Composed Salads

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4.

Composed Salads
 Prepare and season each ingredients separately and evaluate the flavor and quality.
 Arrangements maybe plated ahead of time and add delicate ingredients just before serving.
 Flavors and textures of all ingredients should provide pleasing contrast
 Observe general concepts of plating and presentations of output.

5. Gelatin Salads
 Observe the correct proportion of gelatin and liquid. Too much gelatin makes a stiff, rubbery
product while too little makes a soft product that will not form the desired shape.
 To dissolve unflavored gelatin, stir it in cold liquid to avoid lumping and let it stand for 5 minutes
to absorb water. Then heat it until dissolves, or add hot liquid and stir until dissolved.
 To dissolve sweetened, flavored gelatin, stir it into boiling water. It will not lump because the
gelatin granules are held apart by sugar granules.
 For quick setting, dissolve the gelatin to half of the volume of liquid and the other half is cold
water to lower the temperature. For even faster setting, add crushed ice in an equal volume of
cold water, stir until the ice is melted.
 Do not add raw pineapple and papaya to gelatin salads because these fruits contain enzymes
which dissolves gelatin.
 Canned fruits and other juicy items must be well drained before adding because they will watered
down the gelatin.
 To unmold gelatin if it is firm

-Loosen it by dipping a small pointed knife in warm water and running the tip of it around the top
edge of the molded gelatin.

-Dip the mold into hot water for 1 – 2 seconds

-Quickly moisten tips of the fingers and gently pull gelatin away from edge

 Refrigerate gelatin salads.


Procedure for Quantity Salad Production
1. Prepare all ingredients. Wash and cut greens, fruits, vegetables, and garnishes. Prepare cooked
vegetables and mix bound and marinated salads. Have all ingredients chilled.

2. Arrange salad plates on worktables. Line them up on trays for easy transfer to refrigerator.

3. Place bases on all plates.

4. Arrange body of salad on all plates.

5. Garnish all salads.

6. Refrigerate until serving.

7. Do not add dressing to green salads until serving.

Important Factors to consider in Salad Preparation


1. Quality of ingredients. Salad is as good as the quality of its ingredients, so you have to use ingredients
that are fresh, ripe and in season.

2. Eye Appeal. It should be attractive, appetizing, creatively presented.

3. Simplicity. Make it simple not overcrowded.

4. Neatness. Keep salad neatly placed in a plate.

5. Contrast and Harmony of colors. Contrast in color for your garnishing can accentuate the appearance
of the salad.

6. Proper Food combinations. Choose combination of ingredients carefully. Pineapples and coconut go
well with chicken but not compatible with tuna.

7. Foods should be recognizable. Taste of the food that you are using as a base should be identifiable
when you taste the salad. The dressing should dominates the taste.

8. Keep foods properly chilled but not ice-cold.

9. Serve hot foods while hot and cold foods cold.

10. Keep it clean and crispy. This is done by washing greens in large quantity of water and drain well and
removing the green from the water to allow the dirt to settle to the bottom of the container.

11. Flavorful. Tempting and stimulating if prepared and presented properly.

12. Drain all the ingredients well. Water or excess juices will weaken dressings and will make your salad
look messy.
13. Do not overcook food. Food and ingredients when overcooked eliminates the color an

Prepare Variety of Salad Dressing

Ingredients of Salad Dressing


Salad dressings are liquid or semi liquids used to flavor salads. The flavors of most salad dressings are
not modified by cooking. The quality depends directly on the quality of the ingredients used.

Most salad dressings are made primarily of an oil and an acid with other ingredients added to modify
the flavor or texture.

1. Oils – should have mild, sweet flavor. Strongly flavored

oil can make excellent salad dressing but not appropriate with

every food.

Examples: corn oil, soybean oil, canola oil, peanut oil, olive oil, walnut oil

2. Vinegar – should have a good, clean sharp

flavor. Most salad vinegar are about 5%

acidity, but some range as 7-8%.

3. Lemon Juice – fresh lemon juice maybe used in place

of or in addition to vinegar in some preparation.

4. Eggyolk – as essential ingredient in mayonnaise and

other emulsifier dressings. For safety, pasteurized

eggs should be used.

5. Seasoning and flavorings – fresh herbs are

preferable to dried herbs. Other flavorings include

mustard, ketchup, Worcestershire sauce and

various kinds of cheeses.

Types of Salad Dressings

1. Oil and Vinegar dressings – Basic vinaigrette is a

simple mixture of oil, vinegar and seasonings which is an


example of temporary emulsions. The ratio of oil to

vinegar is 3 parts oil to 1 part vinegar. However, it can be

changed to taste. Less oil makes the dressing more tart,

while more oil makes it taste milder and oilier.

2. Emulsified Dressings – Mayonnaise is an emulsified dressing.

It is more often serves as the base for wide variety of other

dressings. Mayonnaise based dressings are generally thick

and creamy.

3. Other Dressings – cooked salad dressing is

similar with appearance to mayonnaise, but it has a

tarter flavor, while mayonnaise is richer and milder.

Cooked dressing is made with little or no oil and with a

starch thickener.

There are variety of dressings based on neither mayonnaise nor oil and vinegar. They include dressings
on sour cream and on fruit juice and yogurt and low calorie dressings. The important thing is that these
dressings should have well balanced flavor with a pleasant tartness and should harmonize and
complement the salad which they are served.

LM-Cookery Grade 9

103

Emulsions in Salad Dressings

The uniform mixture of two unmixable liquids, oil and vinegar is called emulsion.

1. Temporary Emulsions – a simple oil and vinegar dressing

is called temporary emulsion because the two liquids always

separate after being shaken. The harder the mixture is beaten or

shaken, the longer it takes for it to separate.

2. Permanent Emulsions – mayonnaise is also a mixture of oil and

vinegar, but the two liquids do not separate because it contains


egg yolk which is a strong emulsifier. The egg yolk forms a layer

around each of the tiny droplets and holds them in suspension.

All emulsions form more easily at room temperature.

Other stabilizers are used in some preparations. Cooked dressing uses starch in addition to eggs.
Commercially made dressings may use such emulsifiers as gums, starches and gelatin.

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