Cut Out + Keep

Spring Niçoise Salad

This salad is best in spring!

https://www.cutoutandkeep.net/projects/spring-nicoise-salad • Posted by GMC Group

This salad is best in spring, when tiny new potatoes—sometimes called marble potatoes—and baby artichokes and beets are available at the market. It comes together quickly if you prepare some of the ingredients ahead of time. Cook the new potatoes, artichokes, beets, and eggs up to a day in advance, but wait to make the vinaigrette shortly before serving. If you refrigerate any element, be sure to let it come to room temperature before finishing the salad. When roasting the potatoes, you can add a handful of garlic cloves and/or herbs, such as thyme or savory, if you like. In place of the seared tuna, try large flakes of tuna confit or slow-roasted salmon. Serves 4

You will need

Project Budget
Reasonably Priced

Time

0 h 20

Difficulty

Nice & Simple
Medium screen shot 2012 08 29 at 15.28.31

Description

This salad is best in spring, when tiny new potatoes—sometimes called marble potatoes—and baby artichokes and beets are available at the market. It comes together quickly if you prepare some of the ingredients ahead of time. Cook the new potatoes, artichokes, beets, and eggs up to a day in advance, but wait to make the vinaigrette shortly before serving. If you refrigerate any element, be sure to let it come to room temperature before finishing the salad. When roasting the potatoes, you can add a handful of garlic cloves and/or herbs, such as thyme or savory, if you like. In place of the seared tuna, try large flakes of tuna confit or slow-roasted salmon. Serves 4

Recipe from Salad for Dinner by Tasha DeSerio, photography by Kate Sears and published by The Taunton Press 2012.

Instructions

  1. Heat the oven to 400°F. Fill a large bowl with cold water and squeeze the juice of the lemon halves into it; add the artichokes to prevent them from turning brown.

  2. Just before cooking, drain the artichokes well. Warm a medium skillet over medium heat. Add 1?4 cup olive oil, the artichokes, wine, 1?2 cup water, the thyme, and a pinch of red pepper flakes. Season with salt and simmer, uncovered and stirring occasionally, until the artichokes are tender when pierced at the base with a small, sharp knife, 10 to 15 minutes, depending on the size of the artichokes. If the liquid evaporates before the artichokes are tender, add a splash more water. Let cool at room temperature and then taste for salt.

  3. Put the potatoes in a shallow baking dish or pan just large enough to hold them in a single layer. Drizzle with 1 tablespoon oil, season with a generous amount of salt, and toss well. Add a splash of water (just enough to create a little steam as the potatoes cook). Cover tightly with aluminum foil and bake until the potatoes can be easily pierced with a small, sharp knife, 30 to 40 minutes, depending on the size of the potatoes. Remove from the oven, vent the foil, and let cool at room temperature.

  4. To make the vinaigrette, combine the garlic, mustard, vinegar, and 1 table-spoon lemon juice in a small bowl. Let sit for 5 to 10 minutes. Whisk in the egg yolk and then slowly whisk in 3?4 cup oil. Thin the vinaigrette with a few drops of cool water if necessary (you want it thin enough to drizzle nicely.) Taste and adjust with more salt or vinegar if necessary. Set aside.

  5. Shortly before serving, halve or quarter the potatoes (depending on their size and your preference) and season with about 11?2 tablespoons of the vinaigrette. Set aside.

  6. Season the tuna on both sides with salt and freshly ground black pepper. Warm a large skillet, preferably cast iron, over high heat until very hot. Add the remaining 3 tablespoons oil and place the tuna in the skillet. Cook, without moving, until seared and nicely browned, 2 to 3 minutes, depending on the thickness of the tuna. Turn and cook on the opposite side for another 2 to 3 minutes. (The tuna should be pink in the center.) Transfer to a plate and set aside.

  7. Drain any liquid from the artichokes and discard the thyme. Cut the eggs into quarters and season with salt and pepper. Scatter about half of the arugula around a large platter or individual plates. Tuck the potatoes, artichokes, beets, and eggs in and around the greens. Using your hands, break the tuna into rustic pieces, or slice it with a knife and nestle it in and around the other ingredients. Drizzle about 1?4 cup vinaigrette over the platter, or about a tablespoon over individual portions, and serve immediately, passing the remaining vinaigrette at the table.