Celery Victor Salad
Updated August 1, 2022
- Total Time
- 2½ hours, plus chilling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
FOR THE BRAISED CELERY AND SCALLIONS
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 large carrots, peeled, roughly chopped, then pulsed in a food processor until minced
1 ½ quarts/48 ounces vegetable stock
1 lemon, quartered
12 large fresh thyme sprigs
2 garlic cloves, smashed
1 tablespoon whole black peppercorns
2 dried bay leaves
4 teaspoons kosher salt
1 head of celery, fresh green leaves reserved; stalks separated, trimmed and halved crosswise
12 scallions, trimmed and halved crosswise, whites and greens separated
FOR THE PICKLED MUSTARD SEEDS
½ cup white wine vinegar
2 ½ tablespoons yellow mustard seeds
2 tablespoons granulated sugar
1 ½ tablespoons finely minced shallot
1 tablespoon kosher salt (such as Diamond Crystal)
FOR THE ANCHOVY-GARLIC PASTE
6 medium jarred anchovies in oil
1 tablespoon brined capers
1 large garlic clove, finely grated
1 teaspoon red-pepper flakes
4 teaspoons extra-virgin olive oil
FOR SERVING
6 cups spigarello (or baby kale, or trimmed Tuscan kale), torn into bite-size pieces
1 cup shaved Parmesan (about 4 ounces), plus more to taste
1 cup flat-leaf parsley leaves
4 teaspoon sherry vinegar mixed with 2 teaspoons extra-virgin olive oil, plus more to taste
Preparation
- Step 1
Prepare the stock for the braised celery and scallions: In a large pot, heat 2 tablespoons olive oil over medium-low. Add the carrots and cook, stirring occasionally, until softened, about 5 minutes. Add the stock and bring to a boil over high. Once it comes to a boil, reduce the heat to medium-low and simmer until the carrots are soft and impart their sweetness, about 30 minutes. Strain liquid, discarding solids, and return to the pot.
- Step 2
While the stock simmers, make the pickled mustard seeds: In a small pot, combine the vinegar, mustard seeds, sugar, shallot and salt. Stir to combine, then cook over low heat, bubbling very gently, until mustard seeds are plump, about 15 minutes. Let cool until room temperature, then refrigerate until chilled. (Makes ½ cup; see Tip.)
- Step 3
As the stock continues to simmer, make the anchovy-garlic paste: Finely chop the anchovies and capers, occasionally smashing and spreading them using the flat side of your knife, until they start to form a paste. In a small bowl, stir together the anchovies and capers with the garlic, red-pepper flakes and olive oil until combined. (Makes ¼ cup.) Refrigerate until serving.
- Step 4
Continue preparing the braised celery and scallions: Once the carrot stock has been cooked and strained, squeeze the lemon quarters over the carrot stock, then plop the squeezed pieces into the stock. Add the thyme, garlic, black peppercorns, bay leaves and salt. Bring to a simmer over medium.
- Step 5
Once it simmers, cook the celery: Add the celery in two batches, one layer at time, simmering until tender, about 10 minutes per batch. (Cooked celery should bend a little, when lifted with tongs, without going totally limp.) Using tongs, transfer celery to a wide, shallow dish that can hold the celery, scallions and braising liquid.
- Step 6
Cook the scallions in the stock: Add the firmer scallion whites and cook 2 minutes, then add the more tender scallion greens, and cook another 2 minutes, until all scallion pieces are tender. Add scallions to the cooked celery. Strain the stock over the scallions and celery, discarding the solids, and let the mixture cool at room temperature, about 30 minutes. Cover and refrigerate until chilled, at least 1 hour or, ideally, overnight. (The braised vegetables will continue to absorb flavor but retain texture; they’ll keep, refrigerated, up to one week.)
- Step 7
To serve, strain the braised vegetables. (Reserve the liquid to use as a stock; poach fish in it, add to soups, stews or pasta, or dip bread in it.) Slice the celery and scallions on a sharp angle into 1 ½-inch-long segments, then add them to a very large bowl. Add the spigarello, Parmesan, parsley and reserved celery leaves, plus the anchovy paste and the sherry vinegar mixed with olive oil; toss to coat. The salad should have the right balance of salt, acid and heat, with no ingredient overshadowing the other. Season with extra vinegar or olive oil, if needed.
- Step 8
Plate the salad, mounding in the center of the plate. Dot with 2 to 3 very small spoonfuls of mustard seeds, to taste, and serve immediately.
Use the mustard seeds to taste, but any remaining will “keep indefinitely — like mustard itself,” Ms. Stashko said. Refrigerate them for weeks or even months. Dollop the seeds on salads, roasted vegetables or any number of grilled meats for an instant burst of flavor.
Private Notes
Comments
Before you do all this work, go to Inga’s and try the salad to see if you like it. And if you do, go there again.
I don’t understand the comments about this being too complicated to do at home. You make a braising liquid. You braise celery and scallions. You refrigerate it overnight. In the meantime, you make a dressing and a garnish. The next day you plate and serve. It’s obviously more trouble than cutting open a bag of already prepared salad, but no more trouble than a lot of dishes and it sounds delicious and uses ingredients most people have on hand. I can’t wait to try it out!
Started preparing this last night…”borrowed” some ADD meds from my kid…I’m nearly finished making the salad.
What began with paralysis of intimidation and craving the ADD meds of fellow commenter, I reached the meditative/psychedelic-esque flow state to carry me through and completed the recipe around 1am for a dinner party I’m hosting. And no, I didn’t “home” pickle the mustard seeds—are you insane? Grainy maille will more than suffice. I’ve had this salad countless times at Inga’s. It’s a work of art that I don’t intend to everrrr recreate. I look forward to savoring this at Inga’s and only at Inga’s. Charge me 2x, maybe 3x and I personally need to tip the person preparing this. This recipe with * influence * and * inspire * future salads I create, but shall never be repeated in its pure form.
Most recipes for pickled mustard seeds (now ya tell me!) call for blanching the seeds at least once in boiling water. I absolutely plan to do this in the future, because the resulting mustard seeds from this recipe were inedible.
So funny. I was looking for a recipe for Celery Victor precisely because I had one at Inga’s in Bklyn recently and it was out of this world -- a truly special dish. And the first comment says, “have it at Inga’s and if you like it, go there and have it again.” :-) This does look like a lot of work. Will have to try it on a weekend!

