Via Carota’s Insalata Verde
Published December 10, 2019
- Total Time
- 15 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
2 heads butter lettuce, such as Boston or bibb
1 romaine heart
1 large Belgian endive
1 bunch watercress
½ small head frisée
FOR THE DRESSING
1 large shallot, minced
2 tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon aged sherry vinegar, plus additional, as needed
1 tablespoon warm water
1 cup extra-virgin olive oil
1 ½ teaspoons Dijon mustard
1 ½ teaspoons whole-grain mustard
1 ½ teaspoons honey (optional)
2 sprigs thyme, washed and stripped
1 large clove garlic, finely grated
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
Preparation
- Step 1
Wash the greens: Fill a sink or large basin with tepid water. Remove any wilted or damaged leaves from the butter lettuce, romaine and endive. Trim each head at the root to release whole leaves. Leave butter-lettuce leaves whole, but halve large leaves of romaine and endive on the bias, then drop into water. Trim and discard any roots and long stems off watercress, and drop remaining leaves and tender stems into water. Trim and discard dark green outer leaves and tops from frisée until only light green and white parts remain. Trim at the root to release leaves, and drop into water. Swirl greens in water, then drain. Wash twice more in cool, then cold, water, then transfer to a salad spinner to dry. Gently wrap in clean dish towels, and set aside.
- Step 2
Place the shallot in a fine-mesh strainer, and quickly rinse with cold water. Allow to drain, then place in a medium bowl, and add vinegar and warm water. Allow to sit for 2 minutes, then whisk in oil, mustards, honey (if using), thyme, garlic and a large pinch of salt. Taste, and adjust salt and vinegar as needed.
- Step 3
To serve, gently pile a generous handful of greens into a serving bowl, then sprinkle with salt, pepper and a generous drizzle of dressing. Continue with another handful of salad and more seasoning and dressing, repeating until you have a glorious, gravity-defying mound of salad. Top with a final drizzle of dressing, and serve immediately.
- Step 4
Wrap remaining greens in an airtight container or plastic bag and refrigerate for up to 3 days. Cover and refrigerate remaining dressing for up to 3 days.
When shopping, select small, bright, fresh heads of greens.
Private Notes
Comments
I'm confused by the proportion of oil to vinegar: one cup (16 tbsp) to 3 and 1/3 tbsp vinegar? Even with the mustard, that's a ratio of less than 1:5, while most dressings sit somewhere between 1:2 and 1:3. With the addition of the tbsp of water, this seems far too light on acid. Please advise.
I finally tried this last night, preparing it exactly as written, using a good quality sherry vinegar. When I first tasted the dressing, I was deeply disappointed — it didn’t match the expectations the rave reviews raised. It tasted slightly bitter and harsh. I decided to let it sit for 30 minutes. Glad I did. Wow—what a difference. Somehow it mellowed, the flavors melded, and it all came together.
To those asking for a good aged sherry vinegar, this is my pick. It's affordable and available on Amazon if not in your area: L'Estornell Sherry Wine Vinegar Reserva
This was really disappointing. I made exactly as described. The dressing is bland and oily and the butter lettuce is just lettuce. Nothing more to this than a pile of leaves with oil and vinegar.
This is a wonderful salad dressing. We have a garden so I used greens available, red leaf lettuce, spinach, purslane, and micro salad green mix. It tasted fantastic! I say use what you have on hand unless you’re off to the grocery store then use what they have available. Lots of different greens seems to be the key.
Dressing is fantastic and has more depth than the usual quick homemade honey mustard vinaigrette. Reduced amount of EVO used. Wife and I both agree that despite the multiple styles of greens, it's missing something more substantial. Couldn't find watercress but used romaine, butterleaf, endive, and frisee. I enjoy the bitter notes but it's not for everyone. I was craving either an egg or a salted fish or something that could make this a fulfilling main. Vinaigrette is a keeper.

