Monday, August 25, 2008

Arugula Salad with Ginger-Thyme Vinaigrette

When I was very young, my neighbor Sophia and I would play together for hours and hours in the woods behind our homes, conjuring stories of make-believe, or giggling over dolls and books. At dinnertime, I was often invited to eat with her family. Her first generation Greek parents opened me to a wonderful new world of food, language and music; they were generous with love for their children and treated me much as their own. This recipe is a celebration of that family, along with a cunning addition of arugula to round out my salute to the Mediterranean. Opa!

1 teaspoon organic extra virgin olive oil
1 pound mushrooms, thinly sliced
1/2 pound sugar snap peas, cleaned and trimmed
1 bunch arugula (1/2 pound), cleaned and trimmed
1/2 pound carrots, julienned
1/4 cup sherry cooking wine
1 1/2 cups water

Dressing ingredients
1/4 cup organic extra virgin olive oil
3 tablespoons Apple cider vinegar
1 1/2 tablespoons fresh minced ginger
1/2 teaspoon fresh minced thyme
1/4 teaspoon fresh minced garlic

Place all dressing ingredients in blender, purée for 1 minute, then set aside. Place 1 teaspoon olive oil in large skillet over high heat. Add mushrooms and sauté until golden brown, about 15 minutes.
While mushrooms are cooking, heat water in a saucepan. When water boils, place sugar snap peas in steamer basket, cover, steam 2–3 minutes until peas are bright green. Drain well and chill peas quickly in ice water. Drain again.
Place arugula, squash, red bell pepper and peas in a large bowl, toss with dressing. Divide salad onto 4 plates. When mushrooms are golden, deglaze pan by adding the sherry, cook until all liquid evaporates. Place mushrooms on top of salad and serve. Serves 4.


Food Fact! Apple cider vinegar has been used for centuries as both food and medicine. Hippocrates, the father of modern medicine used vinegar and vinegar mixed with honey as an energizing tonic and a healing elixir in 400BC. Be sure to select apple cider vinegar made from cold pressed, organically grown whole apples, in which no chemicals or preservatives have been added, which contains the "mother of vinegar", and is not pasteurized. (The "mother of vinegar" is a natural gelatinous substance formed during the last fermentation step.)
Resulting from the fermentation of apple juice to hard apple cider, followed by a second fermentation to apple cider vinegar, this natural product retains all the nutritional goodness of the apples from which it was made plus it is fortified with the extra acids and enzymes produced during the two fermentation steps. The health benefits of apple cider vinegar have been promoted by many well-known authors such as Dr. D.C. Jarvis, Dr. Paul C. Bragg and Dr. Patricia Bragg.

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