Green Salad with Nasturtiums (Gorgeous)
CATEGORIES
INGREDIENTS
  • The salad: a blend of lettuces from the farmer’s market, nasturtiums, violets, feta, avocado, toasted pistachios, and a lemon-lavender dressing. Dan absolutely loved it; what was left in the serving bowl he ate in a second helping. The flowers tasted like . . . flowers. That wasn’t a bad thing, but it did freak my mouth out a bit. “Oh my god, you’re eating the centerpiece! Stop that!” I ate it anyway. It was quite good.
  • Lemon-Lavender Dressing
  • the juice of one lemon
  • 2 teaspooons of lavender sugar (sugar that has been mixed with dried lavender petals and left for a few weeks)
  • 3 times as much olive oil as lemon
  • a few grinds of salt
DIRECTIONS
  1. Today, I dared.n “Would you eat it if I put these in a salad?” I asked my husband. “Are they edible?”
  2. “Well, yes, sweetie. I’m not feeding you poisonous flowers.” *shrug* “Okay, sure.”
  3. Nasturtiums taste peppery, I read, and go well with other foods that play off the pepperiness. So . . . here goes nothing.
  4. The salad: a blend of lettuces from the farmer’s market, nasturtiums, violets, feta, avocado, toasted pistachios, and a lemon-lavender dressing. Dan absolutely loved it; what was left in the serving bowl he ate in a second helping. The flowers tasted like . . . flowers. That wasn’t a bad thing, but it did freak my mouth out a bit. “Oh my god, you’re eating the centerpiece! Stop that!” I ate it anyway. It was quite good.
  5. Lemon-Lavender Dressing:Shake well together. Add more of ingredients to taste
RECIPE BACKSTORY
A Turkish cookbook from the 1800’s reads: “Put a plate of flowers of the Nasturtium in a salad bowl, with a tablespoonful of chopped chervil; sprinkle over with your fingers half a teaspoonful of salt, two or three tablespoonsful of olive oil, and the juice of a lemon; turn the salad in the bowl with a spoon and a fork until well mixed, and serve.” Me? I’d never heard of such a silly thing. One time, my sister Becky brought home a book of ridiculous cookbook photos from the 1950’s. They were hysterical. A few days later, when I found a 1990’s salad recipe–with a photo–calling for nasturtium blossoms, I howled with laughter when I showed my mother. She laughed along with me. Well, these times, they are a-changin’. At the local farmer’s market for the past month, I’ve looked each Saturday at tiny boxes of beautiful, colorful, perfectly formed Nasturtium blossoms. Did I dare? Oh, no, that’s just too strange. Then I googled it. Oh. Maybe it’s not so unusual to use nasturtiums in food.