
Bagged salad kits make adding salad easy and come in many flavor combinations and cuisines, including Chinese, Thai, Korean and Japanese. The crucial elements in a great salad are a terrific dressing and mindfully cut vegetables; thin-cut cabbage, delicate shreds and ruffly leaves hold dressing better than large rough cuts. Inspect kit contents for freshness; brown edges indicate near-expiration or transit damage. Great Asian-inspired kits pair bold flavors with fresh, well-cut greens, generous flavorful toppings and a punchy dressing. Poor kits show sloppy cuts, sparse toppings and oily or single-note dressings. Nutrition information is presented per 100 grams.
"For this feature, we leaned into Asian-inspired salad kits, including Chinese, Thai, Korean and Japanese flavors. Among the things we learned is that the crucial elements in a great salad are a terrific dressing and mindfully cut veggies. Large, rough cuts of super crunchy cabbage, for example, are hard to eat and don't have enough surface area to hold dressing. Thin-cut cabbage, delicate vegetable shreds and greens with ruffly leaves are far more easily dressed."
"Key when choosing a salad kit is to examine the contents carefully to make sure the salad is fresh. Brown edges on the greens are a sure sign that the salad is either near expiration or was compromised in transit. A great Asian-inspired salad kit begins with bold, interesting flavor combinations. Greens and vegetables are fresh and well-cut, toppings are flavorful and generous, and the dressing has enough punch to pull everything together."
Read at www.mercurynews.com
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