TOMATO, CUCUMBER, AND ONION SALAD

This month Tag Sale Tastes is 12 years old.  12 years is also how many years ago my mother died.  I was sitting in a Leisure Learning class called “Blogging for Dollars” (don’t need to tell you how that turned out, do I?), and had turned off my phone.  When the class ended I saw I had 5 or 6 messages from my sister — she’d been trying to call to tell me our mother was in the hospital.  She stayed there about a week with an undetermined stomach ailment, until she died after her colon perforated in the hospital and she became septic.  Two weeks later I lost my job at the law firm I did not like, where I’d stuck it out for almost a dozen years.  Good people.  With time on my hands, I was able to get Tag Sale Tastes up and running.  The blog still serves the same two purposes I originally intended it to serve — (1) it motivates me to cook, and (2) it provides a creative outlet, in contrast to the more formal legal writing I do at my day job.  I do not earn any money from the blog, which is partly why you will never see the words “jump to recipe” or “Comment “RECIPE” for the recipe” on my blog (admit it — you hate those too).

I appreciate all of my readers — those that subscribe to the blog via email, those that leave a kind comment, those that tell me they made a recipe from the blog, those that follow me on Facebook, and those that are quiet lurkers.

To celebrate 12 years of Tag Sale Tastes, I am challenging myself to post a salad recipe every day in July.  My summer cooking goal is to get in and out of the kitchen as quickly as possible, using as few heat-generating appliances as possible, and salads are often the key to achieving that goal.  I hope you’ll be inspired to try one or two.  UPDATE:  Salad month came to an abrupt halt on July 8 due to circumstances beyond my control including:  (1) Hurricane Beryl on July 8, (2) taking in my mother-in-law with advanced dementia and her caretakers after she lost power for 7 days after the hurricane, (3) my dad died on July 12, (4) travel to and from Florida for his funeral July 14-15, (5) loss of internet, and (6) Covid.  In short, July kicked our butts.

I’m starting off with an easy recipe, one we tend to make at least once a week in the summer.  No cooking required, just cool, fresh produce and a simple oil and vinegar dressing.  This colorful and flavorful side salad takes just a few minutes to prepare, making it a summer salad superstar in my book, perfect for those living under a heat dome and the “hottest summer on record.”

5 from 1 reviews
TOMATO, CUCUMBER, AND ONION SALAD
Author: 
 
Ingredients
  • NOTE: All vegetable amounts are approximate (you do you)
  • ½ pint cherry or grape tomatoes, halved lengthwise (mixed colors are especially nice)
  • ½ English cucumber, sliced lengthwise and then cut crosswise into ¼" slices
  • ½ of a small sweet onion, thinly sliced (Vidalia, Persian Sweets, 1014, etc.)
  • 3 tablespoons olive oil
  • 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
  • 1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar
  • Salt and pepper, to taste
Instructions
  1. Place tomatoes, cucumber, and onion in a medium bowl, and toss to combine. Pour olive oil and vinegars over oil, stirring to distribute dressing. Season with salt and pepper, and serve.

 

Eat the rainbow

SHISHITO PEPPERS WITH CORN AND QUESO FRESCO

The use of expert witnesses in litigation is common.  In fact, they can be invaluable when it comes to scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge necessary to assist the court or jury (or lawyers) in understanding the evidence or deciding a fact issue.  But there are expert witnesses who, as the Texas Supreme Court recognized, “are more than willing to proffer opinions of dubious value for the proper fee.”

Not long ago, I wrote about a hearing involving a vigorously disputed legal issue.   One of our opponents hired two expert witnesses — law professors — that in our opinion, were “of dubious value.”  The only thing their expert opinions proved, in my opinion, was that professors’ kids need shoes too.  One of them, who admitted he did not research the law or even read our motion, brazenly declared our legal position “ahistorical and countertextual,” “wholly without merit,” and “contrived and fallacious.”  Mc’Scuse me?  So. Many. Adjectives.

I felt disparaged.  I had researched the issue for months, read scores of cases and legal articles, and carefully crafted our legal arguments on the issue.  So you know what I did?  I moved to strike him.  And you know what the judge did?  He struck him.  So I may be ahistorical, but he is history.

All of which provides the inspiration for today’s recipe, which involves striking while the iron is hot — cast iron, to be specific.  Shishito peppers, those wrinkly little bright green peppers, are popping up on appetizer menus everywhere.  Generally mild, about 1 in every dozen or so is hot — you’ve been warned.  They can be made in a flash at home, and will be gobbled up just as quickly.  You don’t have to add the corn and queso fresco, but I think you’ll find they are wholly with merit if you do.

5 from 1 reviews
SHISHITO PEPPERS WITH CORN AND QUESO FRESCO
Author: 
 
Ingredients
  • 1 ear of corn
  • 2 teaspoons olive oil
  • ½ pound shishito peppers
  • ¼ teaspoon sesame oil
  • ¼ cup crumbled queso fresco
  • 1 lime, halved
  • Salt and pepper, to taste
Instructions
  1. Using a sharp knife, remove kernels from corn.
  2. Heat olive oil in a large cast iron skillet over medium-high heat. Add the shishito peppers, corn kernels, and sesame oil, and cook until shishitos are soft and blistered in spots, stirring occasionally. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Transfer to serving platter and sprinkle with queso fresco. Squeeze lime over peppers. Serve hot, with additional lime wedges, if desired.

Can you spot the hot one?

Striking while the cast iron is hot

Don’t blink, or you’ll miss ’em!