What I Had For Dinner Tonight

Making a Vinaigrette

March 20, 2008 · 4 Comments

1.Vinaigrette 1 2.Vinaigrette 2 3.Vinaigrette 3
4.Vinaigrette 4 5.Vinaigrette 5 6.Vinaigrette 6

  1. Start with a clean bottle (or bowl, or ramekin, or glass, or whatever you prefer to use) and add your base oil. I usually use either olive oil or grape seed oil, but if you want to get fancy, walnut oil is nice too…
  2. Add your preferred vinegar (I’m using balsamic here, but some people like red wine vinegar or cider vinegar, or even white vinegar), about 1/6 as much as there is oil, and a spoonful or so of good Dijon mustard.
  3. Then add the basic flavors to taste, like salt, pepper and garlic.
  4. Of course, you can add other flavors and herbs and spices, for this particular dressing I’m using a hybrid lemon/orange from the garden as well as some fresh basil, oregano and marjoram. You can also add something to sweeten it like honey or maple syrup, which goes nicely with bitter greens.
  5. Chop up/juice all the additional ingredients, and add them in. Use a little more oil to wash out the funnel, if needed.
  6. Finally, shake or stir it up well and serve over the salad of your choice. Refrigerate any left over, and bring it back to room temperature before serving.

Categories: You Cook It
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4 responses so far ↓

  • gomichild // March 20, 2008 at 9:43 pm

    Ooo nifty tutorial – thanks honey!

  • alnedra // March 21, 2008 at 5:33 am

    2 questions:

    1. When you say mustard, do you mean the paste, or can I locate mustard seeds?
    2. How long can you usually keep vinagrettes? Do they go bad?

  • queso // March 21, 2008 at 10:32 am

    1. I haven’t tried using just mustard seeds, but if I did, I’d probably pulverize them really well with a mortar and pestle… I’d recommend going with a prepared mustard paste, preferably one that is a Dijon mustard, like Grey Poupon.

    2. At least a week or more… as long as or longer than store-bought dressings- there’s not much in there that will go bad, and the oil, vinegar and citrus all act as preservatives for anything that might.

  • alnedra // March 21, 2008 at 7:57 pm

    Thanks! (^_^)

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