A little salad for the New Year

Did you have black-eyed peas and cabbage for your New Year’s meal? We did — twice, in fact; once, prepared by some friends who invited us over on the actual first, and Thursday too, because I had already bought the fixings for the traditional peas, cabbage, and cornbread.

This might sound strange to those who know me well, as I have never been a lover of either peas or cabbage. I have learned to fix them to my liking, though, mostly because my husband loves them so — the cabbage, I braise with a green apple and red onion, while the peas get a more Tex-Mex treatment: garlic, jalapeno, cumin, and chile powder. Perhaps not as traditional as it could be, but a definite improvement for me and my finicky relationship with both legumes and cruciferous vegetables.

Even if I have learned to like them this way, the whole time I was braising the cabbage and stirring the peas this year, I couldn’t stop thinking about salad. Oh, yes, it was in the twenties outside, frigid for this part of the world, even in January. And I enjoyed my hot meal of cabbage, peas, and cornbread, which we topped with poached eggs, just fine. After it was over, though, I was still thinking about what those ingredients would taste like in salad form, despite the chill in the air.

So salad it was, for dinner last night, a panzanella of sorts, modified with southern ingredients, particularly those considered lucky to eat on the first of the year. The pepper jelly vinaigrette softened the cornbread croutons and jazzed up the cabbage, while the goat cheese melted into the creamy peas in a way I wouldn’t have expected (I’m imagining the peas in dip form, blended with goat cheese…) to make a salad that was surprisingly tasty. In case you have some of these spare parts rumbling around in your fridge, post-New Year’s, here’s a delicious way to use them up. And it just might make you doubly lucky to boot.

New Year’s Cornbread Panzanella with Hot Pepper Jelly Vinaigrette

These proportions will make two dinner-sized salad. If you have a heartier eater on your hands, I think bacon or ham would work well to up the caloric anty; a poached or fried egg would also sit nicely atop this meal.

2 cups cornbread, cut into cubes
Olive oil
1 cup black-eyed peas*, cooked and cooled
1 T. red onion, finely chopped
2 cups green cabbage, sliced into ribbons
1 ounce goat cheese
Hot Pepper Jelly Vinaigrette (recipe follows)

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Toss the cornbread cubes with olive oil and toast them in the hot oven for about 20 minutes (or as long as it takes to chop everything else and mix up the dressing).

To assemble: lay the cabbage ribbons in a single layer on two plates. Top each pile of cabbage with cornbread croutons, peas, and red onion. Divide the goat cheese into two equal portions, and crumble it on top of each salad. Drizzle with dressing.

*I used frozen peas that had been cooked in water for about 25 minutes, but I think leftover peas, cooked as you like them, would work too.

Hot Pepper Jelly Vinaigrette

1 clove garlic, minced
3 T. hot pepper jelly
1/4 cup cider vinegar
Squeeze of lemon
1/4 cup olive oil
Salt, to taste

Whisk together the garlic, pepper jelly, vinegar, and lemon. Pour in the oil in a slow steady stream, whisking vigorously until well-incorporated. Salt to your liking.

10 Responses to “A little salad for the New Year”

  1. Alanna Says:

    And just yesterday the last of the cornbread disappeared! I love ‘fusion’ cooking of this sort, very creative! Thanks for the Josie pics a post or two ago, she’s looking very grown-up for a baby!

  2. MyKitchenInHalfCups Says:

    Dad gum girl, that is genius. Cornbread Panzanella!
    Fabulous.
    And I believe I forgot to say how totally gorgeous little Josie is these days!

  3. Claire Says:

    I didn’t have any of those but I did have greens. This salad sounds just wonderful! I love cornbread and the pepper jelly dressing is so creative. Mmm!

  4. culinarybookworm Says:

    Hi Alanna, Too bad about the cornbread…next time you have some leftover, this is a good way to use it up. Doesn’t she look grown up? Another parenting cliche that is oh-so-true: it goes by so, so fast!

    Tanna, Thank you (on both counts!)

    Hey Claire, How do you fix your greens? I used to believe I didn’t like them at all, but I think that’s only because I’d only had them soggy and mushy. I’d love to know how you like yours…

  5. Tartelette Says:

    What a genius way to use those leftovers…I went the easy route and made soup but that is brilliant…there is always next year!!

  6. Jonathan Says:

    Love this. Will give it a whirl.
    Does Josie eat her veggies?
    Best to you all -JJ

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    You have such a lovely blog. Great recipe it really does look so delicious.

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