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Farmers Market Salad at St. Francis Evolves as Summer Progresses

Sure, lots of people say they ascribe to the farm-to-table movement, and why wouldn't they? It's become a journalistic catchphrase, as well as a PR and marketing tool. Then again, some chefs -- Aaron Chamberlin of St. Francis, for one -- actually walk the talk, buying local, seasonal, and organic...
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Sure, lots of people say they ascribe to the farm-to-table movement, and why wouldn’t they? It’s become a journalistic catchphrase, as well as a PR and marketing tool.

Then again, some chefs — Aaron Chamberlin of St. Francis, for one — actually walk the talk, buying local, seasonal, and organic as much as the budget allows and incorporating the season’s best and brightest produce in ways that make customers say, “Wow! I forgot how unbelievably good a tomato — or fresh corn, or whatever — could be!”

His new Farmers Market Salad typifies what Chamberlin is all about. It’s a simple (and simply gorgeous) construct of base ingredients, with ever-changing additions and deletions as produce comes in or goes out of season.

Lightly dressed in Sauvignon Blanc vinaigrette, it’s a real showstopper.

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The beans give it a little heft, the pickled onion and red-vein sorrel a little tang, the purslane a touch of bitterness, and the tomatoes a burst of sweetness and juice.

Here’s the breakdown:

The base ingredients are:

Green beans, McClendon’s Select Yellow wax beans White beans, McClendon’s Select Red onion (pickled), McClendon’s Select Campari Tomato, McClendon’s Select Parsley, Maya Dailey Celery Leaf

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The additions at the moment are:

Red Vein Sorrel, Two Wash Ranch Purslane, Maya Dailey Shiso Leaf, Two Wash Ranch Heirloom tomatoes, Crooked Sky Farms

Additions for the future might be:

Radish, squash, cucumber, turnip, okra, and corn

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I look forward to trying a new rendition of it — so good with Chamberlin’s crusty, hearth-baked bread — as we get deeper into summer.


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