Two Things to Do on the Weekend to Make Your Week Easier
This salad saved me last week. I'm not sure I really need to go into detail about how many miles we put on the Mazda getting kids to their various weeknight commitments, but put it this way: If our night was an instagram it would've read #uniforminwrongcar #again #firstgoalever! #ittakesavillage #i'msorryenvironment
And finally:
#makeahead
Ever since discovering this chicken-based salad, I've gotten in the habit of roasting chicken on the weekend to have as a dinner insurance plan for nights that spiral into chaos. (Beautiful, messy, chaos-I'll-someday-miss, but chaos nonetheless.) Prepping chicken this way takes about sixty seconds of hands-on time (45 minutes hands-off) and once I have a few breasts sitting in the fridge, I find all kinds of possibilities open up. (And not necessarily just for dinner, but for lunch boxes, too. Lately, Abby has been into chicken wraps -- chicken rolled in a tortilla with a smear of mayo, a piece of lettuce, and a strip of bacon if I'm feeling big-hearted.) You can add your cooked chicken to soups and pot pies or chop up for Andy's chicken salad, but my favorite use this time of year has to be the way you see above: Tossed with fresh greens, dried cherries, blue cheese, candied walnuts and a homemade vinaigrette that was also prepped on the weekend, so all I had to at 8:00 (8:00!) when we all collapsed into our dinner chairs was toss and serve. #genius
Step No. 1: On the weekend, make this vinaigrette.
In an old jam jar shake the following ingredients:
heaping 1/2 teaspoon Dijon mustard 1/4 cup cider vinegar 1 teaspoon sugar salt & pepper squeeze of fresh lemon juice
Now add:
1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil
Shake again. If you are using this entire bottle of vinaigrette that night add herbs, like chives, parsley, or thyme. Otherwise, save the herbs to toss directly into your salad. That way they don't get all wilty and black and depressing a few days later.
Step No. 2: On the weekend, roast some chicken.
Roast 2-3 split chicken breasts or boneless chicken breasts at 375°F on a rimmed baking sheet along with 1/4 cup of water and tent with foil for 40 minutes. The bone-in split breasts are good for shredding, the breasts are good for slicing on the bias. (That's what I did above.)
Step No. 3: On your busiest weeknight, make this: Greens with Chicken, Cherries, Blue Cheese & Candied Walnuts
In a large bowl, toss all of the following:
3 medium sized cooked chicken breasts (see above), sliced as shown Four generous handfuls fresh greens handful of tart dried cherries 1/2 cup crumbled blue cheese (or to taste) handful candied walnuts* snipped chives (or scallions) cider vinaigrette (above, or your favorite mild vinaigrette)
*You can use storebought or homemade if you're man enough. I was not.