Asian Salad

Incorporate your favorite Asian flavors into a healthy, filling salad. The ingredient combinations can vary to create everything from aspicy soba noodle salad with peanut dressingto ashrimp and cabbage saladflavored with hints of cilantro and lime. Food & Wine's guide spans many different countries to give you recipes that fit any occasion you can think of.

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Charred Broccoli Salad
Thisquick saladis our new favorite way to eat broccoli—and it’s delicious hot or cold. Charring brings out depth, and themisodressing is packed with flavor from rice vinegar, ginger, and garlic. Don’t be afraid to let thebroccoliget a strong char on the grill—that’s what sets this salad apart from the pack and will keep your guests coming back for more.
Cilantro Salad with Shallots and Shrimp
Rating: Unrated 1
有些人认为香菜味道像欧芹duted with Bar Keepers Friend; others love it so much they want to rub their snouts in it. I belong to the latter group. If a bunch of cilantro would hold up as a bouquet, I would have carried it at my wedding. I wish someone would market a cilantro tincture that I could dab behind my ears.I make this salad, which is about 75% cilantro, at the end of winter when I’m daydreaming of my summer herb garden, where I plant cilantro every spring—and every July, and again at the end of August. It grows quickly; I harvest it by the roots, and plant it again. Unlike other soft herbs like basil and tarragon that can withstand regular picking and keep on producing, cilantro is what we garden-nerds call a bolter. It speeds quickly to the harvest zone, pausing like a new teenage driver at a stop sign (the rolling stop) before rushing straight to seed. After the leaves begin to frill, the flavor is gone.So when I see cilantro sold with its roots still attached—and in the winter, this can only mean that I’m shopping my favorite Asian market in nearby Fargo, North Dakota—I snatch up a few bunches. Any place that sells root-bound cilantro understands that the pungent perfume concentrates in cilantro’s roots, runs like nectar up through the stems, and dissipates through the leaves. As if that’s not enough to earn my devotion, Asian markets also sell sushi rice and toban djan (Chinese chili bean paste), ingredients essential to making this powerhouse of a salad.Built on a lump of leftover rice, this dish comes together as quickly as a fire built in my wood stove. Chili paste for kindling, onions and peanuts stacked crosswise to burn, and tons of quick-fire cilantro on top. The lime juice is like lighter fluid here, setting the whole thing aflame—a false igniter that at the end of the winter I’m not averse to using.Feel free to throw something grilled on top of this cilantro bed and call it dinner, but truth be told, I prefer it the next day, cold from the fridge, eaten straight from its storage container.
Thai Nicoise Salad
“I know I should love all my recipes equally, but this is my salad queen,” writes Daphne Oz inThe Happy Cook. “Overflowing with a variety of colorful veggies—crisp romaine lettuce, crunchy bean sprouts and cabbage, juicy cucumbers and tomatoes, creamy fingerling potatoes, peppery paper-thin radishes—all doused in a vibrant, gently spicy peanut-lime dressing with a shower of fresh herbs, it just feels like total abundance and pure opulence. How many salads can you say that about? Long live the queen.”
安迪·雷克惊人的肉泰国萨拉d
Chef Andy Ricker of the bi-coastal Pok Pok empire, is known for his vibrant, flavor-packed larbs.
Vietnamese Chicken-Noodle Salad
Rating: Unrated 974
This dish is a terrific meal-in-one, with cool rice noodles, shredded chicken and fresh vegetables and herbs.Slideshow: Amazing One-Dish Pastas
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More Asian Salad

Thai Green Salad with Duck Cracklings
Rating: Unrated 4659
This zippy salad is a great way to use incredibly moist and flavorful duck confit, which is cured in salt, then poached in fat. Tossing the salad with cracklings (duck skin crisped in a pan) adds superb crunch.More Thai Recipes More Main-Course Salads