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Thursday, May 15, 2025

Make a great vinaigrette without hitting the bottle

by

KATIE WORKMAN
628 days ago
20230827

KATIE WORK­MAN

Mak­ing sal­ad dress­ing can feel daunt­ing for many of us. We ei­ther fear it a lit­tle, and keep hit­ting the bot­tle (bot­tled dress­ing, of course), or if we do make our own, we get stuck in that one-dress­ing rut.

But if you take a cou­ple of min­utes to play with some dif­fer­ent oils and vine­gars, you’ll quick­ly see how easy it is to make a home­made vinai­grette, and to keep chang­ing it up so your sal­ads sparkle all year long.

The word vinai­grette may sound a bit fan­cy pants, but it’s just French for oil and vine­gar. OK, no, that’s not quite true, but it cer­tain­ly is part­ly true, and help­ful in mak­ing things much less scary.

At its most ba­sic, you can make a vinai­grette in two min­utes. Then the sky’s the lim­it, and be­com­ing a sal­ad dress­ing mas­ter is one of the eas­i­est and most con­sis­tent­ly use­ful skills to have con­quered in the kitchen.

The most com­mon ra­tio of oil to vine­gar is 3:1.

The Oil

For most vinai­grettes, I lean to­ward ex­tra vir­gin olive oil, first press or cold press if pos­si­ble. Olive oils range wide­ly in flavour from spicy to fruity, mild to ro­bust. You’ll find your­self lean­ing to­ward cer­tain flavour pro­files, but it’s a nice rea­son to ac­tu­al­ly taste your olive oil. It’s al­so a good rea­son to treat your­self to a good one.

For some oil and vine­gar dress­ings, you might want a more neu­tral­ly flavoured oil, like saf­flower or grape­seed. This may be the case when mak­ing a dress­ing with Asian in­gre­di­ents, or any­thing not in the Mediter­ranean fam­i­ly.

The Vine­gar

There are al­so so many vine­gars to choose from — a nice rea­son to linger in the vine­gar aisle of your mar­ket. Con­sid­er white wine vine­gar, red wine vine­gar, sher­ry vine­gar, bal­sam­ic vine­gar, rice vine­gar (un­sea­soned is best for dress­ings), black rice vine­gar, Cham­pagne vine­gar and ap­ple cider vine­gar.

And if you are in a well-stocked mar­ket, spe­cial­ty store or farm­ers mar­ket, keep your eyes open for fruit vine­gars (such as rasp­ber­ry, cit­rus or fig) or oth­er flavours, like herbed vine­gars or spiced vine­gars.

Di­rec­tions for mak­ing the vinai­grette

Here’s my favourite very ba­sic vinai­grette tip: Use two dif­fer­ent vine­gars in your dress­ing. This cre­ates a nice lay­er­ing of flavours and takes it all to a slight­ly high­er lev­el, all for the ex­tra 30 sec­onds it took to open a sec­ond bot­tle of vine­gar.

Some favourite com­bos: red wine and sher­ry vine­gars; bal­sam­ic and red wine vine­gars; white wine and un­sea­soned rice wine vine­gars. I al­so love a blend of fresh lemon juice and a vine­gar.

My fam­i­ly likes their dress­ing on the vine­gary side. We favour more of a 2:1 bal­ance, and my old­er son is a 1:1 type of guy, bal­sam­ic be­ing the vine­gar of choice. Play with the bal­ance un­til you get to the lev­el of acid­i­ty you like.

Ad­di­tions

So, now you have a blend of oil and vine­gar. Two ad­di­tion­al in­gre­di­ents that I think make a dress­ing a vinai­grette are minced shal­lot (or an­oth­er mem­ber of the onion fam­i­ly) and some Di­jon mus­tard. You can play around with dif­fer­ent types of mus­tard, from Ger­man mus­tard to whole grain.

And you def­i­nite­ly need to sea­son with salt (I pre­fer kosher or flaky sea salt) and pep­per (go for fresh­ly ground if pos­si­ble). Use a light hand with salt when mak­ing the vinai­grette, add a sprin­kle of kosher or coarse salt to the dressed sal­ad, and give it a fi­nal toss be­fore serv­ing. It adds a lit­tle burst of taste and tex­ture to salt a dressed sal­ad at the very end.

Oth­er great add-ins for vinai­grettes are fresh herbs, minced gar­lic, minced sun-dried toma­toes or olives, or a few ta­ble­spoons of crum­bled or shred­ded cheese, such as goat cheese, fe­ta, blue cheese or Parme­san. In the herb fam­i­ly, I lean to­wards tar­ragon, pars­ley, thyme, oregano and basil.

Fi­nal­ly, vinai­grette is so for­giv­ing. Too oily? Add more vine­gar. Too tart? Add more oil. Too bland? Add more salt, or maybe a bit of mus­tard. Too salty? Add more oil, and maybe some vine­gar.

Ad­di­tions like that mean you’ll just have a big­ger stash of vinai­grette to tuck in the fridge when you get your per­fect bal­ance. And since vinai­grette keeps hap­pi­ly for a week or two (I usu­al­ly make a big batch for that rea­son), noth­ing will be wast­ed.

Al­so, be­yond let­tuce sal­ads, think about oth­er us­es for your vinai­grette. Driz­zle some on sim­ply cooked veg­eta­bles, or use it in a mayo-free pota­to sal­ad, for in­stance.

Vinai­grettes are a re­al­ly nice way to have some fun in the kitchen with your kids that doesn’t in­volve bak­ing. Mine grew up ex­per­i­ment­ing with vinai­grettes — it’s like a chem­istry project that you can eat.

I once taught a cook­ing class for kids where we put about ten dif­fer­ent kinds of vine­gars in lit­tle bowls and they dipped cubes of plain bread in them to taste the dif­fer­ences. They chose their favourites to make their own vinai­grette to take home.

Here’s a ba­sic recipe to get you start­ed.

Recipe

• ½ cup ex­tra vir­gin olive oil

• ¼ cup vine­gar(s) of your choice (see above)

• ½ tea­spoon kosher flaky sea salt, or to taste

• Fresh­ly ground pep­per to taste

• 2 tea­spoons Di­jon mus­tard, or more to taste

• 1 ta­ble­spoon fine­ly minced shal­lot (op­tion­al)

Di­rec­tions: Put every­thing in­to a con­tain­er with a lid. Cov­er and shake. Don’t you feel great? Use im­me­di­ate­ly, or store in the re­frig­er­a­tor. Give it a good shake be­fore us­ing.


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