Shakespeare coined the term, in 'Antony and Cleopatra' when the Queen uses it to describe her time of carefree youthful pleasure. Nowadays it is often used to mean someone's heyday, or prime.
For me the phrase Salad Days conjures up thoughts of sunny weather, impromptu picnics, or meals at the table in the garden. Those lovely salad ingredients - Cool cucumber slices, fresh leaves, sweet juicy tomatoes, crisp radishes, crimson beetroot, grated carrot, red onions, peppers in jewel colours, grated red and white cabbage
And extra pops of flavour - olives, cooked potatoes, cornichons, sweetcorn, beans, snippets of spring onion or crispy bacon bits
Sprinkles of nuts, seeds, juniper berries, sumac powder, chopped herbs, crispy croutons, grains, cress
Unexpected fruit - strawberry, kiwi, blueberry, avocado, apple.
Creamy mayo, yogurt, creme fraiche, houmous, tahini.
There are so many possibilities out there, an infinite number of combinations of veg, toppings and dressings. So why do some eateries offer 'with side salad' on the menu and then fail to deliver? A sad little heap of cucumber slices, wedges of woolly tomatoes, and an eye wateringly sharp slice of red onion, balanced on a limp lettuce leaf, accompanied by a plastic sachet of mayo does not count imho.
And I haven't even started on the accompanying carbs
[potatoes, rice, pastas, breads] and proteins [meat, fish, eggs, cheese...]
Salads have been on the English menu for centuries. This one is over 600 years old. Tradition has it that at medieval banquets, the woman with the most beautiful hands was invited to mix and toss the ingredients in the great salad bowl.
Whether everything is combined beforehand, or diners assemble their own bowl from an assortment of ingredients, I think salads are wonderful things.
Do you have a favourite salad ingredient?
Do you make your own dressings?




I enjoyed reading the recipe for the medieval salad and it sounds so crisp and crunchy! We use olive oil and balsamic vinegar as a dressing.no more mayo since Norrie became egg intolerant. I like cooked peppers, beans, chickpeas etc in my salad. My late MIL used flowers on the tip of salad leaves and people thought it was strange. Very fashionable nowadays and your very old recipe shows that the custom is centuries old. Catriona
ReplyDeleteI'm sure I came across a WW2 egg free mayo recipe somewhere...
DeleteThere is a musical called 'Salad Days' which my parents went to in the 1950s, and bought the vinyl record. I played it to death when I was about 7 or 8, and even now the songs are still deeply embedded in my life. I've got the cd now! The plot is something about a magic piano that makes everyone dance, and also a romance (of course!)
ReplyDeleteJulian Slade (see FD below) πΆπΆ
DeleteYou inspire me! When I have finished the Hare Days, I shall go on to Salad Days. And really celebrate them.
ReplyDeleteThat will be an exciting blog series to look forward to!
DeleteAlways Delia's traditional vinaigrette, I like avacado but like other pears they are so rarely at the right stage of ripeness. A friend of my father's used to say he watched the pear tree in his garden for the half hour each year when the pears wee perfect.
ReplyDeleteAs to salads in restaurants and cafes, I do wish customers would eat them when they are nice. So discourageing for places to provide nice ones when they go back to the kitchen.
Jill x
There was a pub in Leics where returned salads were allegedly lifted off 'incoming' plates when they got to the kitchen, then put on 'outgoing' ones. (according to teenage girls knew who had weekend jobs there!)
DeleteI had a lovely salad on Monday which I made and it was not the boring bland side salad of the aforementioned menus. I like to include pumpkin seeds, fresh mint trimmings, chive, corn, carrot, capers, olives, croutons. Yummmm!
ReplyDeleteDelicious
DeleteYes we love salads. One of our favourite dressings is home made wholegrain mustard and honey dressing adding cider vinegar, it is delicious. I also love lemon vinaigrette with chopped fresh herbs from the garden. The worst salad I ever had in a restaurant which in the menu said "mixed green salad" was in fact one solitary lettuce leaf with nothing extra not even dressing! Regards Sue H
ReplyDeleteI think I would have complained
DeleteI did. She H
Deleteπ₯ π₯¬ π
DeleteI always think of the dread lettuce + tomato + cucumber combo as 'English' salad, more for decoration than consumption. And yes, I always put fruit in a tossed salad, usually grapes but sometimes apple slices or orange segments and honey or maple syrup in the dressing.
ReplyDeleteYotam Ottolenghi is very keen on a bit of fresh fruit in his salads
Delete"Salad Days" always calls to mind the musical by Julian Slade...it was a college performance and while all my friends and I auditioned, I was the only one to get a part. Not a big one, but still a thrill to be cast. Afterwards I was told I "was not as unbearable about it as we thought you'd be"!! And that was from my friends!
ReplyDeleteAh, but we said we wouldn't look back....
Delete:-)
DeleteAs a lifelong vegetarian and T2diabetic I so agree with you. It’s carbs, carbs, carbs, presumably as cheaper but no good for me. I worked in a pub kitchen for a short time, over 20 years ago and we made fabulous salads, crisp lettuce, juicy toms, olives, smoked mackerel, grated carrots with seeds. Morrisons do a good salad bar I saw today, even down to shelled hard boiled eggs, made me smile. Sarah Browne.
ReplyDeleteI don't like HB eggs at all. Anywhere, ever!
DeleteI eat 100% plant-based, whoe foods so I eat a very large salad every day. I love to cook up some wheat berries or quinoa and add that to my salad. I always have some sort of bean - chickpeas or blackbeans. I also add a tablespoon of hemp hearts or raw sunflower seeds to it. I make my own dressing at times, but often just find it easier to get a good store bought one or a drizzle of really good balsmic vinegar on top.
ReplyDeleteI know you feel much healthier now you have changed your eating patterns. The wholefood diet clearly suits you Terri
DeleteYour description of salad ingredients is mouthwatering. My husband likes salad very much but it has to include hard boiled eggs or he declares it “ not proper salad “ π
ReplyDeletePersonally, although I acknowledge the health benefits of salad, especially when home grown, I find all that chopping a bit tedious π€
Alison in Devon x
A good sharp knife, and a decent programme on the radio and I will chop away happily for ages
DeleteLove salads. Towards the end of the war years I remember my mum gathering baby dandelion leaves to put in a salad!
ReplyDeleteThey are a very trendy ingredient now
DeleteLike you, I think most restaurant salads are a tad limp. My usual lunch involves a mix of dark leafy lettuces, a few radicchio leaves, a small packet of either tuna or salmon (in water), handful of cherry tomatoes cut in half, a sprinkle of feta cheese, a few chopped walnuts, sometimes a bit of mild pepperoncini and a drizzle of poppyseed dressing. A nice variety of flavours with protein and crunch. :)
ReplyDeleteTasty. I note your tuna is in water. I often drain tuna in oil, then add a bit of the oil to a little acid (lemon juice or wine vinegar) to make a dressing
DeleteMy favourite salad ingredient, and one that I often just eat on it's own in place of a full 'side salad' is Iceberg lettuce. Crispy and cold straight from the fridge, I love it. To be honest I rarely make my own salad dressings, I love mayonnaise and know how to make it, but I'm lazy.
ReplyDeleteI'll put shredded iceberg in a sandwich, but find it a little dull on its own. I love 'proper' homemade mayo, but like you, rarely bother
DeleteTry adding a touch of salt and lots of white pepper to it, it's a game changer. :-)
DeleteWe had salad tonight with our posh M&S YS beefburgers. I made a dressing using Dijon Mustard, Olive Oil and a glug of Balsamic Vinegar. It was very nice too. Xx
ReplyDeletePosh dressing for posh burgers!!
DeleteI remember salad in my young days in England, with Boston lettuce, tomatoes, cucumber and sliced hardboiled egg, with salad cream available to put on top! One of my favourite salads to take to a potluck has mixed greens, dried cranberries, toasted pecans, and feta cheese with a raspberry vinaigrette dressing. It is very popular.
ReplyDeleteThat salad sounds both good to look at and good to eat
Deletewe generally have shredded romaine lettuce, tomatoes, cucumbers, red onion and sweet red pepper. We tend to use store bought dressing. We have this salad nearly every night as part of our supper.
ReplyDeleteSweet peppers are delicious!
DeleteYour salad ingredients sound so nice! The salad I tend to make the most is cucumber salad with green chilies, salt, pepper, and lemon juice. One can add red onions, too, but, I don't because I don't like raw onions.
ReplyDeleteI'd swap out the chili for onions (I don't like chili)
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