HOMEMADE NIGERIAN SALAD CREAM
My delicious Homemade Nigerian salad cream inspired by Thousand Island dressing.
It just occurred to me again this morning that the reason all my kids love vegetable salads could be the dressing I use.
After trying so many salad dressings, the one that clicked with my Nigerian palate is the thousand Island Dressing.
When I use it on the kids’ burgers, they just eat and eat. When it’s used on salads, the bowl clears within minutes.
Then, all of a sudden, around last year, the price of Thousand Island dressing just rose like that and aside the price skyrocketing, we couldn’t find it easily like we used to.
Sometimes we went round different supermarkets and see other salad dressings sitting elegantly on shelves but no Thousand Island and we till now
do not know what happened but, when I got tired of searching and sometimes not finding, I took a walk to Almighty Google to look at the ingredients in this delicious salad dressing and to see if they include what one can find easily in Nigeria.
Surprisingly, ALL except the Worcestershire sauce can be found easily in my kitchen. I searched to read more about this one salad dressing that goes so well with our local Nigerian taste buds and thanks to wikipedia…
It originated in the Thousand Islands between the United States Of America and Canada by a fisherman’s wife, Sophia. Many Thanks to Sophia, we have a salad dressing that’s not slappy on my Nigerian cheeks and not making my kids reject vegetable salads.
So, I laughed because the recipe is just a 5 minutes stroll around the kitchen and my rich altered USA/Nigerian salad cream is ready.
In five minutes, just add everything in a bowl and mix. That’s all the work involved. The first time I mixed, everyone ate their salads, some used in their burgers but no one could tell that this was not store-bought.
No one could tell the difference. I only heard compliments like ‘mummy, this salad dressing tastes better, what happened to it?” Lol.
Tomato ketchup, mayonnaise, vinegar, olive oil and the mixed salad dressing. |
Keeping this in the fridge. |
This little spread of cream makes his cucumber appetizing and tasty. |
This your cream can be served as seafood sauce too.
Yes. Thank you Amaka.
You’re a wonderful woman. Bravo! Please is olive oil same as anointing oil?
In Nigeria. Yes.