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[Modernist Cuisine at Home] Sweet Onion Slaw (p. 165)


Chris Hennes

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Rather than a typical cole slaw based on cabbage, the main vegetable in this Modernist Cuisine at Home slaw is sweet onion. It also includes vacuum-pickled red onions (p. 130) and scallions. I guess it's "Modernist" in that it is made with mayonnaise where the egg has been cooked sous vide (for food safety and additional stability. p. 108), though I'm sure a jarred or "normal" homemade mayo would serve just fine. Otherwise it's a pretty typical slaw, with sour cream, mayo, dijon mustard and cayenne forming the sauce.

 

Onion slaw.jpg

 

Overall it's a good slaw, but one that I think would be best as a sandwich topping (an application they suggest in the notes). In that application I think I'd also add double or triple the pickled red onion, which is delicious in its own right and certainly complements the slaw very well.

Chris Hennes
Director of Operations
chennes@egullet.org

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Overall it looks good.

 

My personal preference is for boiled dressing made with fruit juice for coleslaw, not the mayo based ones. (the closest thing in commercially available slaw dressings is Marie's) My recipe is from the 1951 Joy of Cooking. That said, my recipe could be made modernist by bagging it and cooking it sous vide instead of on a double boiler, hmm...gotta try this...

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Nothing fancy - just what my mom used to make - simple but delicious.  

 

 

  • 1 head cabbage sliced
  • 1 vidalia onion chopped
  • 1 green pepper chopped
  • ½ cup sugar
  • ½ cup cider vinegar
  •  cup oil
  • 1 ½ tsp celery seed
Boil together sugar, vinegar, oil and celery seed. Pour over cabbage mixture. Age overnight before serving.
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