logo
3 Salad Dressings You Should Memorize

3 Salad Dressings You Should Memorize

These recipes from Samin Nosrat, the 'Salt Fat Acid Heat' author, will have you reaching for your greens all summer long. Keep homemade dressings on hand in your fridge, and all kinds of big salads become in reach. Rachel Vanni for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Spencer Richards. Published June 27, 2025 Updated June 27, 2025
This article is part of Cooking 101, our series on kitchen fundamentals. Every episode covers a different technique, tool or ingredient, and each host shares the tips and recipes that they believe will set you up for success, no matter where you are in your cooking journey. Watch all the episodes on YouTube, and view all the recipes on New York Times Cooking.
While I'll always have warm feelings for a few store-bought salad dressings (I'm looking at you, Hidden Valley ranch seasoning), the thought of coating fresh lettuce with bottled ingredients of indeterminate age and provenance makes my heart hurt.
After you've taken the time to combine fresh vegetables, grains and other ingredients into something that sings, you want to add to the harmony, not overwhelm it. In that way, I like to think of salad dressings as the Darlene Love of the kitchen. Like Ms. Love, perhaps the most brilliant backup singer of all time, a good dressing enhances without overshadowing it. And there's no better way to ensure that than making your own.
As a young restaurant cook, I was taught that each salad must have its own bespoke dressing. Preparing one might involve blending an herb oil for mayonnaise base or seeding, juicing, mashing, roasting or zesting various fruits. Then came layering in acids and oils until the dressing was perfectly balanced. By The New York Times Cooking
That kind of effort made sense in a high-end restaurant, but, at home, undertaking a multistep recipe for a single-use dressing felt sort of ridiculous. As a result, I'd just about stopped making salad at home until a few years ago, when I began working on my second cookbook. While creating the dressing recipes, I'd often end up with multiple jars, and, loathe to waste them, I found myself reaching for them night after night. Eventually, I came to the now-obvious-seeming conclusion that if I have a jar of homemade salad dressing (or three!) ready to go in the fridge, I'm much more likely to eat a salad. The recipes here aren't just simple, they take any kind of greens you have on hand to the next level.
This delicate sherry-shallot vinaigrette, from Rita Sodi and Jody Williams of the West Village trattoria, Via Carota, is such a stalwart that I now just call it my 'House Dressing.' Use it on any salad of tender greens, grain and bean salads, or a niçoise salad. Via Carota, a West Village restaurant, inspired this sherry-shallot vinaigrette. Rachel Vanni for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Spencer Richards.
The creamy lemon-miso dressing here, inspired by a dressing at Kismet Rotisserie in Los Angeles, is somehow both light and rich. Add the optional poppy seeds for that classic lemon-poppy seed flavor, or leave them out for a much more versatile dressing, great for green salad, grain salad, roasted vegetables, or a composed summer salad of tomatoes, cucumbers and avocado chunks. This miso-lemon dressing is great on roasted vegetables. Rachel Vanni for The New York Times
And then there's a sesame-ginger dressing, which I developed with visions of cabbage slaw and chicken salad floating through my head. The ginger's fire, chile's heat and acid's tang go right to the edge without going over. Use this creamy dressing to dress a salad of crunchy romaine and cabbage, just-boiled green beans, or rice or noodle bowls. It also makes a wonderful condiment for chicken, fish and tofu. Dress a crunchy salad of romaine and cabbage with a creamy sesame-ginger dressing. Rachel Vanni for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Spencer Richards.
While none of these are hard to make, a hand-held immersion blender makes the light work of the dressings, and a sharp knife will make dicing shallots for the vinaigrette immeasurably easier. I like to make them in wide-mouthed jars, then cap and store leftovers in the fridge for up to a week.
Of course, your vinaigrette will congeal in the fridge. Your dressing may separate. And any dressing's sharpness is sure to flatten. But you can always bring it back to life with a few tweaks.
If your dressing congeals, set the jar in a warm spot to return it to its liquid state. For a separated vinaigrette, ensure the jar is tightly capped and give it a good shake to reunite the oil and vinegar. (If it's creamy, first, try shaking the jar. If that doesn't encourage it, let the dressing come to room temperature, add a small chip of ice, give the mixture a quick whiz with an immersion blender.) And for a dressing losing its luster, taste and add a bit more salt, acid, fresh citrus zest or a touch of sweetener.
Take good care of your dressing, and it'll always be there for you, ready to raise up anything it coats.
Follow New York Times Cooking on Instagram , Facebook , YouTube , TikTok and Pinterest . Get regular updates from New York Times Cooking, with recipe suggestions, cooking tips and shopping advice .

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Internet blasts man accused of stealing roommate's groceries: 'What a sense of entitlement'
Internet blasts man accused of stealing roommate's groceries: 'What a sense of entitlement'

Fox News

time3 hours ago

  • Fox News

Internet blasts man accused of stealing roommate's groceries: 'What a sense of entitlement'

Social media users jumped to defend a man whose roommate accused him of being "petty" and "killing the vibe" because the man moved his groceries to a personal mini fridge to prevent his items from being taken. "I rent a flat with two other guys," the slighted roommate posted on Reddit. "We all agreed we'd buy our own groceries and label stuff," wrote the man, who said he was 31 years old. "One of them keeps 'accidentally' using my stuff," he added. Even though his fellow tenant promised to replace the items he used, including milk, eggs and coffee, he rarely ever did, the frustrated apartment mate griped. "I stopped saying anything and just started moving my stuff into my room's mini fridge," the man said. That prompted the roommate to call him out. "Now he's calling me petty and says I'm 'killing the vibe,'" the original poster wrote. "I'm not his parent." The man turned to social media users to help him determine if he was in the wrong for being "territorial" about his food in the shared living space. "We are roommates, not life partners." He received overwhelming support — with some 1,300 positive "upvote" clicks on the post. "If he doesn't replace what he uses, then has a hissy [fit] about you no longer making those items available to him, then he knows he is taking advantage of it and is just mad you set the boundary," one commenter said. "What a sense of entitlement that he actually complains when he can no longer take your things," another Redditor said. Some people recommended hypothetical responses that the 31-year-old could give his mooching roommate. "I'd be asking what his contribution to 'the vibe' was," a social media user wrote. Another offered, "You mean the vibe of you stealing my groceries? Yeah, I'm killing that vibe for sure." "We are roommates, not life partners," yet another said. Some suggested the original poster show the apartment mate what "petty" really looks like. "Start 'accidentally' wearing his clothes," one person commented. "Being petty would be putting your milk back in the fridge once it's gone off, or switching sugar for salt," another said. "I might be that petty." Many Reddit users shared personal experiences with similar roommate disputes, many of which also involved snack-snatchers grabbing their groceries. "It can only work when nobody in the house is a thieving a--hole, and everyone agrees on whatever [the] parameters [are]," one person advised. Of the more than 150 responses, there was only one vote against the original poster. "Grow a spine and tell him off," the response read. But Lisa Mirza Grotts, an etiquette expert in San Francisco, California, disagreed with that advice. "A closed mouth avoids open regret," Grotts told Fox News Digital. "He used non-verbal communication to correct the wrong." Taking without asking or without compensating is the "ultimate roommate faux pas," she added. "Shared spaces demand mutual respect, especially when there's an agreement in place," Grotts continued. "It may not be a legal contract, but it's a social one." Grotts offered a golden rule for roommates: "If you wouldn't borrow it from a neighbor without asking, don't borrow it from a roommate." Fox News Digital reached out to the original poster on Reddit for comment.

Millie Bobby Brown Shows Off Her Tan Lines in an Itty Bitty String Bikini
Millie Bobby Brown Shows Off Her Tan Lines in an Itty Bitty String Bikini

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Millie Bobby Brown Shows Off Her Tan Lines in an Itty Bitty String Bikini

Millie Bobby Brown paired her newly-dyed brunette hair with the tiniest string bikini on Friday, June 27. The Stranger Things star showed off her visible tan lines in the barely-there cottagecore style. She also gave fans a glimpse of her behind-the-scenes filming of Enola Holmes Bobby Brown made a stylish case for cottagecore swimwear as she enjoyed a beach day on Friday, June 27. In addition to giving fans a glimpse at her newly-dyed brunette hair—a major departure from the bleach-blonde style she's been sporting in recent months—the Stranger Things actress stripped down to the tiniest string bikini in a nostalgic print. Brown served up vacation style inspo in the golden hour bikini shoot, which showed her modeling a barely-there two-piece paisley swimsuit by the water. Posing with her hands on her forehead, the sunkissed star ensured her bikini body and visible tan lines were front and center in a blue floral patterned suit with white lace trimming her triangle bikini cups and the low-cut waistband of her tiny string bikini bottoms. In addition to embroidered crochet detailing on her barely-there bikini top, Brown's swimsuit also featured green beading in the front paired with a large vintage-inspired bronze pendant dangling down her toned midriff. The Electric State actress added some extra shine for her beachside photoshoot with a silver pearl choker, gold hoop earrings, and a pair of tortoiseshell aviator sunglasses. Brown kept her beauty simple, showing off a bronzed complexion, flushed cheeks, and a rosy pout. Fresh off her recent return to her natural brown hair, the British star pulled her dark locks back into a sleek wet bun. It was a contrasting style to a Bridgerton-coded updo she shared in a separate Instagram post on Friday. Brown paired a green sleeveless crop top covered in tiny purple flowers with a matching low-rise skirt that put her stomach on full display in a carousel, which she mysteriously captioned, 'Case closed.' Alongside photos that appeared to be from the filming of her upcoming Netflix film Enola Holmes 3, Brown showed off a middle-parted curly bun with two braids creating a headband along her hairline. Read the original article on InStyle

Meet the Lululemon bag that's flying off shelves — and it's under $40!
Meet the Lululemon bag that's flying off shelves — and it's under $40!

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Meet the Lululemon bag that's flying off shelves — and it's under $40!

When it comes to summer accessories, less is definitely more, and nothing beats a bag that holds your essentials but keeps your hands free. Whether you're off to a music festival, dog park, run club or anywhere in between, a belt bag gives you freedom. This small-but-mighty one from Lululemon ticks all the boxes — it's under $40 and just dropped in a new summer-ready pink colour. Meet the Everywhere Belt Bag Mini — a smaller spin on the cult-favourite original Everywhere Belt Bag. This mini version is just as functional, compact, and chic. It packs a serious style punch and is continuously racking up hundreds of glowing reviews, so it's no wonder you're likely seeing it everywhere. Shop in four colours: Pink Organza (pictured), Army Green, White and Black. Sleek in style but made for action, this bag is made with water-repellent fabric and features an adjustable strap that can be worn crossbody or around the waist. Giving a low-maintenance yet high-style vibe, this mini size is perfect for days when you're majorly on the go and only want to carry the essentials. Think keys, wallet, phone and so on. If that's not enough, it also features roomy interior pockets to keep your everyday essentials organized, and comes in a range of versatile colours that make outfit-matching effortless. Designed without flashy hardware, it's finished with a sporty buckle that feels both secure and easy to adjust. 👜 100+ reviews ⭐ 4.7/5 stars 🏅 "It fits everything I need!" With a near-perfect rating, it's clear to see that this mini belt bag is a fan favourite. One happy shopper in particular notes, "It's so convenient for summer — it goes with me everywhere!" $38 at Lululemon One shopper even called it their dog-walking must-have, sharing: 'It fits everything I need — my phone, treats and a few extras with no problem at all.' While most shoppers are sharing rave reviews, a few feel the bag is too small for what they need: 'It's cute and functional, but a bit smaller than I expected. I wish it had just a little more space." It's important to note that this bag really lives up to its mini name and truly fits just the essentials. If you're looking to carry more, the Everywhere Belt Bag Mini may not be for you. Whether you're hitting up a farmer's market, outdoor concert, or just walking the dog around the block, Lululemon's Everywhere Belt Bag Mini has you covered and enjoying hands-free life. Priced under $40, it's a smart buy and with its soaring popularity, it may not stay in stock for long! Another viral find to scoop up before it's out of stock is this tote. Besides its high-end designer look, this carry-all is super functional and made to last. If you're in search of a roomier bag, look no further. This crossbody fits a whopping 2L, so there's no need to leave any essentials behind. Available in a wide range of colours, including trending leopard print, it's an easy yes. Whether you're post-pilates or need a comfy tee, this crop is chic, lightweight and versatile. Available in a range of colourways, it easily pairs with everything from high-rise leggings to relaxed denim. On the hunt for a larger carry-all? This bag makes toting groceries, your laptop and everything in between a breeze and it looks good doing it. Available in a range of fun and fresh colour options, it's an easy yes from us. Whether you're completing the look with the coordinating skirt or styling it with relaxed trousers for an off-duty vibe, this piece adds a soft, elegant touch to any outfit. No barre class required! Labubu who? This adorable bag charm is as functional as it is cute. Perfect for keeping your keys, lip gloss or hand sanitizer within easy reach, it's the kind of accessory you'll wonder how you ever lived without. It may be hard to believe with Canada's weather this week, but sometimes summer can be a bit chilly. Super soft and available in 10 colourways, its fleecy feel and cozy fit are bound to win you over. Wear your pride loud and proud when you sport this crossbody. It has many pockets to keep everything organized and secure. This cute-as-a-button crochet bucket hat is as sweet as it is stylish. Made by hand, each hat is unique and the lightweight cotton blend keeps things breathable on warm days. This isn't your average jumpsuit. Made from lightweight, water-repellent material, this sleek one-piece is designed to feel effortlessly cool and ultra-functional, no matter what's on the agenda.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store