Off-Script With Sohla

Sohla Is Over Small Salads (You Should Be Too)

May  3, 2021

Every month, in Off-Script With Sohla, pro chef and flavor whisperer Sohla El-Waylly will introduce you to a must-know cooking technique—and then teach you how to detour it toward new adventures.


I loved getting lost in a sea of choose-your-own adventure books as a kid. I reread them endlessly, discovering different routes along the way. I also cheated whenever an especially ominous choice was presented, going back and changing my answer if I didn’t like where I ended up.

Being in quarantine really quells my sense of adventure, so making a big salad is my way of inserting some excitement into the day. What is a big salad, you ask? It’s a bed of dressed greens topped with whatever your heart desires—roasted veggies, beans, cheese, torn bagels, fried mortadella—anything. And, thanks to this more-is-more attitude, it’s a meal in itself, not a side.

These salads are so customizable, I can choose a different mix of ingredients every time, or bookmark any salad-story I want to eat on repeat. Use this handy guide to go off-script and become your own big salad storyteller, choosing a new sal-adventure every time!


The Foundation

Crisp & Crunchy

I like to start with a crisp, crunchy lettuce base. You can’t go wrong with tender Little Gems, but bitter chicories, like endive or radicchio, create a dynamic foundation—perfect for topping with zingy citrus or sweet dried fruit. Proper salad etiquette dictates that the greens be cold, clean, and dry. I make sure to wash my greens ahead of time and store them in the crisper drawer wrapped in a kitchen towel or tucked into a produce bag, so they are ready to salad whenever I am. I never cut or tear them until right before dressing.

Get Dressed

There are so many flavorful components in a big salad that, when it comes to the dressing, I never use anything too creamy or rich, sticking to a simple vinaigrette instead. Keep it perky with equal parts oil and vinegar or lemon juice—or both! Combining different acidic ingredients in one dressing, like apple cider vinegar with lemon juice or red wine vinegar with sumac, makes a vibrant dressing that brightens up different parts of your palate. Mustard, honey, and maple syrup add both flavor and body, while fresh or dried herbs and ground spices bring the personality. Whisk it all together or shake it up in a lidded jar for easy emulsifying.

Join The Conversation

Top Comment:
“Good ideas! I make a large Salad for dinner for my Husband and I EVERYDAY. The meal is the side dish. WE live in an Assisted living where they provide our meals. Well, the food is generally as poor as you have heard. So I have taken on the challenge of taking the ingredients for the meal and the salad back to my room and putting it all together, sometimes one big salad, and sometimes a big salad and then the entree. Kind of Chopped style. (From Food Network). Dressings are the challenge to keep the daily salad interesting. And the struggle to find good greens is real. They provide a bunch of whatever greens they have that day. I pick through them and throw the rotting stuff away (that would have been served on my plate if I were eating in the dining room!) as well as big hard stems from the kale. I keep a variety of dried herbs and cheeses on hand, and various condiments so that I can make just about any dressing flavor profile I want --the other day they served sushi (at least a nod to it) that was pretty good, and I complimented it with a Japanese dressing --recipe from Food 52--on a large salad combined with the seaweed salad they provided as well. Turned out to be very good. Rice bowl salads are also pretty common as well. Curry dressings, salsa dressings, blue cheese, caesar-type, southeast asian. We have a ew basics that seem to find their way into most of the salads, but then change it up depending on what is served: zucchini, broccoli, mushrooms, pickled beets, tomato, carrot, raisins. I always add nuts and seeds such as walnut, almond, sunflower or pumpkin. I am not able to get out very much or walk very far. We do have a couple of grocery stores (including a Trader Joes's!) within walking distance. So I can supplement my pantry and keep my herbs in stock. Not enough money to order randomly from the internet any longer. Have always fussed in the kitchen, and loved to challenge myself over the decades learning new things to do in the kitchen..IN my old age it is cooking with a limited variety of ingredients, and making them interesting every day! ”
— judy
Comment

Now onto the fun part, the toppers.

Mortadella, two ways! Provolone, two ways! Photo by JULIA GARTLAND. PROP STYLIST: MEGAN HEDGPETH. FOOD STYLIST: SAM SENEVIRATNE.

The Toppers

Crunch

The fun of eating a good salad comes from digging into a wide range of textures. The opportunities are endless: You will catch me toasting seeds and nuts in ghee when I’m feeling indulgent or charring them in a cast-iron pan when I want a bitter edge. Any leftover bread can be transformed into a crouton: torn, toasted, and tossed in seasonings. Cheese can be grated and cooked in a nonstick skillet until it melts into a lacy frico (or sear up an entire slice of provolone until brown and crunchy like I do in my Italian Combo Salad). Potato chips and pork rinds from my snack cabinet can be crushed right on top. The crunch is where the party lies.

Sweet

Sweetness gives little pops of “oh wow this is fun” as you eat. Chewy dried fruits, like dates, raisins, or cranberries bring textural good times as well. Fresh apples and pears lend salads a crisp sweetness, while citrus bursts with quenching acidity. Explore your pantry. And if you aren’t sure if it will taste good, try some with a bite of dressed lettuce. Experimentation is key.

Protein

A big salad is an all-encompassing meal, so I like to make sure there’s a complete protein. Complete proteins contain all the amino acids that our bodies need to create new protein. The source can range from cold cuts like turkey or salami, to pressed and grilled tofu, or even crispy fried eggs. Don’t sleep on big hunks of your favorite cheese (or cheeses!) as a reliable source of protein. If I’m using beans, I make sure to complete them by throwing in croutons or nuts. With some thought and planning, there’s no reason to not have a complete protein in your salad, even if you are out of animal protein or don’t eat it.

Not a small salad. Photo by JULIA GARTLAND. PROP STYLIST: MEGAN HEDGPETH. FOOD STYLIST: SAM SENEVIRATNE.

Veggies

This is another highly customizable area that changes based on my mood. For lunch, I try to keep things lighter with raw veggies like diced tomatoes, shaved celery, or sliced fennel. Raw vegetables add a crisp brightness, perfect for a filling but comfy lunch. For dinner, I tend to roast my vegetables to give them a little more heft and a deeper flavor. Play around with not just the type of vegetables, but how you prepare them, too.

Pickles

Pickles give hits of joy as you navigate your salad. There's a variety of vegetables that I always pickle seasonally, depending on what I find at the farmers market. Everything from pickled ramps in the spring to pickled cherry tomatoes in the summer will find a happy home in a big salad. Don’t worry if you don’t have fancy homemade pickles—anything out of a jar is delicious as well. Think: cornichons, capers, olives. If you are making a salad with a lot of roasted vegetables or heavy proteins, make sure to add enough pickle-y components to keep the salad refreshing.

Now that you have a basic blueprint, go forth and construct your own big salad! Use as many or as few toppers as you like, based on how lazy or adventurous you’re feeling. But never accept a medium-sized salad at your table again.

What would you put in a big salad? Share ideas in the comments below!

See what other Food52 readers are saying.

  • judy
    judy
  • Annada Rathi
    Annada Rathi
  • Sanscapt
    Sanscapt
  • S
    S
  • missymaam
    missymaam
Sohla El-Waylly is a Food52 Resident, sharing new riffable recipes every month that'll help you get creative in the kitchen. Watch her cook on YouTube in her new series, Off-Script With Sohla. Before she started developing fun recipes for home cooks, she worked as a chef in N.Y.C. and L.A., briefly owning a restaurant in Brooklyn with her husband and fellow chef, Ham El-Waylly. She lives in the East Village with Ham, their two dogs, and cat. Find out what else she's up to on Instagram @sohlae

11 Comments

judy May 20, 2021
Good ideas! I make a large Salad for dinner for my Husband and I EVERYDAY. The meal is the side dish. WE live in an Assisted living where they provide our meals. Well, the food is generally as poor as you have heard. So I have taken on the challenge of taking the ingredients for the meal and the salad back to my room and putting it all together, sometimes one big salad, and sometimes a big salad and then the entree. Kind of Chopped style. (From Food Network). Dressings are the challenge to keep the daily salad interesting. And the struggle to find good greens is real. They provide a bunch of whatever greens they have that day. I pick through them and throw the rotting stuff away (that would have been served on my plate if I were eating in the dining room!) as well as big hard stems from the kale. I keep a variety of dried herbs and cheeses on hand, and various condiments so that I can make just about any dressing flavor profile I want --the other day they served sushi (at least a nod to it) that was pretty good, and I complimented it with a Japanese dressing --recipe from Food 52--on a large salad combined with the seaweed salad they provided as well. Turned out to be very good. Rice bowl salads are also pretty common as well. Curry dressings, salsa dressings, blue cheese, caesar-type, southeast asian. We have a ew basics that seem to find their way into most of the salads, but then change it up depending on what is served: zucchini, broccoli, mushrooms, pickled beets, tomato, carrot, raisins. I always add nuts and seeds such as walnut, almond, sunflower or pumpkin. I am not able to get out very much or walk very far. We do have a couple of grocery stores (including a Trader Joes's!) within walking distance. So I can supplement my pantry and keep my herbs in stock. Not enough money to order randomly from the internet any longer. Have always fussed in the kitchen, and loved to challenge myself over the decades learning new things to do in the kitchen..IN my old age it is cooking with a limited variety of ingredients, and making them interesting every day!
 
Annada R. May 20, 2021
Wonderful ideas! I try to go for textural & flavor variations in my salad. Dressing is where I love to experiment the most. Instead of olive oil, I use tadka of olive oil with mustard seeds. Tadka with fenugreek seeds, nigella seeds adds another layer of flavor. https://food52.com/recipes/82056-tadka-salad-dressing

And lately I have started adding dried mint or dried curry leaves powder to the dressing. Brings abt superb flavor!
 
Sanscapt May 18, 2021
Love Sohla! Looking for that mini cleaver she is using, anyone know where to get one?
 
S May 8, 2021
HI Sohla...i’m a granni and learned some new ways to serve salads..weather mixed or presented so attractive on our plate.
thanks for sharing ..Happy Moms Day tomorrow to all Moms..everywhere with or without salads to eat...Sandi
 
missymaam May 6, 2021
I was hoping for more from the dressings. People that cook with radicchio ALWAYS say things like 'you'll love my radicchio...even if you think you don't like radicchio, this is really good'. Um...is it still radicchio? If you want purple there is purple cabbage, onions, beets, potatoes...NOT radicchio.
 
robin L. July 13, 2021
If you look for the radicchio salad recipe here on food52, your impression of radicchio may improve!! The recipe, "Toro Bravo's Radicchio Salad with Manchego," calls for soaking it in ice water to remove some of it's bitterness. It's one of my favorite Genius recipes.
 
robin L. July 13, 2021
If you look for the radicchio salad recipe here on food52, your impression of radicchio may improve!! The recipe, "Toro Bravo's Radicchio Salad with Manchego," calls for soaking it in ice water to remove some of it's bitterness. It's one of my favorite Genius recipes.
 
Jocelyn M. May 6, 2021
Really keen on Sohla's non-stick pan, anyone know what brand that is?

Used to work in an Italian deli and your mortadella croutons are really reminding me of the behind counter snacks we'd create with our toaster ovens, mmmmm
 
M May 4, 2021
As someone who makes A LOT of big salads for dinner, for years, the challenge isn't opening your mind to size and customization. Going off script is understanding the flavours, and getting the seasoning and mix right, so that it doesn't taste repetitive, and does taste cohesive. That includes understanding the amounts to get a stable emulsification, balancing the flavours, and seasoning properly. Otherwise you get sick of mediocre salads until you find a good, proper recipe that balances everything perfectly and actually teaches you something about how to build it. (Salad for Dinner is a good example.)

To say nothing of the struggle when it's hard to find a variety of good quality greens.
 
HalfPint May 3, 2021
I like putting crisp, sweet apples into salads. Ditto glazed and salty nuts. I sort of hate baby greens which I find to be texturally boring (too limp & wussy). I need crunch which means either romaine or iceberg lettuce. I like the dressing to be tangy, rather than tart.
 
e.bick May 3, 2021
Last summer I got really into a roasted beet and watermelon salad over greens with crumbled chèvre, mint leaves, and a lime vinaigrette. Filling yet refreshing on those hot and humid summer days. Could easily pump it up with some toasted nuts, too. Yum!