bottled ranch dressing -- I usually thin down with lemon juice and sometimes water
'Heart Of Gold'
Natter 56: ...we need the writers.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
There are a number of sweet salad dressing that I enjoy. I eat salad for lunch just about every day, so variety is good. Raspberry based dressing is the yum, and I have a key lime variety (don't know if it is available other places) that is tangy and sweet and yummy. If I am eating out and the restaurant doesn't have a tasty sounding house dressing I'll go for blue cheese every time. Because tasty cheese!
eta: Honey mustard can be yum, but I prefer a spicer variety, some are too sweet.
Hi, darlini!
What are your views on honey mustard or chinese chicken salad (rice vinegar, soy sauce, ginger, sesame oil & a little sugar) dressings?
It is allowed to continue existing.
(I make my own honey mustard, and it is mustard and honey and olive oil, so there isn't even a cream/cheese/mayo issue!)
In totally other thinking, I've been mulling politics. Would Hillary make a good cabinet minister if Obama wins? Oh, wait, secretary. Darn my imperialist leanings.
If you want health care reform, Hillary would probably be more helpful in the Senate than in a cabinet position.
I've never had a so-called honey mustard dressing with any detectable mustard, which is a shame since the straight-up combo of honey and mustard is a fine thing.
Ginger/sesame/rice vinegar/soy is another fabulous taste combination that's all too often oversweetened and de-everything-else-ified.
Both are made much worse when scary texture gums come into the mix, because the only thing worse than sweet where it shouldn't be found is glop.
In sum, if it would make an acceptable dipping sauce for chicken nuggets, it doesn't go with salad. Or keeping my dinner down.
(Note: obviously just my lonely opinion, and no less love for all you mayo-lovin' freaks.)
The prepackaged "Asian" salad we used to get in Boston had a really yummy ginger-something (orange?) dressing. Alas, the prepackaged "Asian" salad in California was totally different, and I haven't seen any here at all.
I could make my own, you say? Shut up.
Man, I so wish I could IM while grading. This is BORING.
I've never had a so-called honey mustard dressing with any detectable mustard, which is a shame since the straight-up combo of honey and mustard is a fine thing.
yeah, it's more like sweet vinegar dressing.