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German Salad.—German
salad is made from cold boiled vegetables chopped up. In
Germany, it is made, according to English ideas, from every
vegetable you have ever heard of, mixed with a number of
vegetables you have never heard of. In England it can be
made by chopping up boiled carrot, turnip, cabbage,
cauliflower, potato, French beans, Brussels sprouts (whole),
celery, raw onion, raw apple, &c. In fact, in making
this vegetable salad the motto should be “the more the
merrier.” In addition to this you will find that they add
what is known as sauer kraut. This latter is not
adapted, as a rule, to English palates. The salad is mixed
with oil and vinegar in the ordinary way, the Germans adding
much more vinegar than we should care for in this country.
The salad is decorated at the finish with boiled beet-root.
It is very pretty to cut the beet-root into triangles, the
base of the triangle touching the edge of the salad-bowl,
the point of the triangle pointing inwards. Gut a star out
of a good slice of beet-root, and place it in the centre of
the bowl; sprinkle a little chopped blanched parsley over
the surface of the mixed vegetables.
Endive Salad.—Endives
come into season long before lettuces, and are much used
abroad for making salads. The drawback to endive is that it
is tough, and the simple remedy is to boil it. Take three or
four white-heart endives, throw them into boiling water
slightly salted. When they get tender take them out and
instantly throw them into cold water, by which means you
preserve their colour. When quite cold, take them out again,
drain them, dry them thoroughly, and pull them to pieces
with the fingers. Now place them in a salad-bowl, keeping
the whitest part as much as possible at the top. Place some
hard-boiled
eggs round the edge, and sprinkle a little chopped
blanched parsley over the white endive. You can, if you
like, put a few spikes of red beet-root between the quarters
of eggs.
It is a great improvement to rub the
salad-bowl with a bead of garlic, or you can rub a crust of
bread with a bead of garlic, and toss this lightly about in the
salad when you mix it.
Salsify Salad.—Boiled
salsify makes a very delicious salad. Take some white
salsify, scrape it, and instantly throw it into vinegar and
water, by which means you will keep it a pure white. Then,
when you have all ready, throw it into boiling water,
slightly salted, boil it till it is tender, throw it into
cold water, and when cold take it out, drain it and dry it,
cut it up into small half-inch pieces (or put it in whole,
in sticks, into a salad-bowl), sprinkle a little chopped
blanched parsley over the top, dress in the ordinary way
with oil and white French vinegar, and be sure to use white
pepper, not black, if white wine vinegar is objected to, the
juice of a hard fresh lemon is equally good, if not
better.
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