This simple Mediterranean salad takes little time to make and is extremely healthy. Serve this as a side dish or a sandwich filling; try layering it in pita bread and top it with cold sliced lamb and feta...
This Tangy Potato and Leek Salad side dish is a revelation. Dijon mustard gives body to cooked leeks, making for a velvety dressing with a rich mouthfeel-no one will miss the fat.
This recipe, courtesy of Martha's daughter Alexis, takes full advantage of summer's availability of fresh vegetables. The trick is to cut all of the vegetables into similar-size pieces so that each forkful...
Roasted Marcona almonds and briny green olives are the perfect cocktail-hour accompaniments to this salad. Serve it with a bright Spanish white or rose, like Verdejo or Rioja rosado.
This Tuscan salad is a wonderful way to use up day-old bread: Use coarse-textured, good-quality bread. You can improvise by adding olives, anchovies, or canned tuna.
This salad offers pleasingly bitter red endive spears, licorice-sweet slices of fennel, and sections of orange and grapefruit. Rosemary, ginger, parsley, and hazelnut oil add complexity.
If you're looking for a tasty vegetable for stir-fries, grilling, or salads, try bok choy. Bok choy is especially delicious when eaten raw. Just slice it up, toss with a light dressing, and enjoy.
With its long crinkled leaves, Napa cabbage is more delicate in flavor than green or red cabbage, making this slaw recipe unique. Rice-wine vinegar and hot chili oil are available in most supermarkets;...
In this variation on classic American-style potato salad, warm potatoes are sprinkled with vinegar, dressed in mayonnaise, and mixed with hard-boiled eggs, curry powder, cilantro, and onions.
Tabbouleh is a grain- and vegetable-based salad traditionally made with bulgur wheat. In this recipe, quinoa is first toasted to deepen its flavor, then cooked by the absorption method and combined with...
Do as chef Chris Fischer does and cook an extra batch of the baby red beets. Toss them whole with salt, pepper, and a tablespoon of red-wine vinegar, and then serve them as an hors d'oeuvre.
Different kinds of beans cook at different rates, so it's best to prepare them in separate pans (working in batches if necessary). The salad can be made with just a few types instead of all five, as long...
Our take on the Nashville specialty relies on spicy paprika and hot sauce for its fiery kick. Tame the heat with sweetened pickles sandwiched between thick slices of crispy toast and a simple, lightly...