Summer

Zucchini and Snap Peas with Sesame Oil and Salt

by:
June 30, 2011
0
0 Ratings
  • Serves 4 as a side dish
Author Notes

This is unfussy, unfancy food for a summer evening on the deck, preferably after a day at the farmers' market sniffing and tasting and buying beautiful produce. We're talking baby zucchini and fresh snap peas, blanched until still crunchy, coated with sesame oil and sprinkled with flaky sea salt. Yea, that's it. And you know what? it's really good.

If you can't find baby zucchini, you can use regular zucchini cut into 1/2-inch coins. —Rivka

Continue After Advertisement
Ingredients
  • 1 pound baby zucchini, ends trimmed
  • 1 pound snap peas, ends and center "string" removed
  • 3-4 tablespoons sesame oil
  • flaky salt
Directions
  1. Put a pot of salted water over high heat and bring to a boil. Add baby zucchini to the pot and cook 1 minute. Add snap peas, cook 1 minute more, and drain. You’re serving these vegetables warm, so no need to use an ice bath; instead, you just slightly undercook them, and they cook the rest of the way while cooling. If using regular zucchini cut into coins, add at the same time as the snap peas, and cook for just about 1 minute, maybe 10 seconds more.
  2. Drain vegetables well, wiping with a towel if necessary. You want them completely dry, or else the sesame oil will just gather with the water at the bottom of the platter and form a not-so-delicious liquid. Let's avoid that.
  3. Transfer to a serving platter. Drizzle with sesame oil, enough so that when you give the platter a few shakes, all the vegetables look thinly coated. Then sprinkle some flaky salt over the whole dish. Taste one. Does it need more oil? More salt? Adjust seasoning accordingly. Serve now, or later. They’re great at room temperature, too.
  4. If you’d prefer, you can serve the vegetables plain on a platter, and put out the salted sesame oil in a bowl for dipping. I think I actually prefer the dish this way, but both methods work just great.
Contest Entries

See what other Food52ers are saying.

I'm a healthcare consultant by day, food blogger by night, and I make a mean veggie chili. I'm eat a mostly-vegetarian diet, but have a soft spot for meat, especially braised short ribs. And this profile wouldn't be complete without an admission that I absolutely am addicted to cookies and chocolate. Finally, I love the idea of food52 and can't wait to share and read my and others' favorite recipes!

0 Reviews