I needed something healthy and invigorating.
Back in Seattle, I came home to quietude, flipped through my cookbooks and went on a sunny stroll through Cal Anderson park, running into several neighbors on the way. We chatted on park benches until the shadows crept over us, relegating the sun to slender stripes on the grass and gravel. Still mildly hung over, faintly tired, I craved something light and cleansing. Cucumbers.
I played with David Tanis' Vietnamese cucumber salad, trying out a bias cut on my vegetables, adding rice vinegar and extra ginger, reducing the sugar. The results were flavorful and just short of fiery. I preferred all of my improvisations except for the bias cut. Simply sliced cucumbers make a more manageable mouthful. I garnished the salad with thinly sliced sweet onions and, though pretty, they were more delicious when tossed and marinated with the rest of the salad. I suggest taste over aesthetics on this one.
After salad came sleep. A new week. A date with a new boy, even. I laughed at myself as I shared camera-phone images of my recent concoctions, lovingly pointing out ingredients like a grandparent naming children in a wallet photo. "I want that," the boy said as he pointed at the cucumber salad with his chopsticks, his gorgeous gray eyes lighting up. I smiled, remembering how the sweet crunch contrasted with the tangy, slightly salty dressing, the bite of onions and peppers. Suffice it to say, I hope to make it again soon.
Adapted from "A Platter of Figs and other Recipes" by David Tanis
4 large cucumbers
salt and pepper
vietnamese (nuoc mamma) or thai (nam pla) fish sauce
palm sugar
3 serranos or jalapenos
2-3 limes
mint sprigs
basil sprigs
thinly sliced sweet onion
Peel cucumbers, cut them lengthwise in half and slice into half-moons. Place in a large bowl, add salt and pepper to taste, a dash each of fish sauce and vinegar, the ginger and a tablespoon of palm sugar. Toss well and let sit for at least 5 minutes.
David suggests finely chopping the chiles and adding them to taste by the spoonful, but I prefer them thinly sliced and added with a bold liberality. Add the onions, douse with freshly-squeezed lime juice and toss again. Cover and refrigerate till serving.
Just before serving, add a fistful of mint and basil leaves, roughly chopped or perhaps stacked, rolled and sliced into a pretty chiffonade. Taste and adjust the seasoning, adding more lime juice, fish sauce or salt as necessary. Though I halved this and enjoyed it as a hefty meal for one, Tanis serves it as a side to wild salmon.
This sounds so amazing! I could see it as a component to an herb or salad plate, which is a traditional accompaniment to Vietnamese meals. Usually there is a variety of herbs, like mint, thai basil, cilantro, pickled salads, crushed peanuts, lettuce leave, saucess... so you can put your meal together, like pho soup! I think a Vietnamese feast needs to happen sometime..
ReplyDeleteYes! You're right that this would be a perfect component in a Vietnamese themed mis en place. I have a package of spring roll wraps, the ones you soak in water first, that we should put to use. I'm so glad you find the recipe inspirational!
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