Sunday, January 23, 2011

Spinach Salad


It's easy to get run down at this time of year and succumb to the colds and flus that are so prevalent. The keys to staying healthy are plenty of rest, good exercise, and great food.

This spinach salad is an example of great food - full of vitamin C and antioxidants to help your body stay strong, and tasty as well. The toasted sesame seeds add a nutty flavor and a little calcium to the orange juice dressing.

I made it with malabar spinach from Finley Farms. Bagged baby spinach would work too.

It's a little unusual to put pieces of orange in a salad, but try it. The textures and flavors go well together. Larry was surprised at how much he liked it.

Spinach and Orange Salad
3 tbsp sesame seeds
3 cups fresh spinach
1/2 red pepper, chopped
2 tbsp chopped red onion
1 orange
1 tbsp rice vinegar
3 tsp orange juice
3 tsp water

Toast sesame seeds in a small heavy frypan until they are aromatic. Grind them in a spice grinder or small blender.

Meanwhile, wash the spinach well, dry it, and tear it into bite-size pieces.

Cut the orange in half. Juice one half for the dressing. With a small knife, slice the peel off the other half, and cut the flesh into chunks. Don't peel off all the membranes because they are full of bioflavanoids that make the other vitamins more effective.

Combine the spinach, pepper, onion and orange chunks.

Whisk together the ground sesame seeds, orange juice, rice vinegar and water. Toss with the vegetables.

Serves 2

1 comment:

  1. It is delightful to share your experiences with food and eating. When I was in Kuujuuaq we had a version of your spinach-orange salad with nuts almost every day. (Vegetables are now available in some parts of northern Quebec, and were very welcome to me as I felt overdosed on cariboo.) My friend Lollie loved my salad. Though I am no longer there, Lollie says she still makes this salad and often eats it with the wheat bread or bannak she makes every week. Lollie is Inuit and legally blind and loves the feel of the greens (spinach and romaine or iceberg lettuce mostly) and orange as well as the taste. She most often eats the salad with her fingers as she has trouble manipulating a fork.

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