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    Home • Recipes • Salads & Sides

    Simple Green Salad - The Best All-Rounder, Seasonal Side

    Published: May 27, 2024 · Modified: Jul 23, 2025 by Jill ColonnaLeave a Comment · This post may contain affiliate links. Read our disclosure policy

    Jump to Recipe

    This simple green salad recipe is the most versatile side dish you can make. It's healthy, quick and easy - just toss together a variety of fresh, seasonal vegetables for a simple mixed green salad that pairs perfectly with any meal. Add a light French dressing with only 3 ingredients, some fresh herbs and toasted seeds for extra flavour and texture

    green salad tossed in French dressing with added toasted nuts, herb flowers and wild strawberries

    What Does a Green Salad Include?

    In France, 'une salade verte' usually means just lettuce - no frills. Expect a handful of leaves dressed in vinaigrette with some chopped herbs. Ask for a green salad in a Paris crêperie, and that's exactly what you'll get.

    But at home we can do better. A simple mixed green salad can be so much more - just by adding what's in season for ultimate flavour and nutrients. The result is you can adapt it from your summer to winter recipes - even for your holiday dishes.

    How to Make Salad in a Simple Way

    • Pick fresh, seasonal greens
    • Add texture with raw or lightly cooked veg
    • Toss in a simple green salad dressing with 3 ingredients
    • Top with toastsed seeds, herbs or even fruit.

    Best Ingredients for a Green Salad

    For the best green salad, choose from your favourite, fresh and seasonal green lettuce leaves. Here are just some: iceberg, gem, lamb's lettuce, baby spinach and pea shoots. If you like your leaves with a more sharp, peppery taste, go for watercress, arugula or rocket. Would you believe the French adore slightly bitter Dandelion leaves (known as 'pissenlit')?

    Leaves aside, add chopped avocado, green bell peppers, cucumber, papaya, and fava beans. If possible, add spring onions (THE salad onion), it definitely adds extra flavour as raw garlic is difficult to digest. Just ask my Corsican mother-in-law; she'll give you a lecture on the subject, but that's another story. At least chop up a shallot.

    Perhaps the ultimate raw veg is fresh raw peas. There's nothing to beat 'les petits-pois' straight out of their pods with that unmistakable flavour and natural crunch.

    wooden salad bowl with arugula, avocado fand chopping board with spring onions, asparagus, apple and toasted pumpkin seeds

    Salad with Cooked Green Vegetables

    According to French chef, Auguste Escoffier (Guide Culinaire) a simple green salad is made up of raw greens. If we add a variety of cooked vegetables, then it becomes a composed salad, such as the classic Niçoise Salad. Although, this latter real-deal from Nice actually doesn't contain cooked vegetables like green beans or potatoes!
    I'm adding this just so you know, but we like to add a few seasonal cooked and cooled veg, just for the thrill (Jings, I live life in the fast lane!)

    So, for cooked green vegetables add green beans, cauliflower/broccoli, or asparagus, - whatever freshest produce you can find. Cook briefly (about 5 minutes) in boiling water, top up with cold water, drain and chop into the salad.

    For me, the best green salad in the world is with oven-roasted asparagus. It takes just a few minutes in the oven.

    spoon of mixed vinegar and oil to create a French vinaigrette
    Even the salad dressing is smiling

    Simple French Dressing - 3 Ingredients

    Toss in the lightest French dressing made with olive oil, white wine or cider vinegar and seasoned with pepper and salt. Shake in a jar with the lid on (well, yes).

    For a simple salad, the dressing rule is
    3 parts oil to one part vinegar, salt and pepper.

    Auguste Escoffier in his Guide Culinaire (1903)

    Add the salad dressing just before you serve to keep it crisp. There's nothing worse than salad that has been sitting in its sauce for too long and resulted in turning limp, lifeless and downright soggy.

    plates of green salad with lamb's lettuce, fresh peas, chives and spring onions
    Adding herb flowers (chives seen here) is pretty but the flavour is even better

    Salad Toppings: Fresh Herbs and Seeds

    For crunch and nutrition, toast a handful of:

    • Pumpkin seeds (pepitas, also green). Pepitas are good for you, with a good source of iron. Just one portion of this salad provides 22% of your daily value of iron.
    • Walnuts, hazelnuts, almonds, pistachios or sesame seeds

    Dry-fry in a pan without any oil for 3-5 mins. This helps to bring out their flavour and is such a handy topping on all sorts of light lunches and salads. Make a large batch and, once cool, store in a lidded jar for up to 6 weeks.

    Fresh herbs make all the difference too. Try:

    • Flat-leaf parsley - particularly provides a vitamin C boost.
    • Chives, basil, mint, coriander/cilantro, chervil and tarragon.
    • Also top with a sprinkling of French croûtons with garlic.

    For more on flowers and herbal flavours,
    see the guide to aromatic fresh herbs.

    the best ever forkful with most green vegetables piled high

    Extra Ingredients to Try

    The beauty of a simple green salad is how it changes with the seasons - and it's the best in the world! Here are a few additions that aren't always green - but taste fabulous:

    • Radishes - whole, sliced or pickled radishes (without sugar)
    • Beetroot - sliced pickled or grated raw
    • Carrots - grated for colour
    • Olives - try small Niçois olives as less sharp, or salty, large Kalamatas.
    • Apples - for acidity: Granny Smith, Braeburn, Chantecler
    • Strawberries - Yes really. Like tomatoes, this works. Especially with arugula and parmesan.
    • Parmesan - thin shavings of Parmigiano Reggiano bring salty umami.
    a colourful spring green salad: avocado, asparagus, peas, pea shoots, herbs, pumpkin seeds and pickled radish

    How to Serve

    Serve this French-style green salad recipe with just about anything:

    For Breakfast, brunch or Light lunch:

    • cheese scones or cheese waffles
    • onion tarte tatin
    • smoked haddock fishcakes
    • Corsican mint omelette
    • Mostly served with classic savoury crêpes, our popular thin buckwheat pancakes from Brittany and Normandy.

    For Dinner to accompany Main dishes:

    • BBQs, grilled meats, risotto and pasta
    • chorizo risotto
    • Corsican cheese lasagna,
    • goat's cheese pasta
    • creamy lemon pasta sauce and Alsatian egg noodles.
    • Croque Monsieur (French café classic).

    More French salad recipes to enjoy:

    • French potato salad
    • Warm Goat's Cheese Salad (salade de chèvre chaud)
    • Roquefort Salad with pear and walnuts (the King of French blue cheese)
    • Roast beetroot salad with smoked mackerel
    • Land and sea salad (terre et mer)
    • Carrot Salad, Moroccan style
    • Classic Niçoise salad
    creating a simple green salad with fresh produce, nuts and seeds

    Simple Green Salad

    Jill Colonna
    This delicious, nutritional yet simple green salad is great with your favourite seasonal veggies and complements any meal. Add toasted seeds and fresh herbs for extra flavour and texture. Made with the simplest French salad dressing with only 3 ingredients.
    Print Recipe Pin Recipe
    Prep Time 20 minutes mins
    Cook Time 5 minutes mins
    Total Time 25 minutes mins
    Course Side Dish
    Cuisine French
    Servings 4 people
    Calories 330 kcal

    Ingredients
      

    • 1 avocado chopped
    • 2 spring onions (scallions) finely chopped
    • 1 small lettuce or choice of leaves arugula, pea shoots, baby spinach, lamb's lettuce
    • 2 tablespoon fresh peas shelled
    • 30 g (2 tbsp) pumpkin seeds and/or walnuts
    • 1 apple (Granny Smith, Braeburn or Chantecler) chopped
    • 2 tablespoon fresh herbs (chives, parsley, chervil or basil) finely chopped

    Simple French Dressing

    • 3 tablespoon olive oil extra virgin
    • 1 tablespoon white wine or cidre vinegar
    • ½ tsp each pepper and salt fleur de sel, Maldon flakes or Celtic sea salt

    Instructions
     

    • Wash the salad leaves and dry by shaking them over the sink or, even better, with a salad spinner. Chop up all the other vegetables, fruit (if using) and place in a large salad bowl. Add the apple last (to avoid browning) and chopped fresh herbs.
    • Toast the seeds and/or nuts. Place them in a non-stick frying pan without any oil and toast for just 3-5 minutes, depending on how you like them toasted. Shake about a few times in the pan for even toasting. Set aside on the counter to cool (see NOTES) then add to the bowl.

    Simple French Dressing

    • Pour the olive oil and vinegar into a jar or bowl with seasoning to your taste and mix well. Pour over the salad just before serving and toss well.

    Notes

    Delicious with lightly cooked fresh asparagus. Simply place in a pan of simmering water and heat for about 5 minutes. Cover with cold water, drain, dry and slice.
    Optional extras: top with the likes of radishes, grated beetroot or carrot - even strawberries.
    Toasted Seeds and Nuts: Make a bigger batch to toast and, once cool, keep the rest in an sealed jar for up to 6 weeks and sprinkle on more salads.
    Nutritional Value per serving: 32% dietary fibre, 7g protein, 5% calcium, 22% iron and 15% potassium.

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      Authentic French Potato Salad - Recipe Without Mayonnaise (à la Parisienne)
    • Moroccan handpainted bowl filled with a raw carrot salad topped with fresh mint, toasted nuts and seeds next to oranges and a Moroccan teapot
      Raw Carrot Salad Moroccan Style
    • side dish of fragrant long grain rice with a hint of cloves
      How to Cook Basmati Rice Indian Style on the Stove

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    Bonjour - I'm Jill

    Author and home cook in Paris. Scottish and French, I've spent 30+ years in Paris sharing lighter, flavour-forward recipes with less sugar and no fuss. No fancy techniques - just real food we eat at home. You'll also find my travel tips to help you taste France like a local.

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    Bonjour - I'm Jill

    Author and home cook in Paris. Scottish and French, I've spent 30+ years in Paris sharing lighter, flavour-forward recipes with less sugar and no fuss. No fancy techniques - just real food we eat at home. You'll also find my travel tips to help you taste France like a local.

    Meet Jill
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