fbpx
Wikipedia

Olivier salad

Olivier salad (Russian: салат Оливье, tr. salat Olivye pronunciation) is a traditional salad dish originating in the Russian Empire, created by French and Belgian chef Lucien Olivier.[1]

Olivier salad
Alternative namesRussian salad, Stolichny salad
TypeSalad
CourseZakuski
Place of originRussia
Created byLucien Olivier
Main ingredientsPotatoes, vegetables, eggs, meat, mayonnaise
  •   Media: Olivier salad

It is also popular in other post-Soviet countries and around the world. In different modern recipes, it is usually made with diced boiled potatoes, carrots and brined dill pickles (or cucumber), together with optional vegetable or fruit ingredients such as green peas, eggs, celeriac, onions and apples, optional meat ingredients such as diced boiled chicken, cured sausage, ham, or hot dogs, with salt, pepper and mustard sometimes added to enhance flavor, and dressed with mayonnaise. In many countries, the dish is commonly referred to as Russian salad, in a few Scandinavian countries (Denmark and Norway) it is called italiensk salat (Italian salad, to acknowledge the popularity of this dish in Northern Italy - where however the common name is Insalata russa) and in Dutch it is called huzarensalade (hussars' salad). In former Yugoslavian countries it is called ruska salata (Russian salad) or francuska salata (French salad). In Romania it is known as "salata (de) boeuf." which means beef salad in French.[1] In France, it is referred to as macédoine de légumes.

In Russia and other post-Soviet states, as well as in Russophone communities worldwide, the salad has become one of the main dishes on zakuski tables served during New Year's Eve ("Novy God") celebrations.[citation needed]

History edit

 
Hermitage restaurant in the 20th century

The original version of the salad was invented in the 1860s by a cook of French and Belgian origin, Lucien Olivier, the chef of the Hermitage, one of Moscow's most celebrated restaurants. Olivier's salad quickly became immensely popular with Hermitage regulars, and became the restaurant's signature dish.[citation needed]

 
Olivier salad prepared with the Hermitage restaurant's recipe

At the turn of the 20th century, one of Olivier's sous-chefs, Ivan Ivanov, attempted to steal the recipe. While preparing the dressing one evening in solitude, as was his custom, Olivier was suddenly called away. Taking advantage of the opportunity, Ivanov sneaked into Olivier's private kitchen and observed his mise en place, which allowed him to make reasonable assumptions about the recipe of Olivier's famed dressing. Ivanov then left Olivier's employ and went to work as a chef for Moskva, a somewhat inferior restaurant, where he began to serve a suspiciously similar salad under the name "metropolitan salad" (Russian: Столичный, tr. Stolichny). It was reported by the gourmets of the time, however, that the dressing on the "Stolichny" salad was of a lower quality than Olivier's, meaning that it was "missing something."[citation needed]

Later, Ivanov sold the recipe for the salad to various publishing houses, which further contributed to its popularization. Due to the closure of the Hermitage restaurant in 1905, and the Olivier family's subsequent departure from Russia, the salad could now be referred to as "Olivier."

One of the first printed recipes for Olivier salad, by Aleksandrova, appearing in 1894, called for half a hazel grouse, two potatoes, one small cucumber (or a large cornichon), 3–4 lettuce leaves, 3 large crayfish tails, 1/4 cup cubed aspic, 1 teaspoon of capers, 3–5 olives, and 112 tablespoon Provençal dressing (mayonnaise).

As often happens with gourmet recipes which become popular, the ingredients which were rare, expensive, seasonal, or difficult to prepare were gradually replaced with cheaper and more readily available foods.[citation needed]

Ingredients edit

 
Advertisement for mogul sauce and other condiments by John Burgess & Son

The earliest published recipe known to date appeared in the Russian magazine Наша пища (Nasha pishcha, "Our Food") No. 6 (31 March 1894). This magazine, published from 1891 to 1896 and edited by M. Ignatiev, stated that the original recipe contained "mogul sauce" or "kabul sauce" (similar to Worcestershire sauce), manufactured by John Burgess & Son[Note 1] (the brand he reputedly used) and Crosse & Blackwell.[citation needed]

The book Руководство к изучению основ кулинарного искусства (Rukovodstvo k izucheniyu osnov kulinarnogo iskusstva, "Guide to the Fundamentals of Culinary Arts") (1897) by P. Aleksandrova gave a recipe containing grouse, crayfish, potatoes, cucumber, lettuce, aspic, capers, olives and mayonnaise. The author wrote that veal, partridge or chicken could be substituted but the authentic recipe contained grouse.[citation needed]

In post-revolutionary Russia, cheaper ingredients were substituted for the originals: grouse was replaced by chicken or sausage, crayfish by hard-boiled egg, cucumbers, olives and capers by pickled cucumbers and green peas.

Earlier, it always included cold meat such as ham or veal tongue, or fish. The mid-20th century restaurant version involved not just vegetables, but also pickled tongue, sausage, lobster meat, truffles, etc. garnished with capers, anchovy fillets, etc. Some versions molded it in aspic.

In modern usage, it is usually boiled diced vegetables bound in mayonnaise, with Doktorskaya-type sausage. The most common alternative version, where the sausage is replaced with boiled or smoked chicken, is called Stolichny salad, after Ivanov's version.

A multitude of other versions, named, unnamed, and even trademarked, exist, but only Olivier and Stolichny salad have entered the common vernacular of post-Soviet states.

Modern Olivier edit

 
Typical Soviet-style Olivier salad

Today's popular version of Olivier salad—containing boiled potatoes, dill pickles or fresh cucumbers, peas, eggs, carrots, onion and boiled beef/chicken or bologna, dressed with mayonnaise—is a version of Ivanov's Stolichny salad, and only faintly resembles Olivier's original creation. This version was a staple of any Soviet holiday dinner, especially of a Novy God (New Year's Eve) dinner (to the extent that its presence was considered on a par with Soviet Champagne or mandarin oranges), due to availability of components in winter. Even though more exotic foods are widely available in Russia now, its popularity has hardly diminished: this salad was and maybe still is the most traditional dish for the home New Year celebration for Russian people.[2]

Festive Russian and post-Soviet states' homemade versions are traditionally at the cook's whim. While some of the ingredients are considered to be basic and essential, others are either favoured or dismissed as a threat to supposed authenticity.

The biggest Olivier salad, weighing 1841 kg, was prepared in December 2012 in Orenburg.[3][4]

In other countries edit

European cafes and delicatessens often provide an entire range of potato salads. Additionally, cafeterias, convenience stores, and truck stops sell a number of sub-par factory packaged or locally made versions, mostly extremely simple, using basic ingredients with cheap mayonnaise-like dressing.[citation needed]

Southeast Europe edit

 
Serbian Christmas meal

In Serbia, Olivier salad is called russian salad and is very common on the New Year and Christmas table. The salad is widely popular as руска салата (ruska salata) in Bulgaria, Serbia, and North Macedonia, and sallatë ruse in Albania. The Bulgarian version of the salad usually consists of potatoes, carrots, peas, pickles and some sort of salami or ham. In Bosnia and Herzegovina both the ruska salata and francuska salata (which is essentially Russian salad prepared without meat) are very popular, especially during holidays.

In Croatia and Slovenia, it is typically prepared without meat, and is usually called francuska salata in Croatian and francoska solata in Slovene, both meaning French salad.

The Romanian variant, called salată de boeuf ("beef salad"), is considered a traditional dish. It is a combination of finely chopped beef (or chicken) and root vegetables, folded in mayonnaise and finished with murături, traditional Romanian mixed pickles. It can also be made vegetarian.

In Turkey, it is known as Rus salatası ("Russian Salad"). The Turkish version consists of boiled and sliced carrots and potatoes, sliced cucumber pickles, boiled peas and mayonnaise and is sometimes decorated with boiled and sliced eggs, black olives and beet root pickles. It is served as meze and is used as a filling for some sandwiches and kumpir (jacket potato). Another Turkish name for Olivier salad is Amerikan salatası ("American salad"), a euphemistic misnomer originating from the Cold War period.

Central Europe edit

In Slovakia it is called zemiakový šalát ("potato salad"). There are several versions; however, it typically consists of boiled and cubed vegetables (potatoes, carrots), finely chopped onions and pickles in a mayonnaise dressing, often with diced hard-boiled eggs and canned green peas. It is seasoned with salt, black pepper and mustard. Some fluid from the pickles may also be added.

In Czech it is called simply bramborový salát ("potato salad"). It consists of boiled and cubed vegetables (potatoes, carrots, parsley and celery root), finely chopped onions and pickles in a mayonnaise dressing, often with diced hard-boiled eggs, some kind of soft salami and canned green peas. It is the side-dish of choice to go with schnitzel or breaded carp, staple Christmas meals in the Czech Republic.

 
Sałatka jarzynowa, Poland

Polish sałatka jarzynowa or sałatka warzywna ("vegetable salad", often simply called sałatka) is vegetarian, consisting of peas, hard boiled eggs, and the mirepoix, always cut into small cubes, seasoned with mayonnaise, salt, pepper. Recipes usually vary by region (tart apples or pickles can be added) and even by household, sometimes even adding meat (e.g. ham). One such notable exception is szałot (Polish pronunciation: [ˈʂawɔt]), a Silesian variety which may include not only boiled potatoes, carrots, peas and boiled eggs, but also bacon, sausages or pickled herring.[5] Such salads are often served on family celebrations, in particular on Christmas Eve.

In Hungary the meatless version is called "franciasaláta" (French salad). Versions with meat added are called "orosz hússaláta"[2] (Russian meat salad). With or without meat, it is a popular food all year round.

 
Ensaladilla rusa, Madrid, Spain

Southern Europe edit

In Greece it can be found on almost any restaurant's menu and is called ρώσικη σαλάτα (rossiki salata); it usually contains no meat. Ensaladilla rusa ("Russian little salad") is widely consumed in Spain and it is served as a tapa in many bars. It typically consists of minced boiled potato, minced boiled carrots, canned tuna, minced boiled eggs, peas, and mayonnaise.[6] In Italy, Insalata russa has the same ingredients. A similar version is also popular in Portugal, where it is called salada russa. It is usually served either as a standalone dish or as a garnish to fish dishes, particularly fish fillets.

Northern Europe edit

In Iceland and Norway it is called russisk salat, and contains carrots and green peas in mayonnaise dressing. It may also include small shrimp.[7] Often the salad is paired with smoked meat on bread. A similar but distinct salad known as italiensk salat is also available in Scandinavian countries, consisting of shredded cabbage and carrots in a mayonnaise dressing. The two salads, russisk salat and italiensk salat, are often confused.[8] In Finland, the regional salad italiansalaatti contains carrots, peas and ham in mayonnaise dressing but replaces potatoes with spaghetti or macaroni. In the Netherlands there is a similar salad called Huzarensalade ("Hussar Salad"), but this salad already existed in the 1840s. Its name probably derives from the Dutch hussar regiments, and refers to the original ingredient of horsemeat.[9]

Asia edit

 
Russian salad, Hanoi, Vietnam

Olivier salad (Persian: الويه) is popular in Iran, where it is known as salad Olivieh and usually made with potatoes, eggs, Persian pickled cucumbers, carrots, chicken, peas and mayonnaise, and is frequently a sandwich filler.[10]

 
Russian salad, Karachi, Pakistan

It is a popular salad in Vietnam, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and India as well, where it is usually made with potatoes, peas, apples or pineapples, and mayonnaise and is frequently used as a side dish in cafes. Another version of Russian salad is also very popular in Pakistan which bears no resemblance to Olivier salad and instead is a cabbage and apple slaw.

Japanese potato salad (potesara, ポテサラ), is often said to be a yoshoku version of the Olivier salad, differing in a semi-mashed consistency of the potato, chopped ham as a main meat ingredient (instead of traditional poultry) and a liberal use of rice vinegar and karashi mustard in its dressing.

Olivier salad is believed to have been introduced as a "Capital salad" or "Niislel salad" in Mongolia during the Soviet period. It usually consists of minced ham and carrots, minced boiled eggs, minced boiled carrots, and potatoes dressed with mayonnaise. It is widely popular amongst Mongolians, especially during the festive seasons.[citation needed]

Latin America edit

 
Argentinian ensalada rusa

The dish is also very popular in many Latin American countries where it is called ensalada rusa and has been reduced to its minimum: minced boiled potatoes and carrots, green beans and abundant mayonnaise-based dressing. In Argentina it is usually served on its own as a first course, or with a very thinly sliced beef wrapping called matambre, in a dish called matambre con rusa. Argentines of Eastern European Jewish origin may make the salad with tuna. In Peru, Chile, Colombia, Venezuela and Argentina it is a traditional Christmas side dish. In the Dominican Republic the dish is made with diced boiled vegetables including beets, carrots, potatoes and sometimes corn, mixed with mayonnaise and spices. It is often served as a side dish.[citation needed]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Now owned by the Greencore Group [1] 2012-08-14 at the Wayback Machine

References edit

  1. ^ a b "A salad that no nation wants to call their own". tasteatlas.com. Retrieved 2023-01-04.
  2. ^ Russian Salad (Olivier)
  3. ^ "Самый большой салат "Оливье" [The largest Olivier salad]" (in Russian). The book of records of Russia. 2012-12-16.
  4. ^ (in Russian). RIA Novosti. 2012-12-16. Archived from the original on 2012-12-19.
  5. ^ Marek Szołtysek, Kuchnia śląska, Wydawnictwo Śląskie ABC, Rybnik 2003, ISBN 83-88966-07-3 (in Polish)
  6. ^ "ensaladilla-rusa-recipe-russian-potato-salad". spanishsabores.com. 4 April 2013. Retrieved 2014-12-29.
  7. ^ "Delikat Russisk Rekesalat". Delikat (in Norwegian Bokmål). Retrieved 2022-06-05.
  8. ^ "Mærkelige madnavne: Hvorfor hedder det italiensk salat og russisk salat? | Samvirke". samvirke.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 2022-06-06.
  9. ^ Nicoline van der Sijs (2022-10-01). "Etymologica: de huzarensalade". Neerlandistiek.nl.
  10. ^ Salad Olivieh - My Persian Kitchen

Further reading edit

  • Alan Davidson, The Oxford Companion to Food, Oxford, 1999. ISBN 0-19-211579-0.
  • Anna Kushkova, "At the Center of the Table: The Rise and Fall of the Olivier Salad", Russian Studies in History 50:1:44-96 (Summer 2011) publisher's page (pay)

External links edit

  •   Media related to Olivier salad at Wikimedia Commons

olivier, salad, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, december, 2. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Olivier salad news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Olivier salad Russian salat Olive tr salat Olivye pronunciation is a traditional salad dish originating in the Russian Empire created by French and Belgian chef Lucien Olivier 1 Olivier saladAlternative namesRussian salad Stolichny saladTypeSaladCourseZakuskiPlace of originRussiaCreated byLucien OlivierMain ingredientsPotatoes vegetables eggs meat mayonnaise Media Olivier saladIt is also popular in other post Soviet countries and around the world In different modern recipes it is usually made with diced boiled potatoes carrots and brined dill pickles or cucumber together with optional vegetable or fruit ingredients such as green peas eggs celeriac onions and apples optional meat ingredients such as diced boiled chicken cured sausage ham or hot dogs with salt pepper and mustard sometimes added to enhance flavor and dressed with mayonnaise In many countries the dish is commonly referred to as Russian salad in a few Scandinavian countries Denmark and Norway it is called italiensk salat Italian salad to acknowledge the popularity of this dish in Northern Italy where however the common name is Insalata russa and in Dutch it is called huzarensalade hussars salad In former Yugoslavian countries it is called ruska salata Russian salad or francuska salata French salad In Romania it is known as salata de boeuf which means beef salad in French 1 In France it is referred to as macedoine de legumes In Russia and other post Soviet states as well as in Russophone communities worldwide the salad has become one of the main dishes on zakuski tables served during New Year s Eve Novy God celebrations citation needed Contents 1 History 2 Ingredients 3 Modern Olivier 4 In other countries 4 1 Southeast Europe 4 2 Central Europe 4 3 Southern Europe 4 4 Northern Europe 4 5 Asia 4 6 Latin America 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory edit nbsp Hermitage restaurant in the 20th centuryThe original version of the salad was invented in the 1860s by a cook of French and Belgian origin Lucien Olivier the chef of the Hermitage one of Moscow s most celebrated restaurants Olivier s salad quickly became immensely popular with Hermitage regulars and became the restaurant s signature dish citation needed nbsp Olivier salad prepared with the Hermitage restaurant s recipeAt the turn of the 20th century one of Olivier s sous chefs Ivan Ivanov attempted to steal the recipe While preparing the dressing one evening in solitude as was his custom Olivier was suddenly called away Taking advantage of the opportunity Ivanov sneaked into Olivier s private kitchen and observed his mise en place which allowed him to make reasonable assumptions about the recipe of Olivier s famed dressing Ivanov then left Olivier s employ and went to work as a chef for Moskva a somewhat inferior restaurant where he began to serve a suspiciously similar salad under the name metropolitan salad Russian Stolichnyj tr Stolichny It was reported by the gourmets of the time however that the dressing on the Stolichny salad was of a lower quality than Olivier s meaning that it was missing something citation needed Later Ivanov sold the recipe for the salad to various publishing houses which further contributed to its popularization Due to the closure of the Hermitage restaurant in 1905 and the Olivier family s subsequent departure from Russia the salad could now be referred to as Olivier One of the first printed recipes for Olivier salad by Aleksandrova appearing in 1894 called for half a hazel grouse two potatoes one small cucumber or a large cornichon 3 4 lettuce leaves 3 large crayfish tails 1 4 cup cubed aspic 1 teaspoon of capers 3 5 olives and 11 2 tablespoon Provencal dressing mayonnaise As often happens with gourmet recipes which become popular the ingredients which were rare expensive seasonal or difficult to prepare were gradually replaced with cheaper and more readily available foods citation needed Ingredients edit nbsp Advertisement for mogul sauce and other condiments by John Burgess amp SonThe earliest published recipe known to date appeared in the Russian magazine Nasha pisha Nasha pishcha Our Food No 6 31 March 1894 This magazine published from 1891 to 1896 and edited by M Ignatiev stated that the original recipe contained mogul sauce or kabul sauce similar to Worcestershire sauce manufactured by John Burgess amp Son Note 1 the brand he reputedly used and Crosse amp Blackwell citation needed The book Rukovodstvo k izucheniyu osnov kulinarnogo iskusstva Rukovodstvo k izucheniyu osnov kulinarnogo iskusstva Guide to the Fundamentals of Culinary Arts 1897 by P Aleksandrova gave a recipe containing grouse crayfish potatoes cucumber lettuce aspic capers olives and mayonnaise The author wrote that veal partridge or chicken could be substituted but the authentic recipe contained grouse citation needed In post revolutionary Russia cheaper ingredients were substituted for the originals grouse was replaced by chicken or sausage crayfish by hard boiled egg cucumbers olives and capers by pickled cucumbers and green peas Earlier it always included cold meat such as ham or veal tongue or fish The mid 20th century restaurant version involved not just vegetables but also pickled tongue sausage lobster meat truffles etc garnished with capers anchovy fillets etc Some versions molded it in aspic In modern usage it is usually boiled diced vegetables bound in mayonnaise with Doktorskaya type sausage The most common alternative version where the sausage is replaced with boiled or smoked chicken is called Stolichny salad after Ivanov s version A multitude of other versions named unnamed and even trademarked exist but only Olivier and Stolichny salad have entered the common vernacular of post Soviet states Modern Olivier edit nbsp Typical Soviet style Olivier saladToday s popular version of Olivier salad containing boiled potatoes dill pickles or fresh cucumbers peas eggs carrots onion and boiled beef chicken or bologna dressed with mayonnaise is a version of Ivanov s Stolichny salad and only faintly resembles Olivier s original creation This version was a staple of any Soviet holiday dinner especially of a Novy God New Year s Eve dinner to the extent that its presence was considered on a par with Soviet Champagne or mandarin oranges due to availability of components in winter Even though more exotic foods are widely available in Russia now its popularity has hardly diminished this salad was and maybe still is the most traditional dish for the home New Year celebration for Russian people 2 Festive Russian and post Soviet states homemade versions are traditionally at the cook s whim While some of the ingredients are considered to be basic and essential others are either favoured or dismissed as a threat to supposed authenticity The biggest Olivier salad weighing 1841 kg was prepared in December 2012 in Orenburg 3 4 In other countries editEuropean cafes and delicatessens often provide an entire range of potato salads Additionally cafeterias convenience stores and truck stops sell a number of sub par factory packaged or locally made versions mostly extremely simple using basic ingredients with cheap mayonnaise like dressing citation needed Southeast Europe edit nbsp Serbian Christmas mealIn Serbia Olivier salad is called russian salad and is very common on the New Year and Christmas table The salad is widely popular as ruska salata ruska salata in Bulgaria Serbia and North Macedonia and sallate ruse in Albania The Bulgarian version of the salad usually consists of potatoes carrots peas pickles and some sort of salami or ham In Bosnia and Herzegovina both the ruska salata and francuska salata which is essentially Russian salad prepared without meat are very popular especially during holidays In Croatia and Slovenia it is typically prepared without meat and is usually called francuska salata in Croatian and francoska solata in Slovene both meaning French salad The Romanian variant called salată de boeuf beef salad is considered a traditional dish It is a combination of finely chopped beef or chicken and root vegetables folded in mayonnaise and finished with murături traditional Romanian mixed pickles It can also be made vegetarian In Turkey it is known as Rus salatasi Russian Salad The Turkish version consists of boiled and sliced carrots and potatoes sliced cucumber pickles boiled peas and mayonnaise and is sometimes decorated with boiled and sliced eggs black olives and beet root pickles It is served as meze and is used as a filling for some sandwiches and kumpir jacket potato Another Turkish name for Olivier salad is Amerikan salatasi American salad a euphemistic misnomer originating from the Cold War period Central Europe edit In Slovakia it is called zemiakovy salat potato salad There are several versions however it typically consists of boiled and cubed vegetables potatoes carrots finely chopped onions and pickles in a mayonnaise dressing often with diced hard boiled eggs and canned green peas It is seasoned with salt black pepper and mustard Some fluid from the pickles may also be added In Czech it is called simply bramborovy salat potato salad It consists of boiled and cubed vegetables potatoes carrots parsley and celery root finely chopped onions and pickles in a mayonnaise dressing often with diced hard boiled eggs some kind of soft salami and canned green peas It is the side dish of choice to go with schnitzel or breaded carp staple Christmas meals in the Czech Republic nbsp Salatka jarzynowa PolandPolish salatka jarzynowa or salatka warzywna vegetable salad often simply called salatka is vegetarian consisting of peas hard boiled eggs and the mirepoix always cut into small cubes seasoned with mayonnaise salt pepper Recipes usually vary by region tart apples or pickles can be added and even by household sometimes even adding meat e g ham One such notable exception is szalot Polish pronunciation ˈʂawɔt a Silesian variety which may include not only boiled potatoes carrots peas and boiled eggs but also bacon sausages or pickled herring 5 Such salads are often served on family celebrations in particular on Christmas Eve In Hungary the meatless version is called franciasalata French salad Versions with meat added are called orosz hussalata 2 Russian meat salad With or without meat it is a popular food all year round nbsp Ensaladilla rusa Madrid SpainSouthern Europe edit In Greece it can be found on almost any restaurant s menu and is called rwsikh salata rossiki salata it usually contains no meat Ensaladilla rusa Russian little salad is widely consumed in Spain and it is served as a tapa in many bars It typically consists of minced boiled potato minced boiled carrots canned tuna minced boiled eggs peas and mayonnaise 6 In Italy Insalata russa has the same ingredients A similar version is also popular in Portugal where it is called salada russa It is usually served either as a standalone dish or as a garnish to fish dishes particularly fish fillets Northern Europe edit In Iceland and Norway it is called russisk salat and contains carrots and green peas in mayonnaise dressing It may also include small shrimp 7 Often the salad is paired with smoked meat on bread A similar but distinct salad known as italiensk salat is also available in Scandinavian countries consisting of shredded cabbage and carrots in a mayonnaise dressing The two salads russisk salat and italiensk salat are often confused 8 In Finland the regional salad italiansalaatti contains carrots peas and ham in mayonnaise dressing but replaces potatoes with spaghetti or macaroni In the Netherlands there is a similar salad called Huzarensalade Hussar Salad but this salad already existed in the 1840s Its name probably derives from the Dutch hussar regiments and refers to the original ingredient of horsemeat 9 Asia edit nbsp Russian salad Hanoi VietnamOlivier salad Persian الويه is popular in Iran where it is known as salad Olivieh and usually made with potatoes eggs Persian pickled cucumbers carrots chicken peas and mayonnaise and is frequently a sandwich filler 10 nbsp Russian salad Karachi PakistanIt is a popular salad in Vietnam Bangladesh Pakistan and India as well where it is usually made with potatoes peas apples or pineapples and mayonnaise and is frequently used as a side dish in cafes Another version of Russian salad is also very popular in Pakistan which bears no resemblance to Olivier salad and instead is a cabbage and apple slaw Japanese potato salad potesara ポテサラ is often said to be a yoshoku version of the Olivier salad differing in a semi mashed consistency of the potato chopped ham as a main meat ingredient instead of traditional poultry and a liberal use of rice vinegar and karashi mustard in its dressing Olivier salad is believed to have been introduced as a Capital salad or Niislel salad in Mongolia during the Soviet period It usually consists of minced ham and carrots minced boiled eggs minced boiled carrots and potatoes dressed with mayonnaise It is widely popular amongst Mongolians especially during the festive seasons citation needed Latin America edit nbsp Argentinian ensalada rusaThe dish is also very popular in many Latin American countries where it is called ensalada rusa and has been reduced to its minimum minced boiled potatoes and carrots green beans and abundant mayonnaise based dressing In Argentina it is usually served on its own as a first course or with a very thinly sliced beef wrapping called matambre in a dish called matambre con rusa Argentines of Eastern European Jewish origin may make the salad with tuna In Peru Chile Colombia Venezuela and Argentina it is a traditional Christmas side dish In the Dominican Republic the dish is made with diced boiled vegetables including beets carrots potatoes and sometimes corn mixed with mayonnaise and spices It is often served as a side dish citation needed See also edit nbsp Food portal nbsp Russia portalList of chicken dishes List of Russian dishes List of salads Mimosa salad Chicken salad Egg salad Potato saladNotes edit Now owned by the Greencore Group 1 Archived 2012 08 14 at the Wayback MachineReferences edit a b A salad that no nation wants to call their own tasteatlas com Retrieved 2023 01 04 Russian Salad Olivier Samyj bolshoj salat Olive The largest Olivier salad in Russian The book of records of Russia 2012 12 16 Mirovoj rekord po prigotovleniyu salata Olive ustanovlen v Orenburge in Russian RIA Novosti 2012 12 16 Archived from the original on 2012 12 19 Marek Szoltysek Kuchnia slaska Wydawnictwo Slaskie ABC Rybnik 2003 ISBN 83 88966 07 3 in Polish ensaladilla rusa recipe russian potato salad spanishsabores com 4 April 2013 Retrieved 2014 12 29 Delikat Russisk Rekesalat Delikat in Norwegian Bokmal Retrieved 2022 06 05 Maerkelige madnavne Hvorfor hedder det italiensk salat og russisk salat Samvirke samvirke dk in Danish Retrieved 2022 06 06 Nicoline van der Sijs 2022 10 01 Etymologica de huzarensalade Neerlandistiek nl Salad Olivieh My Persian KitchenFurther reading editAlan Davidson The Oxford Companion to Food Oxford 1999 ISBN 0 19 211579 0 Anna Kushkova At the Center of the Table The Rise and Fall of the Olivier Salad Russian Studies in History 50 1 44 96 Summer 2011 publisher s page pay External links edit nbsp Media related to Olivier salad at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Olivier salad amp oldid 1202275903, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.