Classic Tuna Salad

A classic tuna salad with albacore tuna, green onions, finely minced celery, capers, pimientos, and salad olives in a mayonnaise dressing with herbs and spices.

A classic tuna salad with a mayonnaise dressing.
Photo: Cynthia Dalton

It was, what we used to call, “swell elegant.” “It” was my first “grown-up” birthday party. At the very sage, wise, and sophisticated age of six, my birthday party plan went from hotdogs and potato chips, to a lady-like luncheon salad, hard rolls and butter, ice tea, and a meaty, beefsteak tomato stuffed with my Mom’s classic tuna salad.

It also went from a simple homemade layer cake for dessert, to a masterpiece my Mom created, based on my fantasy cake I had described to her for nearly three months in advance.

My dream cake was based on a strapless, white evening dress my always elegant Mom had, with layers of silk and chiffon and a wide midriff of ornately embroidered bright pink, tangerine, and  fuchia colored roses and rose buds with trailing leaves and vines, in two tones of green, both light and dark.

My Mom was a fantastic cook. You can blame my love of cooking directly on my Mom and I think some of the greatest memories I have from childhood involve the time I spent with my Mom in the kitchen.

But more than a great cook, my Mom was a brave cook. No challenge phased her. So she took it in stride when I requested a multi-layered strawberry cake with white buttercream frosting and as literal a translation of those embroidered roses as she could possibly conjure up.

My Mom had never ventured into sugar-craft, but no matter, she taught herself how to make the tiny, detailed, buds, blooms, leaves, and tendrils. The result of all her hours of effort was the most beautiful and delicious cake I had ever eaten or ever will eat again.

I don’t remember the presents I received that year, I don’t even remember the names of the little friends in attendance (for which I should be ashamed), but that gorgeous cake was the greatest gift EVER!

And the classic tuna salad became my most requested party entree, vying only with the New Orleans-style boiled shrimp feast for which my Mom was also famous.

Parsley, green onions, celery, capers, lemon, and hot sauce are ingredients for classic tuna salad.
Photo: Cynthia Dalton

You don’t have to wait for a special occasion however, to enjoy Mom’s classic tuna salad — it travels well for lunch — although you will need access to refrigeration or an insulated bag to keep it chilled. And, it shines stuffed into an avacado half or a ripe, earthy tomato. Do be sure to season the tomato or avacado half — my Mom believed that all food elements need their own seasoning and I concure.

Please use the comments section below to share your memories of your first “grown-up” birthday party feast as well as your take on this recipe.

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Classic Tuna Salad
Don't be put off by the long list of ingredients — which are mostly pantry staples, and measuring them into the dressing is a snap. Also, if you're using this for a sandwich filling, unless you are using a sturdy roll designed to soak up dressing, I find it's best to avoid a soggy sandwich by packing bread and filling separately, until lunchtime.© The Working Lunch Project
A classic tuna salad with a mayonnaise dressing.
Votes: 0
Rating: 0
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Rate this recipe!
Course Lunch
Cuisine American
Prep Time 20 minutes
Passive Time 1 hour
Servings
servings
Ingredients
Course Lunch
Cuisine American
Prep Time 20 minutes
Passive Time 1 hour
Servings
servings
Ingredients
A classic tuna salad with a mayonnaise dressing.
Votes: 0
Rating: 0
You:
Rate this recipe!
Instructions
  1. In a small bowl mix first 12 ingredients (mayonnaise through black pepper) for dressing and set aside.
  2. In a medium bowl, mix together remaining ingredients.
  3. Add most of dressing to tuna mixture, toss to combine, and add the remaining dressing to your desired consistency.
  4. Refrigerate and chill tuna salad for 1 hour to allow flavors to combine before derving. Use within a few days.
Recipe Notes

Nutritional facts per serving:

252 calories

21g fat

556mg sodium

3g carbs

0.7g fiber

14g protein

 

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Tahini Salad Dressing

A toasted seame tahini salad dressing.
Photo: Cynthia Dalton

The genesis for this Tahini Salad Dressing came from a favorite, creamy, Middle Eastern inspired ‘store-bought’ salad dressing of mine from a few years back, that I used to find in the ‘natural foods’ aisle of the grocery store — it gained in popularity and naturally (pun intended) gained substantially in price as well.

I’m unable to justify such extravagance for a truly small amount of dressing — caviar is a luxury item — I just don’t think salad dressing falls into the same category.

This tangy salad dressing gets its pucker quotient from freshly squeezed lemon juice and cider vinegar. With a rich flavor from toasted sesame oil and soy sauce (if preferred, liquid aminos can substitute for the soy sauce), this dressing is a study in savory, substantial deliciousness.

To make this dressing more of a clone of the original, one could always add a small handful each of chopped flat-leaf parsley and either chopped green onions or chives (I prefer not to, only because I can then add these ingredients directly to my salads, or not, according to my mood in the moment).

 

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Tahini Salad Dressing
This makes a fantastic dressing for salads featuring meats (or, seasoned, baked tofu). My favorite way to enjoy this dressing is drizzled over a salad of mixed greens, sliced cold steak, hard-boiled egg, red bell pepper strips, and red onion. Sesame tahini salad dressing also makes an excellent dipping sauce for your favorite nibbles. © The Working Lunch Project
A toasted seame tahini salad dressing.
Votes: 0
Rating: 0
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Course Lunch
Prep Time 10 minutes
Passive Time 3 hours
Servings
1/4 cup servings
Ingredients
Course Lunch
Prep Time 10 minutes
Passive Time 3 hours
Servings
1/4 cup servings
Ingredients
A toasted seame tahini salad dressing.
Votes: 0
Rating: 0
You:
Rate this recipe!
Instructions
  1. In a medium bowl, whisk together all ingedients until combined and creamy.
  2. Transfer to a covered container and chill in refrigerator for 3 hours to allow flavors to meld. Use within 1 week.
Recipe Notes

Nutritional facts per serving:

214 calories

18g fat

462mg sodium

8.4g carbs

2.1g fiber

4.6g protein

 

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