Salad for lunch: rice noodles with beet, carrots, and herbs

Here's the trick to preparing a week's worth of salad lunches in very little time: use your food processor.

Prepare all of your vegetables ahead of time and this rice noodles with beet, carrots, and herbs salad for lunch will come together in a flash.

The Kitchen Paper

February 1, 2016

I really wanted to call this post “how to prepare a week worth of lunches in less than an hour.”

But seriously, people have been asking “what are you eating now that you’re in school 40 hours each week!?” and while I’m still kinda figuring that out, I have lunch dialed. And breakfast, really. Dinner though: sometimes it’s chips/salsa/hummus. OOPS. I’m working on it!

This salad has a few key elements (rice noodles, veg, sauce, herbs), a couple of accessories (nuts, black sesame seeds), and a ton of freedom. Choose whatever veg you want! Make a sauce that you like better! Add more goodies (nori, anyone?)! Swap almost for peanuts or cashews (neither of which I can have at school, hence the almonds)! Just make sure to make the VEG and HERBS (OK, and the sauce) the priority!

In Kentucky, the oldest Black independent library is still making history

Here’s the trick to preparing this in huge quantities in very little time: le food processor! I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: my food processor is hands down the best kitchen appliance I own. I cannot recommend it enough. I have a decades-old Cuisinart that works like a champ! For this project I used the s-blade (kale, cilantro, mint), the shredder (beets, carrots), and the slicer (cucumber, green onions). The most essential is probably the shredder — it saves you the most time.

I get all the veg sliced/diced/shredded before I do anything else. Get ’em nice and small! This makes for easy eating. You can cook the rice noodles while you’re doing this, if you want. I use the method of pouring boiling water over the dry rice noodles and letting them sit for 7-10 minutes (covered). I slightly under-cook them, because they’ll soak up some juices from the veggies/sauce when you pack it in the morning!

You could store all of the veggies separately, but I mix them together — when I pack my lunch, I take a scoop of rice noodles (which are in a zip-top with sesame oil, so they’re easy to pull out!), a HUGE scoop (or two) of veg, plenty of extras (nuts, sesame seeds, cucumbers). I put the herbs in with the veg, just to make it easy. And of course: add some sauce! I make a big batch, and pour in 2-3 tablespoons for each serving. Stick that in your bag and just try to make it to lunchtime without digging in.

Rice Noodle Salad with Beets, Carrots, and Herbs
Makes about 5 servings

For the sauce:
4 tablespoons soy sauce (tamari, if you need this to be gluten free)
2 tablespoons toasted sesame oil (+ more for noodles)
1 tablespoon rice wine vinegar
1 teaspoon sriracha
2 tablespoons fresh lime juice
1 teaspoon fish sauce
2 tablespoons water

A majority of Americans no longer trust the Supreme Court. Can it rebuild?

For the salad:
12-18 ounces dry rice noodles (this will vary from person to person!)
1 large bunch kale
2 large carrots
2 large beets
6 green onions
1 cucumber
2 cups cilantro
1 cup fresh mint
1 cup sliced almonds
2 tablespoons black sesame seeds

1. Whisk together all the sauce ingredients, and set aside.

2. Bring 8 cups of water to a boil. Remove from heat and add the rice noodles. Cover, and let sit for 7 minutes. Test a noodle at 7 minutes, and cook until slightly underdone. Drain, and rinse thoroughly with cold water. Drain again, and toss with a teaspoon of toasted sesame oil. Set aside.

3. Prepare the veggies in your food processor: remove the kale ribs, and use the s-blade to chop into fine pieces. Shred the carrots and beets. Slice the green onions and cucumber, and again use the s-blade to chop the cilantro and fresh mint. You can mix all of the veggies together, or keep them separated!

4. To assemble, take a large handful of rice noodles, a handful or two of the veggies, and top with a few Tbsp of sliced almonds, and a 1/2 teaspoon black sesame seeds. Mix it all together, and enjoy!

Related post on The Kitchen Paper: Kale Salad with Goat Cheese and Hazelnuts