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Dairy French French, Salad 1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

2 Unpeeled white boiling
potatoes halved
up to three
Salt and pepper to taste
2 T Butter or more as needed
4 Mixed baby greens
2 T Minced fresh chervil
3 T Minced fresh chives
1 T Minced fresh parsley
1 Shallot, minced
2 T Olive oil
1 1/2 T White wine vinegar
3 oz Fresh white goat or sheep
cheese cut or crubled
into pieces
8 Flavorful black
Mediterranean olives
Pitted up to twelve

INSTRUCTIONS

Warm salads are a bistro mainstay, sustaining enough to satisfy the
soul, yet light enough not to smother the appetite for the rest of  the
meal. Salad ingredients can be tossed together in a pan with hot
dressing over heat until they wilt, or they can be set on plates and
have a hot dressing or hot ingredients poured over them.  The best warm
salads are made with hearty greens; delicate little  lettuces would
loose their moisture and freshness. Cabbage, frisee,  and vegetables
such as beets or potatoes are all good; and a  vinaigrette-tossed
mixture of baby greens is an excellent base for  anything hot, such as
grilled artichoke hearts or that bistro  classic, hot goat cheese.  In
fact, warmed salads with any of the wide variety of goat cheeses  and
blue cheeses are a bistro classic, adding blasts of big flavor in  each
tiny nugget that melts delicately when the warm ingredients are  added.
Young asparagus stalks and green beans, bits of sweet juicy  cherry
tomatoes, and handfuls of herbs are often tossed into warm  salads at
the last minute for fragrant freshness.  The contrast between fresh raw
greens, tangy goat cheese, and crisply  browned potatoes is marvelous;
in recent years I've found variations  and variations on this theme in
bistros around France.  A scattering of black olives adds a jaunty
accent, and the goat cheese  melts seductively on the salad greens when
the hot potato cakes are  added. Serve with a crisp Sancerre or a
Sauvignon Blanc from the  Loire.  Cook the potatoes in boiling water
until they are halfway tender,  about 15 minutes. The potatoes should
be still slightly crunchy.  Rinse in cold water, then shred or grate
using the large rasps of a  grater or in a food processor. Most of the
peel should slip off in  the process; ignore any that doesn't and
discard the peel that does.  Season the potato shreds with salt and
pepper.  In a large, heavy cast-iron or nonstick skillet, melt the
butter over  medium-high heat and spoon in mounds of the potato
mixture, pressing  them down as they brown, until the bottoms of the
pancakes are golden  brown, adding more butter if needed. Turn and cook
the second side  until the cakes are crisp-edged and browned.
Meanwhile, combine the greens with the chervil, chives, parsley, and
shallot, then dress with the olive oil and vinegar.  Sprinkle the top
of the salad with the goat cheese and olives.  When the potato pancakes
are cooked through, place them on the dressed  salad leaves.  Serve
right away.  Excerpt from THE VEGETARIAN BISTRO, copyright © 1997 by
Marlena  Spieler. Reprinted with permission of Chronicle Books.
Formatted for you by: Bill Webster Posted to MC-Recipe Digest V1 #812
by Bill Webster <thelma@pipeline.com> on Sep 27, 1997

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Nutrition (calculated from recipe ingredients)
----------------------------------------------
Calories: 2165
Calories From Fat: 475
Total Fat: 54.1g
Cholesterol: 61.1mg
Sodium: 85.3mg
Potassium: 3463.7mg
Carbohydrates: 373.1g
Fiber: 30g
Sugar: 35.1g
Protein: 51.1g


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