The word “real” appears in quotes
because this is not, in fact, a truly authentic Caesar salad. As
originally concocted back in Tijuana in the 1920s, the salad was
prepared at a table in front of the patron in a grand show of fuss:
rubbing raw garlic around the inside of a wooden bowl, drizzling the
liquid ingredients into the bowl, and then adding the lettuce,
coddled eggs, grated cheese, and croutons, and tossing it all
together. (Anchovies didn’t become a part of the recipe until some
time later.)
My recipe, in contrast, calls for
preparing the dressing in advance, which makes it far easier as a
dinner party dish. But I still call the salad “real”
because—unlike most Caesars you find in restaurants—it uses
coddled eggs, which to my mind are what makes the salad worthy of its
name.
The recipe may look complex, but the
croutons, dressing, and lettuce can all be prepared in advance. (Wash
and tear up the lettuce, wrap it in a paper towel and place it in a
plastic bag until time to dress the salad.)
"Real" Caesar Salad
(serves 4)
Ingredients
7 tablespoons (a little under ½ cup)
extra virgin olive oil
2 cups French bread, cut into ½”
cubes
1 medium-size clove garlic
1 teaspoon anchovy paste or 1 anchovy fillet
1 teaspoon sugar
¼ teaspoon freshly-ground black pepper
1 teaspoon Dijon style mustard
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
2 eggs in their shells, at room
temperature
2 hearts of Romaine lettuce, torn into
bite-sized pieces
½ cup grated Parmesan or Romano cheese
Directions
Make the Croutons
Toss the bread cubes with 3 tablespoons
of the olive oil, sprinkle with salt and black pepper, and bake on a
baking sheet in a 375° F
oven until golden-brown (10-15 minutes), tossing occasionally to
prevent burning. The croutons can be made several days in advance;
just put them in an airtight plastic bag once cooled and freeze until
an hour before service.
Make the Dressing
Chop the garlic until fine (or put it
through a press), then add the anchovy and mash together until
it forms a paste. Scrape the paste into a small mixing bowl, and add
the sugar, black pepper, mustard, lemon juice, and Worcestershire
sauce, and combine till smooth. Slowly drizzle in the rest of the
olive oil (4 tablespoons), mixing all the while with a wire whisk
until well blended. (Adding a teaspoon of water at the end helps to emulsify the mixture.) You can let this sit on the countertop until time
to dress the salad, but give it a good whisk before using. (It can
also be kept in the fridge if made the day before, but be sure to let
it come back up to room temperature before using.)
Coddle the Eggs
A few minutes before you want to serve
the salad, get a small saucepan of water (enough to cover the eggs)
simmering on the stove. Using a large spoon, place the eggs into the
simmering water (being careful not to crack their shells) and let
them cook for 1 to 1½ minutes. Pour the hot water out of the pan
and, leaving the eggs in, refill with cold water to stop the cooking
process.
Compose the Salad
Place the lettuce in a salad bowl, and
toss with the dressing. Then, holding the eggs one at a time in the
palm of your hand, crack them in two with a butter knife, and use a
teaspoon to spoon the egg into the salad. (Pour the yolk over the
lettuce, and then break the white of the egg into small pieces with
the spoon as you scoop it out of the shell.) Toss again, to mix in
the egg evenly.
If you are serving individual salads,
plate up the dressed egg/lettuce mixture, and then distribute the
cheese and croutons evenly between the plates. Otherwise, add the
cheese and croutons to the large bowl and and give the salad one
final toss before serving. Finish with freshly-ground black pepper. (See photo at top.)
🍃 🍴 🌱
The daughter of a law professor and a potter, Leslie Karst learned
early, during family dinner conversations, the value of both careful
analysis and the arts—ideal ingredients for a mystery story. Putting
this early education to good use, she now writes the Lefty
Award-nominated Sally Solari Mysteries, a culinary series set in Santa
Cruz, California.
An
ex-lawyer like her sleuth, Leslie also has degrees in English
literature and the culinary arts. She and her wife and their Jack
Russell mix split their time between Santa Cruz and Hilo, Hawai‘i.
Leslie’s website
Leslie also blogs with Chicks on the Case
Leslie on Facebook
Leslie on Twitter
Leslie on Instagram
Praise for Leslie's most recent Sally Solari mystery, the Lefty Award-nominated MURDER FROM SCRATCH:
“Karst
seasons her writing with an accurate insider’s view of restaurant
operation, as well as a tenderness in the way she treats family, death
and Sally’s reactions to Evelyn’s blindness.”
Ellery Queen Magazine (featured pick)
All five Sally Solari Mysteries are available through Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and Bookshop.
Dying for a Taste, A Measure of Murder, and Murder from Scratch are also available as AUDIOBOOKS from Audible!