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I was planning on writing a post about granola today – about how I didn't think I'd like it, how I prefer my un-sugared flakes, how I was converted by this recipe, how I'd seen the light and now you could tooooo, except that it was a total disaster. Over-salted, burnt, cringe-worthy even when doused in yogurt and studded with blueberries. And it left me with nothing to write about, to boot. Oh, I hate hate hate it when that happens.

I guess it's a lesson. Don't mess with breakfast? Just keep eating your plain old flakes with milk and leave granola to the others. Sigh. Do you think I should try again? Molly's chocolate granola sounds dreamy, though I fear for my energy levels if I start having chocolate for breakfast. (I used to eat this treacly German cereal called Crunchy Nut when I was in high school – sugary corn flakes bedazzled with little pieces of peanuts, man, that stuff was heaven in a bowl and furthermore, much like crack for the delicate bloodlines of this girl who would eat a bowl for breakfast and proceed to practically hum with zany energy until lunchtime. Unless that was just because I was fifteen. Fifteen! Oh, come back, would you?)

And maybe it's also a kick in the pants to tell you about this rice salad I've been sitting on (well, not the salad, but you know) for a few weeks now. Upon first impression, there's not all that much special about this salad at all. I mean, there's rice, and some tender edamame (or favas, as the original recipe calls for but which are far too difficult to track down in this city and, in any case, to deal with once they are tracked down) and a few crunchy bits of red pepper and fennel, some nice bright herbs and a sprightly dressing. But it's not exactly rocket science, right? In fact, it seems mostly like a kitchen-sink type of dish, you know, the kind that you cobble together out of all the odd bits and bobs lying around your pantry and your fridge.

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So, you know, not all that special, though certainly delicious and filling and different – for God's sakes – from all the pots of plain boiled rice we seem to eat around these parts. And goodness, but suddenly that recipe seems a little scant for two people, let alone four, let's double it next time. And there was the strange fact that I kept making versions of this salad with whatever I could find lying around the house. Sauteed ramps and peas with mint and some lemon juice instead of the edamame and peppers and fines herbes. Or toasty Indian spices and canned lima beans. Suddenly room-temperature rice spruced up with all sorts of delicious things feels elemental, like we'll be eating it all summer long and with gusto.

It's hardly rocket science, no, but it's creeping its way into my permanent repertoire and that's chemistry, at least.

Edamame and Rice Salad with Fines Herbes Vinaigrette
Serves 2 to 3

1/3 cup sliced almonds
Salt
1 1/2 cups frozen edamame
1/2 cup long-grain rice, preferably basmati or jasmine
1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
1 tablespoon tarragon vinegar
3 tablespoons peanut or canola oil
2 teaspoons chopped chives
1 teaspoon finely chopped oregano (technically this is meant to be chervil, but oregano is what I've got on my balcony)
1 teaspoon finely chopped flat-leaf parsley
1 teaspoon finely chopped tarragon
Freshly ground black pepper to taste
1/4 cup finely diced red pepper
1/4 cup finely diced fennel

1. Heat the oven to 300 degrees. Toast the almonds in the oven on a baking sheet until fragrant, about 10 minutes, and set aside.

2. Fill a medium saucepan with water and add about a teaspoon of salt. Bring to a boil and cook the frozen edamame for 4 to 5 minutes, just until tender. Using a slotted spoon, transfer them to a shallow bowl to cool. Bring the pot of water back to a low boil.

3. Rinse the rice in a small strainer, then add the rice to the boiling water. Cook, stirring occasionally, just until tender, 8 to 10 minutes.

4. While the rice is cooking, whisk together the mustard and vinegar in a small bowl, then whisk in the oil until the dressing emulsifies. Whisk in the chives, oregano, parsley and tarragon. Season with one-fourth teaspoon salt and a pinch of pepper, or to taste.

5. Strain the cooked rice and add it to the edamame. Pour half the vinaigrette over the mixture. Add the red pepper and fennel and toss until coated. Add more vinaigrette, salt and pepper to taste.

6. If you are serving the salad right away, sprinkle the toasted almonds over the top. If you want to chill it, cover the salad and refrigerate until needed. Just before serving, stir the salad again and add more vinaigrette if needed, then sprinkle with the toasted almonds.

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29 responses to “Regina Schrambling’s Edamame and Rice Salad with Fines Herbes Vinaigrette”

  1. Erinn Avatar

    This sounds light, delicious and healthful (bonus!)
    My vote? Try the granola again. I say this as much to myself as to you, for I too, often give up when I’m super excited about a recipe and it goes horribly awry. I tried making crackers the other day. In a word? Horrific. I have made a promise to myself to try the recipe at least one more time!

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  2. jenny Avatar
    jenny

    about the granola I just have to say: I’m glad someone out there has as many problems with the stuff as I do. I gave up on commercially-produced granola years ago–I decided I might as well just eat a bowl full of sugar–and have spent the last several years searching for a recipe that would make me a convert.
    the l.a. times recipes interested me, but then I saw one in cooking light (which included dried cherries–swoon!) that finally convinced me to get out my baking sheet. well, I had the same disaster you did. dry, burnt, and rather than salty, just bland. UGH. and I had, like 5 lbs of the stuff, too. what a waste.
    molly’s recipe intrigues me, although I’m thinking of it more as snack food than breakfast. who knows, though. chocolate has a way of seducing even those with the most rigid opinions about when it should be consumed …

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  3. kickpleat Avatar

    Don’t give up on the granola! try another recipe. seriously, it can be deliciously easy. Your salad however looks lovely and perfect for summer.

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  4. Alison Avatar

    Hi! I have been reading your blog forever but just decided to comment. It’s breakfast talk everywhere this week! I work for the Dinner Tonight blog on Martha Stewart, and one of our editors just wrote about her thoughts on breakfast, too. She was inspired by the nymag spread about breakfast. Have you seen that? Don’t give up on new breakfast ideas yet!
    Just thought I’d share!
    http://blogs1.marthastewart.com/dinnertonight/2008/06/the-most-import.html

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  5. EB Avatar

    “Sauteed ramps and peas with mint and some lemon juice”?? Heaven!

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  6. Molly Avatar

    I am not a big rice person – I’ve never told you that, I know; can we still be friends? – but this sounds so, SO good. So perfect for summer. Oooh, ooh.
    And don’t give up on granola! I make a double batch of chocolate granola once a week these days, and I have never had it fail me. I really think you’ll like it! If you’re worried about the sugar, just cut it back a bit. You could also replace some of the chocolate with dried fruit – maybe cherries? – or more nuts, if that seems less dangerous. What do you think?

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  7. kitten Avatar

    Luisa, the granola from Melissa at the Traveler’s Lunchbox made me a granola convert-I never liked it before! And it has yet to fail me, I regularly have to make batches for other members of my family!
    So wanted to let you know that, and to also thank you for you long ago post on the whirlygig buns, (well thank Tea for mentioning them in her recent post really) I made them last week and they were a super hit! I made a half batch which worked well in an 8×8 pan, and still with lots leftover. Did you freeze the rest of your batch?

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  8. Yosha Avatar
    Yosha

    I wasn’t much on granola until I tried this recipe. I ended up burning the oats a bit (totally my fault, keep an eye in the oven!) but it still tasted sooooo good! I didn’t add coconut, didn’t have flax seed oil, so I just put in extra flax seed. I don’t like vegetable oil, so did a reduced amount of low fat butter. I put whole almonds and it came out smoky tastign. Overall, very yummy!!
    http://slowlikehoney.net/2008/05/21/back-to-basics/

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  9. Jeena Avatar

    Those almonds just top this dish off to perfection. I wish I had a spoon handy looking at these pictures it looks so delicious.

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  10. nicole Avatar

    this sounds and look fabulous!

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  11. Bobbie Avatar
    Bobbie

    My problem with making my own granola (besides the huge amount my husband consumes every morning) has always been stirring/turning it in the rimmed sheet without spilling it all over and making a mess. Any ideas here?

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  12. Mercedes Avatar

    Too bad about the granola- have you tried Molly’s other granola, the one w/o the chocolate? Homemade granola is one of those things that’s miles better than storebought. It’s particularly lovely with Greek yogurt and poached apricots (best breakfast ever).
    I agree about the edamame- not the same as favas but also great and worth the convenience.

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  13. kathryn Avatar

    May not be rocket science, but this is just the kind of recipe I can imagine making over and over and over again. Light, flexible, contains edamames, vegetables and interesting. Thanks for posting.

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  14. Julie Avatar

    I make an end-of-summer rice salad with tomatoes and arugula but I’ve never even thought of trying a more spring-appropriate rice salad — I just wait for the end of summer to come again. But this version of rice salad sounds lovely and perfect for spring and early summer.

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  15. dancing kitchen Avatar
    dancing kitchen

    The very best granola I’ve ever had the pleasure of making…is a recipe from The Travelers Lunchbox blog…
    http://www.travelerslunchbox.com/journal/2007/6/9/the-lip-ladys-secret-granola.html
    Fabulous…simply fabulous.
    ~Cin

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  16. Victoria Avatar

    Hi, Luisa,
    Do you think lima beans would be good in this salad? I usually use them when a recipe calls for favas. Why, oh why, in this City – where EVERYTHING seems to be available – we can’t get favas all the time?

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  17. Luisa Avatar

    EB – it was! Heavenly. Even more so because I got to use up all the wilty-looking old stuff in the fridge and it turned out deliciously.
    Molly – we can definitely still be friends! Truth be told, I hardly ate it before Ben came along: he is the rice man in the household. But now I love it. As for the granola, it’s on, baby. I’m totally going to try it this weekend, maybe with a little less sugar. Can’t wait! 🙂
    Kitten – I did freeze those rolls and then defrosted them individually in a hot oven.
    Bobbie – hmm, my only suggestion would be to cut back on the recipe a bit, so that the pan isn’t filled to the brim. That way you can flip and turn the granola and even do a little shimmy-shake with the pan and there is no mess…
    Mercedes – you had me at poached apricots! Apricots! Oh, I’m counting the days.
    Kathryn – exactly! You got it.
    Cin – now you’re the second person to recommend Melissa’s granola…so I will have to put it on the to-make list. I loved the story behind it.
    Victoria – yes! I often substitute limas for favas, but when doing that substitution, I only used canned limas. They’re creamier and silkier than their frozen brethren. There are favas at Whole Foods right now, I just find them to be too expensive and too much of a headache to cook (and shell and cook again and shell again – yeesh!).

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  18. dara Avatar

    My first attempt at granola came out burnt and unworthy too. It’s no surprise when you realize they have you cooking nuts for an hour or more! Of course they’re burnt. But Molly’s chocolate version converted me too; it’s 20 minute cooking time is right on. I think I cut out the sugar and used just the honey, and maybe even a little less than called for. And I used bittersweet chocolate. I still wouldn’t eat it first thing in the morning – with that sort of jolt, I’d be starving all day, not to mention humming! But it’s a fabulous afternoon snack and, with the stupendous raw milk I get, a total treat. When I make it, I have to hide it from my sweetie so he doesn’t gobble it up, and we refer to it as crack 😉

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  19. eg Avatar
    eg

    I had a similar disaster with a Mark Bittman granola recipe. I was very bitter about the waste of time and money but the local cardinals and sparrows loved it which was fun to watch this winter. I was also interested in the recipe from The Traveller’s Lunchbox, I’m always more interested when something has a fun story to go with it.

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  20. rube Avatar
    rube

    I just made a double batch of the salad (with farro instead of rice) and it was fresh and flavorful. Thank you so much for pointing it out.

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  21. Honeybee Avatar

    I’ve had some blood sugar level issues lately but I never realised it had something to do with age! Well, thirty had to change something. A colleague gave me a slice of Schwarzwälder Torte (well yes, of course I ate it) some afternoon a few weeks ago and by 5 p.m. I was feeling so utterly tired that I could have slept at my desk. For breakfast, only porridge or a muesli made from steeped oats do the trick.

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  22. Kim Avatar

    The rice and edamame dish looks fantastic, perfect for summer. I have had great luck with Ina’s recipe for granola. Good with greek yogurt as a breakfast or dessert.

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  23. Angela Avatar
    Angela

    Please, please don’t give up on granola! I make Molly’s other granola, the one Mercedes mentioned, religiously. And my boyfriend, who refers to me as a “dirty hippie” for making my own granola, nevertheless gobbles it down every morning…
    Just to save you some time if you are interested, Molly’s other recipe is here: http://orangette.blogspot.com/2008/02/consider-it.html

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  24. Victoria Avatar

    Luisa,
    I have canned lima beans in my cupboard and have never tried them yet, but based on your recommendation I shall. Do I love how you write???? Who else can say yeesh????? Thanks for the suggestions.

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  25. Emily Avatar
    Emily

    Luisa, I really think you should try the granola! Molly made me a convert with her “Daily Granola”, which I make every other week nowadays. I just tried her chocolate granola yesterday, and it is dreamy, I promise! I substituted sunflower seeds for the coconut (didn’t have any), and might cut back just a touch on the sugar next time.
    Give it a go!

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  26. Luisa Avatar

    An update, everyone: I made Molly’s French chocolate granola last Friday afternoon and it was gone – GONE – by Sunday morning. Now, granted, we had house guests for breakfast one of those mornings, but still: GONE.

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  27. Kat Avatar

    Wow! That looks delicious!

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  28. Debra Avatar
    Debra

    Cin/dancing kitchen, thank you for posting this:
    http://www.travelerslunchbox.com/journal/2007/6/9/the-lip-ladys-secret-granola.html
    This is the secret to the kind of granola I’ve been looking for! I made a batch last week and it didn’t last long enough. Ordinarily, I drink my milk from a glass while eating granola out of hand, because I don’t care for soggy cereal, but this even stayed crunchy in milk.
    These tender-crisp clusters on top of cooked fruit make a great instant crisp, or equally good layered with your favorite fruit and yogurt. I think I’ll fiddle with it a bit and try making granola bars.
    I did make a substitution. Three cups of nuts with all the other fat and sugar, was just too calorie dense for me, so I put in one cup pecans and two cups of rice crispies to lighten it up. The got soggy in the beginning, but crisped right back up in the oven. I wouldn’t hesitat to increase them next time.
    Thanks again!

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  29. Rose-Anne Avatar

    My goodness, Luisa, you really know how to sell a reader on rice salad! The dog days of summer are kinda hit-or-miss around Chicago these days, but I really want to give this recipe a whirl–you just made it sound so delicious. Nicely done!

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