This is going to sound really strange... but ive never made a salad before, nor has does anyone in my family make or has ever made salads... we weren't the sit at home together and eat dinner type of family. Always went out to eat. So im really trying to eat healthy, and love fresh good salads from restaurants, and i would like to start attempting to make my own.. For one it will be quicker, cheaper, and hopefully healthier. So can you girls guide me on how to make a salad, and make it healthy, and easy. Im very short on time. But am also pretty picky, don't like tomatos broccoli cauliflower. Love cucumbers, good lettuce... mmm can't think of anything else right now, but open to lots of ideas! Oh and i like balsalmic vinegarette, i think thats pretty healthy right? I also love love love caesar salads but i know they are way to fattening even if i recreated it at home... or am i wrong?
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"Deep down you may still be that same great guy I used to know. But it's not who you are underneath, it's what you do that defines you" Rachel Dawes, Batman Begins
well to start, it's so easy to make salad these days with all the bagged, precut, prewashed lettuce available. balsamic vin is pretty good, and i'd imagine you could make a caesar salad that wasn't too bad for you if you could find a decent low-cal caesar dressing (and go light on the croutons). i would try adding stuff like...chicken (you can buy strips of pre-cooked chicken strips for some protein), nuts, chickpeas...even fruit in addition to veggies, like grapes are pretty good on salad, so are thin slices of apples and pears, raspberries, strawberries, etc... stuff like that...just improvise. there's not a real science to it, just whatever sounds good to you! or try to recreate some salads that you've had at restaurants. i guess the only thing to watch out for is cheese...which is tasty and can really enhance a salad (i like gorgonzola), but can add a lot of calories in the process, but also calcium, which is good...so just keep that in mind.
how do i pick "good" lettuce... because this is definitely a MUST for me.. i like all my food super fresh. Plan on buying all these ingredients at whole foods
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"Deep down you may still be that same great guy I used to know. But it's not who you are underneath, it's what you do that defines you" Rachel Dawes, Batman Begins
imho, there is no need to buy everything at whole foods.. particularly since you are cooking for one so it is likely that some lettuce/veggies etc. could go to waste.
I find it the easiest to just buy the bagged mixes or bagged spinach ( i get em from Giant Eagle).. you can get romaine, mixed greens, etc and you know they are fresh and good, etc. whereas when I buy a head of romaine, i feel like it's never as good..
my favorite salads are:
-spinach, gorgonzola, craisins, almond slices, and raspberry vinaigrette
-romaine, corn (from a can), black beans (can), tomatoes, onions, etc. with blue corn chips and Trader Joe's Cilantro dressing, also lots of ground pepper
-goat cheese, tomato, and spinach, olive oil and balsamic vinegar, ground pepper
-not exactly salad but close, I eat with pita: tomato, scallions, feta, a little bit of olive oil
-greek (romaine, feta, tomatoes, red onion, f/f balsamic vinaigrette)
-currently im loving adding cut up morning star patties (parmesan Ranch) to my regular salads (ie, house/garden) to add some protein, but I don't eat chicken so that's why
i am getting some good ideas from people here! i second the fruit (dried or fresh) and the addition of nuts or maybe some chicken breast, hard boiled egg, or tofu to make a salad feel like more of a main course. i tend to just throw everything i like into a big bowl, throw on some dressing, and hope it comes out okay. probably not restaurant-worthy, but it always seems to work out somehow!
as for picking out good greens, just take a look at the bag. it's pretty easy to tell--if stuff looks wilted, or broken/smashed, just put it back and pick out a new bag! also, you can't really go wrong at whole foods with the greens. i also have found that greens are not necessarily much more expensive than at a regular supermarket. anytime you buy the prewashed stuff, they mark it up anyway...
also, i was surprised that some of the cereal i like is MORE expensive at shaws/star than at whole foods...weird, huh?