have a red bell pepper in my kitchen when I made this recipe for the first time, so I substituted banana peppers for the bell pepper and I thought it worked very well as a substitute. Today, I made it for the second time and used a bell pepper. The banana pepper version was much better. It added a nice bite to the tuna that you’d expect from a pickled pepper.

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Credits

Craig Claiborne

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