Frisée aux Lardons
- Total Time
- About 30 minutes
- Rating
- Notes
- Read community notes
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Ingredients
- 4handfuls tender, pale curly endive (about 10 ounces)
- 6ounces thick-cut bacon, sliced crosswise into ¼-inch-thick lardons
- 2teaspoons Dijon mustard
- 2tablespoons sherry vinegar
- ½teaspoon finely grated garlic
- 3tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
- Salt and pepper
- 4eggs
- 12thin slices from a French baguette, lightly toasted and rubbed with a garlic clove
Preparation
- Step 1
Wash and dry curly endive, place in a shallow salad bowl and refrigerate.
- Step 2
In a small skillet, simmer bacon for about 5 minutes in a small amount of water. Drain and dry skillet, then cook bacon over medium heat until lightly browned and crisp, but still a bit springy.
- Step 3
For the vinaigrette, whisk together mustard, vinegar and garlic. Whisk in olive oil. Season with salt and pepper.
- Step 4
Put a low-sided skillet on the stove and fill two-thirds with salted water. Bring to a gentle simmer. Crack each egg into a cup and carefully lower into the water. Poach eggs for 3 to 4 minutes, until whites have set and yolks are still soft. With a slotted spoon, remove to a towel-lined plate.
- Step 5
Lightly salt endive and toss with vinaigrette, coating well. Divide greens among 4 plates, place an egg in center of each, then add 3 croutons. Spoon warm lardons over salads. Shower with freshly ground black pepper and serve.
Private Notes
Cooking Notes
The classic French farmhouse salad is a great start. Here's some choice variants. 1) Frisee, or curly endive, is a good start point, but consider embellishing it with treviso, or other members of the raddicchio family. 2) Lardons are essential, but bacon is not. I like to dice up some Berkshire pork belly and throw it in wok until they're crispy. Mmmm. Delicious, and also avoids nitrates. 3) Poached eggs are a fine addition, but experiment. I like red walnuts and crumbled gorgonzola.
Beautiful recipe. I prefer a touch less Dijon in the dressing.
Yes to this--and almost any--version of this glorious salad. Just to mention, though, that some use finely minced shallot instead of the garlic in the vinaigrette, and I've had the latter made with the warm bacon fat instead of olive oil and the croutons topped with shredded, melted Gruyère. And I agree about less Dijon.
Layer in blanched asparagus for a more substantial side dish - family favorite
Homemade unsmoked ventreche is easy to make. Pork belly, garlic, salt, pepper. (Yes, there are unsmoked versions even in France). Once cured, throw it in the freezer. Lardons for salads and thicker slabs for cassoulet whenever you like. I am eating this salad right now with cold rabbit meat. A fifty-year Columela sherry vinegar is not and not too expensive.
That tart from the mustard perfectly balances the rich yolk, which I leave runny because egg sauce is absolutely the best. I'll admit I eyed to my preference and when I tasted the dressing it was eyebrow raising tart. Then I ate it and happiness consumed me in return.
Two tablespoons of sherry vinegar made mine suuuper sour. Maybe it was the type of sherry vinegar I used?
This was good. However, if you are looking for the classic bistro Salade Lyonnaise which integrates the lardon drippings into the salad dressing, I would recommend Mark Bittman's Salad Lyonnaise recipe on this site.
I agree with Kim, a little less Dijon. Otherwise a really great recipe.
The classic French farmhouse salad is a great start. Here's some choice variants. 1) Frisee, or curly endive, is a good start point, but consider embellishing it with treviso, or other members of the raddicchio family. 2) Lardons are essential, but bacon is not. I like to dice up some Berkshire pork belly and throw it in wok until they're crispy. Mmmm. Delicious, and also avoids nitrates. 3) Poached eggs are a fine addition, but experiment. I like red walnuts and crumbled gorgonzola.
Yes to this--and almost any--version of this glorious salad. Just to mention, though, that some use finely minced shallot instead of the garlic in the vinaigrette, and I've had the latter made with the warm bacon fat instead of olive oil and the croutons topped with shredded, melted Gruyère. And I agree about less Dijon.
Agree- warm bacon fat in the dressing is wonderful!
Great classic French recipe!
2 teaspoons of Dijon for 3 Tablespoons of olive oil is the perfect amount for an assertive dressing for this simple salad.
Without the Dijon flavor this is just an egg on some bland greens....
Beautiful recipe. I prefer a touch less Dijon in the dressing.
I agree. Fantastic, simple classic salad and using slightly less mustard made for a better balanced dressing. In either case, this is great...
I agree too! Less Dijon. This is my all time favorite salad so nothing could ruin it. Thank you for reminding me.
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