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Easy Caesar Dressing (No-Egg Recipe) + Video

September 21, 2017

This easy Caesar dressing is easy to make in your blender or food processor and requires no eggs, so it lasts a long time. And it’s SO tasty! Scroll down for video.
This easy caesar dressing is easy to make in your blender or food processor and requires no eggs, so it lasts a long time. And it's SO tasty! | recipe from Chattavore.com

Essentially, Caesar salad came into my life when Philip Haymaker came into my life.  Well, when he came into my life full-time, anyway (since we knew each other for four years before we started dating).

I remember what he ordered on our first date: angel hair pasta with tomato-basil sauce and a Caesar salad.  That was on a Tuesday night.  We went out again on Friday…I don’t remember what entrée he ordered, but I remember this: he ordered a Caesar salad. And almost ever restaurant salad that he has ordered in the last fourteen and a half (!) years has been the same.

I don’t mean to imply that I had never encountered (or eaten) a Caesar salad before that first date.  I recall a Caesar salad at a Red Lobster in California when I was visiting my aunt the summer before eighth grade.  I also remember telling my mom about it and her saying, “Do you like Caesar salad?” in a shocked sort of way.  It’s just that my family didn’t eat too many Caesar salads back then….most of our salads were of the iceberg variety, with tomatoes and maybe some green peppers or avocado mixed in, usually with a creamy ranch or blue cheese dressing.  It’s actually funny to think about that now because my mom and my sister are pretty much completely enamored with Caesar salad these days and the four of us threaten each other with steak knives to see who’s going to get the last of the salad (not really but almost).

Caesar dressing is an enigma of sorts and there are all types of stories about what Caesar salad is supposed to be.  You know what I say? Caesar salad is supposed to be good.  I don’t think when Caesar Cardini threw together the first Caesar salad in his Tijuana hotel kitchen that he swore then and there under his breath to seek revenge on anyone that dared to change the recipe.

So here’s how it goes…you can put eggs in….or leave them out.  You can use anchovies, or maybe you prefer paste (I do) or maybe you’d rather just use Worcestershire sauce (which contains anchovies)?  Okay.  Maybe you like your cheese shredded, or maybe you like it grated.  Whatevs.  Do you like to rub the bowl with garlic or do you like to crush the garlic into your dressing?  Have it your way.  Would you rather make a pourable dressing or would you rather assemble the salad in the bowl then make the dressing right there on the lettuce (as I did in this post)?  The world is your oyster.

I’ve been doing it that way for a while: lettuce in the bowl, then egg yolks, garlic, cheese, lemon juice/vinegar, olive oil, and cheese plus croutons.  I like it that way….but here’s what I don’t like: one-day salad. Make that one-hour salad.  We all know that once you dress lettuce it’s done for….so I was happy when my aunt gave me her easy Caesar dressing recipe (which I used to have before the blog but lost).  It doesn’t contain eggs so it’s got a relatively long shelf-life (I’ve kept it for up to four days in my fridge) and it emulsifies beautifully if you blend it just fast enough, and you just use what you need.

As you can see, this is not a very “traditional” salad I’ve photographed for you here….I didn’t have bread to make croutons so I crushed up some Stacy’s Simply Naked pita chips.  They were perfect.  And while I prefer shredded cheese on my salads because it coats the leaves oh so perfectly, cheese (Grana Padano in this case but usually Parmigiano Reggiano) shaved with a vegetable peeler makes a nicer visual impact for photos.  My easy Caesar dressing pairs perfectly with this fresh salad.

This easy Caesar dressing is quick enough that you can keep it in the fridge all the time. Which you’ll want to do.
This easy caesar dressing is easy to make in your blender or food processor and requires no eggs, so it lasts a long time. And it's SO tasty! | recipe from Chattavore.com

Mary

Yield: 12 servings

2 tablespoons

45

Easy Caesar Dressing

10 minPrep Time:

10 minTotal Time:

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Ingredients

  • 1 tablespoon anchovy paste (or 3-4 flat or rolled anchovy fillets)
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 1 teaspoon dijon mustard
  • 1/3 cup red wine vinegar
  • juice of 1/2 lemon
  • 2/3 cups neutral-flavored oil (I use grapeseed, but canola, safflower, or vegetable oil will work as well)
  • salt and pepper (to taste)

Instructions

  1. Press the garlic through a garlic press or grate on a Microplane or fine grater. Place in a food processor or blender or a container you can fit your immersion blender into (like my homemade mayonnaise, a pint-sized Mason jar works well here) along with all of the other ingredients except the oil and vinegar.
  2. Mix well, carefully breaking up/mashing the anchovy fillets if you are using them.
  3. Add the oil and vinegar and blend on the highest speed that your machine allows until completely smooth and emulsified. Use a leaf of the lettuce you will be using to make your salad to taste; adjust seasonings. Store in the refrigerator.
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https://chattavore.com/easy-caesar-dressing/

Shared on Meal Plan Monday on Southern Plate.
This easy caesar dressing is easy to make in your blender or food processor and requires no eggs, so it lasts a long time. And it's SO tasty! | recipe from Chattavore.com

Filed Under: By Course, Easy Recipes, From Scratch, How to Cook From Scratch, How to Use Tools & Techniques, How-To, Recipe Videos, Recipes, Salad, Salads and Cold Dishes, Sauces & Dressings, Videos Tagged With: dressings, salad, side dishes By Mary // Chattavore 5 Comments

Classic Macaroni Salad + Video

June 16, 2017

This classic macaroni salad is another treasure from my grandmother's collection. It's easy and just a little different from the norm.

This classic macaroni salad is another treasure from my grandmother’s collection. It’s easy and just a little different from the norm.

This classic macaroni salad is another treasure from my grandmother's collection. It's easy and just a little different from the norm.

I’ve written a lot over the last three years about my grandparents and their influence on me-just overall as well as on my cooking. My grandmother had many signature dishes (like this strawberry pie and this breakfast casserole) and I grew up watching her cook dinner nearly every night (we ate at their house more nights than not because my mom didn’t get home from work until dinnertime).

The strange thing is that there are lots of things that other people mention that my grandmother was known for of which I have no recollection, like tomatoes and artichokes, chicken stuffed with shrimp (now that’s a decadent dish!), and this classic macaroni salad. I guess they’re just things that I didn’t really eat as a kid, but it still seems strange to me that I don’t remember them.
This classic macaroni salad is another treasure from my grandmother's collection. It's easy and just a little different from the norm.
My grandmother passed away when I was fourteen and when my grandfather passed away when I was twenty-one I got my grandmother’s recipe books and a recipe card file that belonged to my great-grandmother. I remember going through them and not recognizing too many of the recipes…but over the years people have mentioned recipes to me and asked if I had a copy of them. I had my grandmother’s bright orange recipe book on my shelf but never could seem to find the recipes that people asked about.

The strangest thing happened in May. Philip had to clean out the basement closet (because we had too have a termite treatment-ick!) and pulled out a box of “stuff” that had been there since we moved in 2002. I figured it was a bunch of junk that we didn’t want anymore (and some of it was) but I found some dishes of my grandparents’….and the recipe book. And the card file. Recipes people had been asking about? There they were. Treasure. I nearly cried. But instead…I’m going to share those recipes with you. This classic macaroni salad is up first.
This classic macaroni salad is another treasure from my grandmother's collection. It's easy and just a little different from the norm.
For many years I wouldn’t touch pasta salad with a ten-foot pole. Languishing on salad bars it always looked heavy and a little greasy and made me cringe. When a friend brought a tortellini and balsamic pasta salad to a work potluck I changed my perspective on pasta salads but still had trouble finding a recipe that I loved to make. This is it. I’ve scaled the recipe down from my grandmother’s (sixteen servings!!!) and pickled the onions. The dill pickles and the cheddar cheese add a little flair to the salad, and the sour cream, mayo, and mashed egg yolk dressing is just a little unexpected.

Add this classic macaroni salad to your repertoire. Trust me. My grandmother knew what she was doing.

Shared on The Weekend Potluck on Served Up With Love.

This classic macaroni salad is another treasure from my grandmother's collection. It's easy and just a little different from the norm.

Mary

Yield: 6 servings

Macaroni Salad

20 minPrep Time:

10 minCook Time:

30 minTotal Time:

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Ingredients

  • ¼ cup white wine vinegar
  • ½ small onion, finely diced
  • 5 ounces small shell or elbow pasta
  • 2 hard-boiled eggs
  • ½ teaspoon dry mustard
  • 1/3 cup cup mayonnaise
  • 1/2 cup sour cream
  • ½ teaspoon garlic salt
  • ½ teaspoon seasoned salt
  • 1 Kosher pickle or 4 gherkin dills, diced
  • 4 ounces cheddar cheese, diced
  • 1 stalk celery, cleaned and diced
  • ½ bell pepper (any color), diced

Instructions

  1. Place the onion in a bowl and cover with the vinegar. Refrigerate until you are ready to mix the pasta salad-at least 30 minutes.
  2. Cook the pasta according to package directions. Drain and rinse with cold water. Set aside until cool.
  3. Remove the yolks from the hard-boiled eggs (save the whites for another use, or have a snack). Mash the yolks. Combine the mashed yolks, mayonnaise, sour cream, dry mustard, and seasoned salt.
  4. Place the cooled pasta into a large bowl and add the pickles, cheese, celery, and bell pepper. Drain the onion and add to the bowl. Pour the dressing over and mix to combine. Adjust seasonings. Chill until ready to serve.
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https://chattavore.com/classic-macaroni-salad/

This classic macaroni salad is another treasure from my grandmother's collection. It's easy and just a little different from the norm.

Filed Under: By Course, By Main Ingredients, Easy Recipes, Pasta, Recipe Videos, Recipes, Salad, Salads and Cold Dishes, Sides, Videos Tagged With: pasta, side dishes, Southern, vegetarian By Mary // Chattavore 12 Comments

Cobb Salad Meal Prep

March 31, 2017

This Cobb salad meal prep tutorial will help you prep ingredients for a week's worth of delicious salads in an hour or less, including homemade dressing! | recipe from Chattavore.com

This Cobb salad meal prep tutorial will help you prep ingredients for a week’s worth of delicious salads in an hour or less, including homemade dressing!

What’s your lunch situation? Mine is pretty abysmal, I have to admit. And that’s really sad, because you guys, I’m a food blogger. Everything I eat is supposed to be delicious, gourmet, and totally Instagrammable, right? This is not the case.

What’s funny is that when I was a teacher, I used to think that people who worked outside of schools pretty much had it made. I mean, I always ate lunch with my kids (not required, but preschool teachers know this is best practice) so lunch usually meant scarfing whatever I was eating while simultaneously opening yogurt pouches and milk cartons, refereeing arguments, and making sure everyone stayed in their seat. Oh, wait, don’t forget the time I was told I was a terrible human being for not sharing my cheese dip with a kid from another class because he “liked cheese dip too” and “adults are supposed to share their food with kids”. Never mind that he had a full lunch in front of him and I had two tablespoons of cheese dip. Anyway…
This Cobb salad meal prep tutorial will help you prep ingredients for a week's worth of delicious salads in an hour or less, including homemade dressing! | recipe from Chattavore.com
Fast forward to today. There are many great things about my job, but the lunch arrangement is not one of them. I never thought that eating at a table would feel like a treat. Seriously. There are weeks that it doesn’t happen at all. I frequently eat in my car…it’s been a while since I’ve had to eat while driving, but there was definitely a period of time when everything had to be able to be consumed with one hand and no utensils. I have an office, but it is very rare that I’m there at lunch time (or at all). I’ve started forcing myself to frequently pack a lunch that requires utensils so I am forced to at least eat my lunch while not driving. Microwave access is definitely an issue, so it’s either got to be cold or able to go into a Thermos unless I know that I’ll be able to use a microwave, which is rare.
This Cobb salad meal prep tutorial will help you prep ingredients for a week's worth of delicious salads in an hour or less, including homemade dressing! | recipe from Chattavore.com
Plus, I’m terrible at packing my lunch. I do best when I plan ahead (big surprise there). I am not a person who can eat a PB&J every single day, but if I plan something really good I can eat it for a week without feeling like I’m gonna lose my mind. Turkey & cheese croissants, soup in a Thermos, and a really good salad are some of my faves. I’ve decided to really make an effort to spend the time prepping everything on Sundays so I don’t have to stress over it on weeknights.
This Cobb salad meal prep tutorial will help you prep ingredients for a week's worth of delicious salads in an hour or less, including homemade dressing! | recipe from Chattavore.com
One thing…I don’t really like the whole “put everything in the containers on Sunday night and just grab them as you need them” idea, at least not for salads. There’s too much danger of things getting soggy or rotty and I’m not down with that. So, I prep everything ahead like a little mini salad bar and then assemble the salad the night before so I can pick out any unsavory bits.
This Cobb salad meal prep tutorial will help you prep ingredients for a week's worth of delicious salads in an hour or less, including homemade dressing! | recipe from Chattavore.com
This Cobb salad is super simple. It took me about an hour from start to finish, including making the dressing, roasting the chickpeas, boiling the eggs, and chopping the lettuce, cheese, and cucumbers. Cobb salad usually has chicken, but I really, really dislike chicken that’s been sitting in the fridge, so I subbed in the crispy roasted chickpeas. Also, Cobb salad is traditionally served with a vinaigrette, but I made my own ranch using the recipe from the BTC Old-Fashioned Grocery cookbook (affiliate link)(and here’s my own ranch dressing recipe). Everything gets its own container and I assemble it in my Systema salad container the night before. This salad will get me through the week, and I’ll start over again next Sunday!

Shared on Weekend Potluck on The Country Cook!

Recommended for this recipe:


This Cobb salad meal prep tutorial will help you prep ingredients for a week's worth of delicious salads in an hour or less, including homemade dressing! | recipe from Chattavore.com

Mary

Yield: 5 salads

Cobb Salad Meal Prep

30 minPrep Time:

30 minTotal Time:

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Ingredients

  • 2-3 hearts of romaine
  • 1 cucumber, seeded and diced
  • 1 package grape tomatoes
  • 2 avocados
  • 5 ounces cheddar cheese, cubed, or crumbled blue cheese
  • 5 strips bacon, cooked
  • 5 eggs, boiled
  • your choice of dressing
  • your choice of crunchy toppings - I used roasted chickpeas, sesame sticks, and roasted, salted pistachios

Instructions

  1. Chop the romaine into bite-sized pieces. Place in a salad spinner and fill with water then drain and spin, or place in a colander and rinse thoroughly then shake the colander. Spread the lettuce down the center of a strip of 4 or 5 paper towels then roll the lettuce up. Place the lettuce in a gallon-sized zipper bag and refrigerate.
  2. Store the cucumbers in a covered bowl. Store the cheese in a sandwich bag or a covered bowl. Store the bacon in whole strips in a sandwich bag and the eggs in an egg carton, unpeeled.
  3. To assemble the salad, place a few handfuls of lettuce (about 1 1/2 to 2 cups), a couple of spoonfuls of cucumber, 3 or 4 tomatoes, 1/4 avocado (I leave it in the peel then just scoop it out before I eat), and a diced egg in a covered bowl. In a separate container (or a separate section of a salad container), place a piece of bacon, chopped, an ounce (about 1/4 cup) of cheese, your choice of crunchy toppings, and a small container of dressing. Refrigerate until ready to serve or carry in a bag with ice packs.

Notes

You can add chopped chicken, turkey, or ham to this salad if you would like.

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https://chattavore.com/cobb-salad-meal-prep/

This post contains affiliate links. This means that if you click through and make a purchase, I will receive a small commission. This does not affect the cost to you. For more information, please see my disclosures. Thank you for supporting my blog!

Filed Under: By Course, How to Make-Ahead and Meal Prep, How-To, Lunch, Recipes, Salad Tagged With: lunch, main dishes, salad By Mary // Chattavore 1 Comment

Sesame Chicken Salad with Almonds

August 12, 2016

Sesame chicken salad has a sweet, creamy honey-sesame dressing, crunchy almonds, and sweet Mandarin oranges. It's a delicious way to do chicken salad! | recipe from Chattavore.com

Sesame chicken salad has a sweet, creamy honey-sesame dressing, crunchy almonds, and sweet Mandarin oranges. It’s a delicious way to do chicken salad!
Sesame chicken salad has a sweet, creamy honey-sesame dressing, crunchy almonds, and sweet Mandarin oranges. It's a delicious way to do chicken salad! | recipe from Chattavore.com
Last year I went through a Mason Jar salad kick here on Chattavore. One of my favorites was (and still is) the Asian chicken salad. It was a nod to one of my favorite menu items at Applebee’s, the Oriental chicken wrap. They don’t have that on the menu anymore, but they do still have the Oriental chicken salad, which has all the same flavors.
Sesame chicken salad has a sweet, creamy honey-sesame dressing, crunchy almonds, and sweet Mandarin oranges. It's a delicious way to do chicken salad! | recipe from Chattavore.com
Anyway, that dressing…that dressing is just so good. I started thinking about how delicious it would be to make chicken salad with it. Not eat it with a fork chicken salad with lettuce, but chicken salad you could eat on crackers or bread or in a wrap (lettuce or tortilla). My ideal sesame chicken salad would be sweet and crunchy, with small chunks of chicken. Shredded chicken would be good too, but the first time I made this, I shredded my chicken by pulsing it in the food processor very briefly and it was a little too fine.
Sesame chicken salad has a sweet, creamy honey-sesame dressing, crunchy almonds, and sweet Mandarin oranges. It's a delicious way to do chicken salad! | recipe from Chattavore.com
I used my dry-brined chicken thighs, because they are basically my go-to for any recipe that needs precooked chicken. The dressing comes together quickly and a then few runs with a sharp knife through some almonds, green onions, and drained Mandarin oranges is all it takes. I used smoked almonds because that’s what I had and I thought they’d work perfectly. I was right.
Sesame chicken salad has a sweet, creamy honey-sesame dressing, crunchy almonds, and sweet Mandarin oranges. It's a delicious way to do chicken salad! | recipe from Chattavore.com
This sesame chicken salad took me less than ten minutes to make (besides cooking the chicken). I divided it up into Easy Lunchboxes (<–affiliate link) with fruit and crackers and stacked them in the fridge and Philip and I had lunch for several days. It was absolutely delicious and a nice way to start off the school year – no sad lunches here!

This sesame chicken salad with almonds and Mandarin oranges is great for lunch or an easy dinner!

This post contains affiliate links. This means that if you click the link and make a purchase, I will receive a small commission. This does not affect the cost to you. For more information, please see my disclosures. Thank you for supporting my blog!

Shared on the Meal Plan Monday Link-up on Southern Plate and the Weekend Potluck link-up on The Country Cook.
Sesame chicken salad has a sweet, creamy honey-sesame dressing, crunchy almonds, and sweet Mandarin oranges. It's a delicious way to do chicken salad! | recipe from Chattavore.com

Mary

Yield: 4-6 servings

Sesame Chicken Salad with Almonds

10 minPrep Time:

10 minTotal Time:

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Ingredients

  • 1 pound chicken thighs or breasts, cooked and cubed or shredded (I use this recipe )
  • 1 recipe creamy honey-sesame dressing (see below)
  • 1/2 cup toasted almonds, chopped (I used smoked almonds)
  • 1/2 cup Mandarin oranges, well drained and chopped
  • 2 green onions, thinly sliced
  • For the Dressing
  • 3 tablespoons honey
  • 2 teaspoons rice vinegar
  • 1/4 cup mayonnaise
  • 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
  • 1 teaspoon sesame oil

Instructions

  1. Whisk all of the dressing ingredients together in a large bowl. Add the remaining ingredients to the dressing. Toss to combine and coat all ingredients with the dressing. Cover and refrigerate until ready to serve.

Notes

Prep/Cook time does not include time to cook the chicken.

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https://chattavore.com/sesame-chicken-salad-almonds/

Sesame chicken salad has a sweet, creamy honey-sesame dressing, crunchy almonds, and sweet Mandarin oranges. It's a delicious way to do chicken salad! | recipe from Chattavore.com

Filed Under: By Course, By Main Ingredients, Chicken & Turkey, Easy Recipes, Lunch, Main Dishes, Recipes, Salad, Salads and Cold Dishes Tagged With: chicken, lunch, main dishes By Mary // Chattavore Leave a Comment

Creamy Honey Lime Dressing with Ginger

August 1, 2016

This honey lime dressing is sweet and creamy with a spicy hit of ginger (completely optional!). It's perfect for your summer (or winter) salads! | recipe from Chattavore.com

This honey lime dressing is sweet and creamy with a spicy hit of ginger (completely optional!). It’s perfect for your summer (or winter) salads!
This honey lime dressing is sweet and creamy with a spicy hit of ginger (completely optional!). It's perfect for your summer (or winter) salads! | recipe from Chattavore.com
Writing a food blog is an interesting dichotomy. My life is filled with food – cookbooks, cooking magazines, blogs, lists of recipes to make, food photos, and all the rich food that you could ever hope to try. Problem is that I think about food so much that a lot of times when it comes time to make the food I can’t bring myself to. We end up eating way too much indulgent food because that’s what we have around, and my mindful eating is shot (eating cuz you ate is strong around here).
This honey lime dressing is sweet and creamy with a spicy hit of ginger (completely optional!). It's perfect for your summer (or winter) salads! | recipe from Chattavore.com
One of my constant goals is to fit more fruits and vegetables into our diet. As much as I would love to be one of those organized ladies who keeps perfectly chopped up salad greens (I even have a tutorial about that), fruits, and other tasty veggies stored flawlessly in my fridge, ready to be grabbed at a moment’s notice, the reality is quite the opposite. I love fruits and vegetables – salad especially – but even when I take the time to pre-prep my salad greens I usually end up forgetting about them. Getting time to prep them is a rare occurrence; I work two jobs (ahem, behavior analyst and blogger) in addition to trying to enjoy my family, so I try to carve out time that I’m not busy each week. Heck, after making bread by hand for a good long while then buying bakery loaves for the past year, I caved this week and bought a bread maker. I am not too proud to use a machine.
This honey lime dressing is sweet and creamy with a spicy hit of ginger (completely optional!). It's perfect for your summer (or winter) salads! | recipe from Chattavore.com
One of the things that helps me remember to eat my greens is having some sort of fabulous dressing in the fridge. Homemade ranch and green goddess are two of my go-tos, but during the summer I want something to go with fruity salads. To me, spinach, arugula, and tender mixed greens pair perfectly with berries and peaches, and the whole combination needs a sweet and light dressing to complement it. Enter this creamy honey lime dressing. I didn’t want my honey lime dressing to be a vinaigrette; as much as I love vinaigrettes, sometimes I think the acid from the vinegar is a little much, and I wanted a creamy, not oil-based, dressing.
This honey lime dressing is sweet and creamy with a spicy hit of ginger (completely optional!). It's perfect for your summer (or winter) salads! | recipe from Chattavore.com
Turns out that Greek yogurt is a perfect base for a creamy honey lime dressing. I whisked together Greek yogurt, honey, lime zest and juice, a splash of apple cider vinegar, and a hit of fresh ginger to make this sweet, tangy, and slightly spicy dressing. It is the perfect foil for the earthy flavor of the spinach in this salad (and would perfectly complement a plate of bitter, spicy arugula) and pairs deliciously with the sweet summer fruit. If you don’t want the spice, you could leave out the ginger, but honestly, it’s very understated (Philip would have liked more and I thought it was just perfect).

Try this creamy honey lime dressing on your fresh summery salads!

This honey lime dressing is sweet and creamy with a spicy hit of ginger (completely optional!). It's perfect for your summer (or winter) salads! | recipe from Chattavore.com

Mary

Yield: 1 1/4 cups dressing

Creamy Honey Lime Dressing with Ginger

5 minPrep Time:

5 minTotal Time:

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Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup plain Greek yogurt (I used Chobani whole milk Greek yogurt)
  • 1/2 cup honey
  • zest and juice of 1 lime (be sure to zest it before juicing it!)
  • 1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar
  • 1 tablespoon grated fresh ginger (about a 2-inch piece, peeled) (optional)

Instructions

  1. Combine all ingredients in a blender and blend until well-combined, or whisk together in a small bowl or jar. Store in a lidded bowl or jar in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks.
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https://chattavore.com/creamy-honey-lime-dressing-with-ginger/

This honey lime dressing is sweet and creamy with a spicy hit of ginger (completely optional!). It's perfect for your summer (or winter) salads! | recipe from Chattavore.com

Filed Under: By Course, By Main Ingredients, Easy Recipes, Recipes, Salad, Salads and Cold Dishes, Sauces & Dressings, Vegetables or Vegetarian Tagged With: dressings, salad By Mary // Chattavore Leave a Comment

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About Chattavore

Hi, I'm Mary! Welcome to Chattavore, a destination for people who want to feed themselves and their families well every day! Life can be crazy, which means that getting dinner on the table can be a challenge (more often than not!) and my mission is to take all your favorite recipes and figure out how to serve them on a Tuesday.

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