My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (2024)

My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes

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My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (1)

  • Pamela
  • February 15, 2011
  • 52 Comments

Categories: Basics, Gluten-free/gluten-free adaptable, Recipes, Salads, Vegetarian

My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (2)

If you’re just starting to tinker with the idea of eating more healthfully, but don’t know where to begin, may I nudge you toward making your own salad dressings? Why? First of all, salad dressings or vinaigrettes are something you probably use regularly. Second, they are simple to make. And last but not least, I have never found a bottled salad dressing that uses the kind of high-quality oils and ingredients I prefer to use. In fact, most bottled dressings not only contain refined oils, but also sugar or high-fructose corn syrup, preservatives, stabilizers and lots of other mysterious things I can’t even pronounce — never a good sign.

My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (3)

Truthfully, when I was growing up, we ate loads of fresh salads and we never made vinaigrettes. It was my job to dress the salad and all I did was drizzle the olive oil over the greens about three or four times around the salad bowl and the vinegar over once. I would sprinkle it with a little salt and voila! Sometimes I still do that if I’m in a rush and I don’t have dressing already made in the fridge. But more often than not, in the beginning of the week I will combine a few simple ingredients in a clean jar with a lid (love reusing nut butter jars for this) and shake, shake, shake!

My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (4)

I have lots of dressings I use for different salads, but there are two that are my standbys for a bowl of simple mixed greens. Both have a base of unrefined extra-virgin olive oil which is very rich in oleic acid, a very stable monounsaturated fatty acid, as well as Vitamin E and loads of antioxidants. All bets are off when you use refined olive oil where all the nutrients have been stripped away and you’re basically left with a bottle of free radicals. The olive oil I buy is in a dark glass bottle and after the word “Ingredients” it says in the tiniest print that I can barely read since I turned 40, “unrefined extra-virgin organic olive oil.” Forget low-fat or non-fat salad dressings. Most of those contain MSG or MSG-derivatives with tricky names like “hydrolyzed vegetable protein” or “autolyzed yeast extract.” We need fat on our salad to help us assimilate all the fabulous fat-soluble vitamins in the vegetables! What a waste to eat Vitamins A, D, E and K without the presence of fat to help our intestines absorb those nutrients.

My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (5)

Lemon juice is super alkalizing to our bodies and raw, unpasteurized apple cider vinegar is so enzyme-rich — both are my favorite acids for dressings. I personally love the lemon juice dressing, but I came up with the apple cider vinegar/brown rice vinegar dressing when I was at my mother-in-law’s house and she asked me to whip up a salad dressing that she would like. I was thrilled to make her something delicious so that she would stop using a packaged brand that rhymes with Shmood Shmeasons. Alas a convert! It has become a very popular dressing in my house and hers.

The basic rule of thumb with a vinaigrette is to mix 1 part acid (lemon juice, vinegar) with 3-4 parts oil. Adjust the ratios to suit your taste and build from there with salt and pepper, garlic or shallots, mustard or fresh herbs, if you have them. Once you get into the habit of making salad dressings regularly, you won’t even have to measure your ingredients anymore. So long Shmishbone!

My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (6)

5.0 from 4 reviews

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My Favorite Everyday Salad Dressings

Author:Pamela

Ingredients

  • everyday salad dressing #1 (with lemon juice)
  • 1 medium garlic clove, minced or 1 small shallot, finely diced
  • ¾ teaspoon fine grain sea salt
  • a few turns of freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
  • 2½ - 3 Tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice
  • ½ cup unrefined, cold-pressed extra-virgin olive oil
  • _______________________________________________
  • everyday salad dressing #2 (with cider or red wine vinegar)
  • 1 small shallot, minced (about 2 teaspoons)
  • ¾ -1 teaspoon fine grain sea salt
  • freshly ground black pepper to taste
  • 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
  • 2 teaspoons raw honey or 100% pure maple syrup
  • 2 Tablespoons unpasteurized apple cider vinegar or red wine vinegar
  • 2 Tablespoons unseasoned rice vinegar
  • ¾ cup unrefined, cold-pressed extra-virgin olive oil

Instructions

  1. Either whisk together in a small bowl or place all the ingredients in a glass jar with a lid and shake until emulsified.
  2. Both dressings can be made ahead and kept in a glass jar in the refrigerator for 5-7 days. Because olive oil solidifies when chilled, you will need to remove it from the refrigerator well before you want to use it in order for it to become pourable. Or you can leave the dressing at room temperature in a cool, dark place for a few days.

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Comments

  1. […] squash casserole (swap lentils for the turkey for a plant-based version), fresh green salad with everyday salad dressing #1 (you can also swap in crumbled leftover cooked turkey or beef burgers from your holiday cookout). I […]

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  2. My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (15)

    Jennifer W

    I came here because I want to make daily salad dressing. As a teen I stayed with a family in Normandy, France. They grew their veggies in beds along the side of the house and made a little bowl of vinaigrette for every salad.

    They also made mayonnaise as needed in a tiny blender!

    I am searching for recipes for the vinaigrette, mayonnaise and also blue cheese dressing because I like it with celery.

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    • My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (16)

      PamelaModerator

      What a wonderful experience! These are my go to salad dressings. They go well with anything. Have you taken a look at my blue cheese dressing? https://pamelasalzman.com/seven-layer-salad-with-blue-cheese-dressing-recipe/

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  3. My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (17)

    Janice

    Pamela! Thank you for this chopped salad idea in your post with everyday salad dressing #2! We made it tonight with stuff we had on hand (everything but subbed green for red cabbage). Awesome to pair with the vegan mushroom herb risotto I made in my instantpot!

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    • My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (18)

      PamelaModerator

      Amazing! Great combo!

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  4. My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (19)

    CHRISTOPHER

    Would dressing #2 be good without maple or honey ? trying to elminate all sugars. 🙂

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    • My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (20)

      PamelaModerator

      I’ve tried it without and I prefer it with the maple syrup or honey. That’s my personal preference. You can omit it and try the dressing to see how it tastes to you. Or you can use half the amount of maple syrup.

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    • My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (21)

      Michele

      Hi Christopher,
      I don’t like sweet dressings at all and just omit the sugars in any recipe, to my taste, they’re always good.
      Hope this helps!

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  5. My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (22)

    Allison

    Dressing #2 is my go-to… everyone loves it. My 8-year old, who doesn’t like most ‘green things’, literally shovels salad into his mouth with this dressing on top. I can slip in broccoli sprouts, arugula, spinach, and he’ll eat it. I don’t even mind how bad his manners are, because watching him inhale greens makes me so happy!

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    • My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (23)

      PamelaModerator

      Best, best, best! I’m thrilled for you! My son is very difficult when it comes to salads, and this is the only dressing he’ll eat.

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  6. My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (24)

    Rebecca Foster

    I had a jar of “salad dressing #2” in the fridge, and it made for a great, spur of the moment dinner. I came home after a long day of being out and told my husband I wasn’t cooking…often means a frozen pizza or a bowl of cereal. When I remembered I had a salad dressing I told him I was going to make a salad, and he said he would have one too. So, with fresh greens, an avocado, some cherry tomatoes, and the leftover chicken from our fajita night (your recipe) a couple of nights ago, I whipped up a full salad meal, and I am going to bed satisfied and proud of how we ended up eating such a better meal just because we had your dressing on hand and ready to go. THANK YOU!

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    • My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (25)

      PamelaModerator

      Rebecca, you just made my day. Your story of resourcefulness and confidence in the kitchen is exactly why I do this. Thank you!

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  7. My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (26)

    Marty

    Pamla: I love the simplicity of your dressings! I used to watch my grandfather as a child mix dressing over a large oblong wooden bowl filled with mixed greens, thinly sliced red onions and grape tomatoes. He first drizzled, like you, olive oil over the bowl of salad greens, then he’d fill a large soup spoon with dry mustard, pinch of salt and pepper, splash of either lemon juice or wine vinegar, mixing that up with the tip of dinner knife, then pouring it over the salad and mixing it gently.

    I’ve been making dressings similarly since. I sometimes add some gluten-free shoyu or Bragg’s or use freshly squeezed orange or grapefruit juice instead of the lemon juice or vinegar.

    I also love using nut butters, almond or tahini as a base first, then adding lemon juice, rice wine vinegar, liquid stevia or maple syrup or agave syrup, pinch of dried ginger, Bragg’s and a pinch of salt, and for a slight kick, some flaked red pepper. The original recipe I found added oil, but I add water to desired consistency instead because I figure there’s enough oil in the nut butter we don’t need the additional.

    I’m trying to teach my husband how to make his own dressings, instead of resorting to buying them off the shelf, esp when I’m out of town!

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    • My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (27)

      PamelaModerator

      Thank you for sharing that memory of your grandfather — beautiful. I think salads and their dressings are best simple as long as you start with lovely, fresh ingredients. Funny about your husband! I guess you just have to make him a jar before you leave to go out of town.

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    • My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (28)

      Linda Tell

      Oh I love that he mixed it in a spoon. Brilliant! Thanks for sharing.

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  8. My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (29)

    Amanda

    Just finishing my late breakfast of arugula with Dressing #1 and a poached egg on toast – how can something this easy taste like it came from a 5-star restaurant?? And I made it? Impossible! This dressing will definitely help me battle my Frosted Mini Wheat addiction!

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    • My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (30)

      PamelaModerator

      Amanda, that sounds amazing! Nice work!

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  9. My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (31)

    Elizabeth

    I made dressing #2 for a party and everyone loved it – all the children (3 year olds included) were asking for seconds! I had to make 2 huge bowls of salad and there was none left over. I made a huge jar of dressing, hoping to have some left over for the week, but used it all because everyone loved it!

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  10. My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (32)

    Nicole

    This is exactly what i need to make every week. Store bought dressings are just not any good and every salad i make with Pam’s dressing i love. This one is perfect to keep everyday
    thank you

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  11. My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (33)

    Doreena

    Tried dressing #2 and it is awesome. YUMMY! Made a whole bunch of it for the week!

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    • My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (34)

      PamelaModerator

      That’s great! I just made a jar for the week today, too!

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  12. My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (35)

    Doreena

    I never really liked any of the store bought salad dressings. I tried the #1 dressing and loved it! It tasted so light and fresh. I look forward to trying the #2 dressing this week!
    Thanks Pamela!

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    • My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (36)

      Excellent blog! I really love how it’s uncpmolicated on my eyes and also the details is well written. I am wondering how I might be notified whenever a new post has been made. I have subscribed to your rss feed which really should do the trick! Have a nice day!

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  13. My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (37)

    Andrea

    I think good salad dressing makes all the difference, and Pamela’s dressings are the bomb! They taste so fresh and good, I actually look forward to eating a salad the way I used to look forward to eating dessert!
    FYI….I l find that minced the shallot incorporates better into the dressing.

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  14. My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (38)

    Cristina

    Made salad dressing #1 in a jar yesterday. Outstanding! I will be eating salad even more than I already do thanks to Pamela. I Love it so much I am going to try it on steamed cabbage tonight.
    Thank you!

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    • My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (39)

      PamelaModerator

      I just used dressing #1 for lunch today on a salad of mixed greens, tuna and white beans! Enjoy!

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  15. My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (40)

    Mary

    How easy and delicious! I going to take your advice and make enough for a few days at the beginning of the week. Thanks

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  16. My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (41)

    Jill

    Where do you find that olive oil? Is it very expensive?

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    • My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (42)

      PamelaModerator

      The olive oil I use is by Napa Valley Naturals and I buy it at Whole Foods. It is about $13 for a 750 ml bottle. I like it because it is unrefined, cold-pressed and organic. It also comes in a dark glass bottle to protect the oil from being oxidized by light. I store my olive oil in my pantry away from heat. Spectrum also sells an unrefined olive oil for maybe one or two dollars more. You have to read the fine print to make sure it’s unrefined.

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  17. My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (43)

    sonia

    Hello, I’m the mother-in-law that loves dressing #2. This is the yummiest dressing ever!
    Whenever we have salad, I have to make triple the amount of lettuce because we can’t stop eating it. Besides the great taste, the ingredients are all natural. It works best like pamela does to toss the lettuce and dressing with her hands. I thought this was going too far, but you use less dressing and you get even flavor in every bite.
    Needless to say, no more seasonings from a package for me, thanks to pam’s dressing!

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    • My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (44)

      Kymberly

      After reading Sonia’s review Joshua and I are going to make your dressing this weekend. Can’t wait to try it. From what i remember everything i have tasted that you make is delish.

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      • My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (45)

        PamelaModerator

        Thanks Kymberly!! Please keep me posted. 🙂

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  18. My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (46)

    Teddi Gilderman

    yum, yum making #1 tonight! Thanks Pamela

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My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (47)

I come from a large Italian-American family with 28 first cousins (on one side of the family!) where sit-down holiday dinners for 85 people are the norm (how, you might ask – organization! But more on that later …).

Some of my fondest memories are of simple family gatherings, both large and small, with long tables of bowls and platters piled high, the laughter of my cousins echoing and the comfort of tradition warming my soul.

My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (48)

My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (49)

My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (50)

My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (51)

My favorite everyday salad dressing recipes - Pamela Salzman (2024)

FAQs

What is the number 1 salad dressing? ›

Ranch Dressing

The ranch is hands down America's most beloved salad dressings. It is made from a number of ingredients such as buttermilk, mayonnaise, mustard, garlic, onion, chives, salt, and pepper. A creamier and richer version often features sour cream or yogurt for enhanced taste.

Why do oil and balsamic vinegar not mix? ›

This happens because vinegar and oil are made of very different types of molecules that are attracted to their own kind. The electronegative oxygen in a water molecule pulls electrons away from the two hydrogens, creating an uneven distribution of charge within the molecule.

Why oil and vinegar don t mix? ›

A polar substance will not dissolve a nonpolar substance. In the case of oil and vinegar, the vinegar is polar and more dense than the oil, so it settles on the bottom of the container. The oil is nonpolar and less dense, so it doesn't dissolve in the vinegar, and it floats on top.

What is the best emulsifier for salad dressing? ›

Egg yolks or Mayonnaise

The lecithin found in egg yolks has a natural affinity for both oil and water, making it an effective emulsifier. When combined with vigorous whisking or blending, the egg yolks help create a stable, creamy emulsion that imparts a luxurious mouthfeel to your dressing.

What is the unhealthiest salad dressing? ›

Caesar dressing. Made up of mayonnaise, cheese, salt and oil (and all too often, anchovies), Caesar tends to be one of the least healthy options out there. Those ingredients cause it to be high in both saturated fats and sodium.

What is the healthiest salad dressing in the world? ›

8 Simple and Healthy Salad Dressings
  1. Sesame ginger. This simple salad dressing doubles as an easy marinade for meat, poultry, or roasted veggies. ...
  2. Balsamic vinaigrette. ...
  3. Avocado lime. ...
  4. Lemon vinaigrette. ...
  5. Honey mustard. ...
  6. Greek yogurt ranch. ...
  7. Apple cider vinaigrette. ...
  8. Ginger turmeric.
Jul 27, 2023

Do Italians dip bread in olive oil and balsamic vinegar? ›

And as for the balsamic vinegar, well, Italians don't put balsamic on bread. It's also expensive, and Italians don't feel it should be wasted on bread—rather, they use it (in combination with olive oil) for salads.

Do Italians mix oil and vinegar? ›

Not really. The combination of olive oil and vinegar is often used in salads (and is ever present on dining tables and restaurants). Nor do any other nationalities of the Mediterranean region that I've been to typically use for the most part…

Can you mix olive oil and vinegar together? ›

Vinaigrettes. If you add oil and vinegar to the same container, you'll notice they don't easily mix. However, you can emulsify oil and vinegar with some firm whisking and a bit of patience. This is the definition of a vinaigrette!

What is the best mix of oil and vinegar? ›

Oil and Vinegar are essential in creating an optimal emulsion – where the two ingredients bind together so well that you can't separate them even when shaken vigorously. An optimal emulsion happens when you combine these ingredients in equal parts with a ratio of three parts oil to one part vinegar (3:1).

Why can't olive oil and vinegar mix? ›

Oil and vinegar do not mix because lipids are insoluble in water. Vinegar is mostly water, so it does not form a solution with vegetable oil. ... This means that oil molecules attract other oil molecules, water molecules attract other water molecules, and both exclude each other.

Why do you have to shake salad dressing before using it? ›

Rather, the disordered existence of water on one side of the bottle and oil on the other side is more desirable for the water molecules. And that's why you will always have to shake that bottle of Italian Salad Dressing before pouring it on your salad.

What will permanently emulsify a dressing? ›

In the case of mayonnaise and hollandaise, it's the lecithin in the egg yolks that acts as the emulsifier. Lecithin, a fatty substance that is soluble in both fat and water, will readily combine with both the egg yolk and the oil or butter, essentially holding the two liquids together permanently.

Which dressing is permanently emulsified? ›

A simple vinaigrette, the combination of oil and vinegar, is an example of a temporary emulsion because the two liquids only briefly stay together before re-separating. On the other had, mayonnaise, the combination of oil, egg yolks, and lemon juice or vinegar is an example of a permanent emulsion.

What is the best emulsifier for vinaigrette? ›

The most common emulsifiers in your kitchen are likely egg yolks, mayonnaise, prepared mustard (preferably Dijon), honey, and tomato paste (though I'm not a fan of raw tomato paste, the flavor works quite well in a vinaigrette). For a more neutral flavor, use mayonnaise.

What salad dressing is most popular? ›

Ranch dressing is the most popular salad dressing in the United States, with 40% of Americans naming it their favorite. Italian dressing is the second most popular salad dressing, preferred by 10% of the US population. 8% of Americans prefer Caesar salad dressing.

What is the most popular salad in USA? ›

Caesar Salad

It is a popular choice in many American restaurants and is often served as a side dish or a main course.

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