In pre-Roman times, People in England enjoyed beet greens. The Roman occupation brought lettuces, cucumbers, carrots, endive and sorrel. Medieval monks planted them among the herbs in their gardens, and Renaissance gardeners developed new varieties and produced them in greater quantities.
The word "salad" comes from the Latin word "herba salta" or "salted herbs," so called because such greens were usually seasoned with dressings containing lots of salt. Early American colonists called it "sallet." They brought their favorite seeds to the New World, established kitchen gardens, and dined on their seasonal treasures. The first German-American herbal, printed in 1777, included 35 plants used as salads.
During the late 19th Century, the concept of salads expanded. At first the most daring addition was the fresh tomato, long suspected by some Americans and Western Europeans as dangerous when eaten raw. Fruit salads followed , and by the end of the century, potato, egg, or chicken salads in fancy presentations flourished.
The modern salad bar probably first emerged in the late 1960s.
Build a Salad
- Bring assorted ingredients and let students build their own salads, as they like them. Bring unusual ingredients in many colors (See below.) to encourage students to try something different.
- Give prizes for Prettiest Salad, Most Unusual Salad and Most Nutritious Salad.
- Keep it neat by having students assemble their salads in zip lock bags and drizzle in dressing. Provide plastic forks and napkins.
- Discuss the benefits of including a variety of fruits and vegetables in the diet.
- Students sort vegetable ingredients by color; fruit. vegetable; protein, carbohydrate; plant part (leaf, root, stem or fruit); food group. Students think of other ways to sort vegetables.
- Students weigh their salads.
- Students compose their salads into still life art compositions. Photograph salads for web presentations.