This recipe was one of her favorites from way way back (early 1970's?). She found it recently after going through a collection of old papers. She couldn't remember where it came from but it was printed on an old newspaper with references to addresses in Ontario, Canada. While she was wildly enthusiastic about making this recipe for me, I remembered some of the dishes for which she achieved her previous dubious fame (I believe a type of tomato-y jello was involved) and was somewhat less enthusiastic. It was fairly complicated involving a number of steps and my wife claimed that when she first made this dish, it sorely tested her culinary skills but this time she seemed well within her comfort zone. Despite my initial hesitancy, I was quite please with how well it turned out. Unlike other ribbon salads which use flavored and artificially colored gelatin and tend to be sweet, this one is savory and can definitely play a legitimate role in any meal. Here we just served it alone (picture above). Bottom layer looks dark but top and bottom layers are the same savory tomato flavor separated by a creamy cottage cheese based center layer. (below).
This was a weekend light lunch and I served it with my salmon salad and baguette and a wedge of tomato seasoned with salt and olive oil.
Here you can see both top and bottom layers are the same with a nice white smooth cottage cheese layer.
Ingredients:
Red layer
2 envelopes unflavored gelatin
3 1/2 cup tomato juice
2 tsp sugar
1 tsp salt1 tsp onion juice (we used grated onion).
1/2 tsp Worcestershire sauce
2 tbs vinegar (we used rice vinegar).
White layer
1 envelope of unflavored gelatin
1/4 cup cold water
1 1/2 cups cottage cheese, mashed (We used small curd and pureed it with other ingredients in a blender).
1/2 cup mayonnaise
1/4 cup finely diced celery
2 tbs finely chopped onion
1/2 tsp salt
1/8 tsp pepper
1 tsp lemon juice
Directions:
To make red layer soak gelatin in 1/2 cup tomato juice 5 minutes. Combine remaining tomato juice with rest of ingredients and heat to boiling. Add gelatin and stir until dissolved. Pour half of mixture in 9 X 5 pan. Chill until set ( #1). Leave remaining half at room temperature.
To make white layer. Soak gelatin in cold water 5 minutes then melt over hot water (we used a double boiler). Combine remaining ingredients puree in the blender. Add gelatin and chill until slightly thickened (#2). Pour over set tomato layer (#3). Chill until set (#4). Add remaining tomato mixture (#5) and chill until firm (#6).
I first tasted the dish almost as soon as the layers had set. The Worcestershire flavor was rather assertive in the red layer. The white layer was creamy with a subtle onion and celery overtone. The next day, the flavors had a chance to meld. The red layer had calmed down quite a bit and tasted just fine. This is lots of work (mostly my wife's) but it is a nice cool savory dish perfect for hot summer. We were glad we resurrected this "ancient" recipe.
1 comment:
Yay Carol! Nobody makes savory gelatin salads anymore. Personally, I think they are lovely and elegant and should be served more often in the summertime.
Super job Carol. It looks well worth the effort.
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