This basically looks like what i bring back to the table from a salad bar. Pickled beets, pickles, tuna, macaroni salad, chopped eggs, bacon, cole slaw, all on a bed of spinach.
@fugithegreat4 ай бұрын
That's what I was going to say! It looks like a very hearty salad.
@magesentron4 ай бұрын
Totally was thinking the same thing! This is the salad of the future!
@wayneantoniazzi27064 ай бұрын
I was struck by the salad bar comparison myself! "The more things change the more they stay the same!"
@alomaalber65144 ай бұрын
foods for a tropical climate!
@glamazon61724 ай бұрын
I will annihilate a salad bar buffet.
@jimbob33324 ай бұрын
Salmagundy, Gathered on a Monday, Washed on a Tuesday, Chopped on a Wednesday, Cooked on a Thusday, Eaten on a Friday, Saved for a Saturday, Thrown out on Sunday, That was the end of Salma Gundy.
@Mechabang4 ай бұрын
A good poem more efficient and entertaining than Jamie Oliver's song/recipe
@shallowgod55394 ай бұрын
Beat me to it
@chakrazoo4 ай бұрын
I agree
@zoethegreatfish4 ай бұрын
I was thinking it sounded like "Solomon Grundy born on a Monday...."
@belhariry4 ай бұрын
My favorite Batman villain, Salama Gundy!!
@ravenwolf71284 ай бұрын
Very similar to the antipasto dishes my grandmother made (she grew up in Italy) Meats, olives, pickled veggies, fresh greens, chopped cheeses, summer sausage, boiled eggs, lots of herbs and spices; served before the main meal with homemade bread and an olive oil and vinegar dressing. Man, grandma's food was always soooo good.
@andyv22094 ай бұрын
Yeah that's what i thought of too, it's still a very common dish where i am both in home kitchens and restaurants
@Ultrad3213 ай бұрын
Grandma's are always great at cooking. Mine was all old school southern comfort food. Fried chicken, country style steak, baked macaroni and cheese, homemade biscuits😊
@Karen-b3b1fАй бұрын
@@Ultrad321I’m a grandma and I can’t cook worth beans, but I can lead you on a long hike and keep the food away from the bears. 🙂
@tristanc38734 ай бұрын
Conceptually it reminds me of modern Cobb Salads. Large party salads where a base of greens is topped heavily with multicolored and strongly flavored ingredients like blue cheese, grilled chicken, tomatoes, seasoned croutons, bacon, boiled eggs, etc. Especially in the presentation focus, and making things look large. Cobb salads commonly are served on platters that can just barely hold them for the same effect as the heaping over a bowl described in the recipe in the video.
@shelbymarie94084 ай бұрын
Great now I want a Cobb salad 😂😂😂😂
@JC-fj7oo2 ай бұрын
Or a chef salad. Essentially the same idea of taking all of the meats and veg that are leftover from the week and putting them on some greens or tossing with vinegar.
@olafwilhelm46844 ай бұрын
Townsends: Salam Agundy Me: Agundy Salam
@Goblin_deez.4 ай бұрын
First someone beats me to a Solomon Grundy joke and now I scroll down and see my back up joke I angrily ‘like’ this comment
@olafwilhelm46844 ай бұрын
@@Goblin_deez. aww... *huggggs*
@jbkhan11354 ай бұрын
lol
@GunterThePenguinHatesHugs4 ай бұрын
_"Salam Agundy, brother 🤝"_
@matthewanipen24184 ай бұрын
every now and then there is a joke so funny and clever the mind has a delay before it lets you laugh. thank you for this.
@williamjacobik79664 ай бұрын
Salamagundy, born on a Monday
@Ritabug344 ай бұрын
😂
@mii66194 ай бұрын
Came here to write that.. Beat me to it!
@mpersad4 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@kuchenjaeger21644 ай бұрын
So happy I wasn't the only one who immediately thought this lmao
@protect_trans_lives4 ай бұрын
Same thought lol :D
@jldisme4 ай бұрын
It sounds very much like fiambre from Guatemala. Fiambre is a cold salad, traditionally served during Dia de los Muertos, often boasting an impressive 50+ ingredients!
@genericpersonx3334 ай бұрын
Interestingly, "green" salads are one of the older foods we know about thanks to them being literally noteworthy. One would only have some weeks each year to have a true green salad of fresh greens with other fresh vegetables and fruits before they had to be preserved or eaten, so people from ancient Romans to Frankish kings considered them special enough to mention even if there are not many elaborate recipes on the scale of Salamagundy here.
@trueKENTUCKY4 ай бұрын
Salamundy
@donttalktomebye4 ай бұрын
Interesting how they were so coveted and people nowadays try to avoid it
@arthas6404 ай бұрын
funny how they've gone from peasant food nobles considered insulting to serve (like McDonalds at the White house today) to today where it's a favorite food of the 1% because of how healthy it is and how expensive peasant foods like kale and watercress are now.
@pendlera29592 ай бұрын
That seems odd. Greens are super easy to grow, have multiple harvests per year, and can be grown in quite cold weather.
@arthas6402 ай бұрын
@@pendlera2959 yeah I've dug kale out of the snow for lunch, and chard is similar. Same with dandelions. They grow slower in cold weather but if you plant it late in the year you can eat it most of the winter. Eating it as a salad would be kind of tough and bitter but you can make a rubbed/massaged salad to avoid that if you want it raw or just parboil it.
@az555444 ай бұрын
My grandfather always laid out a Sunday Night Supper. Leftovers from the fridge withbread, cheese and jars of pickles, mayo, mustard. We loved it as kids on the 1970s.
@birchlover33774 ай бұрын
Definitely sounds like the descendant
@SusanYeske7014 ай бұрын
Smorgasbord!
@Budrica4 ай бұрын
We used a variety of crackers and lots of pickles, olives, cheeses, canned fish, sliced onions, etc and called it "A Feast" haha
@partylikeits10664 ай бұрын
My german grandparents have something like that most nights
@mojosbigsticks4 ай бұрын
Same on a Sunday night, as we'd had the roast for lunch, Mum didn't want to cook again, and everyone was a different level of hungry.
@tonlito224 ай бұрын
In defense of pirate Salamagundy: pirates liked to live above their means and play act rich men, and from what I've heard this was a sort of celebration food for them. Adding to that, a lot of pirate captains were or had been if not gentlemen associates of gentlemen and were aware of the place of grand salad, that also made a good impression on the crew as a colorful communal dish.
@raedwulf614 ай бұрын
Aaarrh!
@Tinil04 ай бұрын
...But there absolutely is a traditional Jamaican dish called Solon Gundy that is fish pate and seems far more likely to be a part of their diet?
@juliaskalla39794 ай бұрын
I think pirates like this one more so that way they won’t get scurvy
@Cristina.Castillos4 ай бұрын
I once got invited to a fisherman's party, and I was honestly expecting seafood and fish. However... he got chicken... So I doubt a pirate crew that would likely eat fish and crackers all the time, would also have fish as a party food.
@KrisHughes4 ай бұрын
All sailors, pirates or otherwise, were usually very glad to see anything that looked like a vegetable or fruit (or freshly roasted fowl) when they were on land.
@michelhv4 ай бұрын
"Salmigondi" is still an expression in French to speak of a tangled mess, a complicated situation.
@petergray27124 ай бұрын
Isn't "macedon" also a French term for both a mixed salad and a scrambled mess?
@michelhv4 ай бұрын
@@petergray2712Macédoine has a more neutral character, and you can use it to speak positively of a situation. You’ll find the name on cans, meaning a mix of peas, carrots, green beans, potatoes, baby corn etc.
@NQR-90004 ай бұрын
Indeed, in French, one of the meanings of Salmigondi is basically "word salad".
@dewilew21373 ай бұрын
I clicked on this video because I recognized the name of the dish as similar to something my mom has mentioned having while growing up in Jamaica (I always thought she’d said ‘Solomon Grundy’, or something of that sort, but I was a kid, wtf did I know? 🤷🏽♀️). I was then disappointed to see that this is actually a mixed salad, as my mom said that the dish she remembers having is a salty, smoked fish dish, which is often used as a topping or spread. BUT THEN! You mentioned Caribbean pirates eating a smoked herring dish by the same name, and my heart skipped a beat! I am so happy to have stumbled upon this connection to my mother’s culture. Thank you so much for mentioning the Caribbean version! ❤🤗
@t.c.bramblett6174 ай бұрын
I love foods that are fun to say! Salamagundy, Syllabub, Mulligatawny, Jambalaya, Cioppini, Turducken....
@shaventalz30924 ай бұрын
Spam, spam, spam spam SPAAAAM!
@kamo72934 ай бұрын
@@shaventalz3092is that fun to say? all it reminds me of is email spam 😂
@newkingdom67504 ай бұрын
Mulligatawny is my favorite 😄
@chrissnow8654 ай бұрын
Mulligatawny is hands down the best soup recipe of all time
@dawnalbright4 ай бұрын
Succotash
@KensanOni4 ай бұрын
When I was growing up, at a nearby mall, there was a soup and salad shop that had the same name, although different spelling, and I am just tickled that the name has a deeper meaning than I had known.
@meganlalli54504 ай бұрын
In one restaurant where i worked, one of the waitresses made the most amazing salads by mincing everything quite small. Every forkful gave a taste explision because chopped finely enough and mixed well, you got a tadte of everything in one bite.
@brt52734 ай бұрын
I'm partial to this too. My grandmother used to do this then heap it on top of lettuce leafs. I don't make it very often because its a lot of work but it's really delicious.
@amusliminusa4 ай бұрын
Yes chopped salad. We eat it with a spoon.
@DarkIllusia4 ай бұрын
Yes my favorite way to make salad is thin slice everything. It needs to be eaten fast, but you get a good blend of everything. Learned that from my mama.😊
@zer0nix2 ай бұрын
Some combos can backfire (speaking from experience), so any good recipes y'all have to share will be welcomed!
@renebrock41474 ай бұрын
But no 'stertium flowers. Nasturtium flowers have a bright, peppery taste, and the bright blooms are often used as decorations.
@KauaiboyRayce4 ай бұрын
Nasturtium 'capers' are wild try them sometime!
@jollyfamily9138Ай бұрын
I love them- the whole plant is edible and tastes rather like radishes, the leaves look like lily pads and the flowers are beautiful reds, oranges and yellows.
@Beryllahawk4 ай бұрын
What a beautiful dish for something like Thanksgiving. I feel like it'd be great in the early fall too because so much of this is cold. Where I live, it's VERY HOT until October most years, meaning that a salad like this could actually be a bad idea due to the meats going off in the humid heat. But imagine this in the middle of a table with plenty of nice bread, or crackers, and maybe some switchel or cider! Maybe not grand in the way the folks back then would have thought, but grand enough for me!
@mix-n-match8344 ай бұрын
Late fall and winter traditionally were seasons when people were eating mostly preserved foods like pickles and various meat and fish products. This is something that would not look out of place on New Year table.
@rigues4 ай бұрын
My God, I've been making Salamagundy for YEARS without knowing it. Just made some for dinner. Chopped lettuce, chopped red cabbage, diced tomatoes, diced heart of palm, diced pickles, some nuts (usually a mix of chopped Brazil nuts and walnuts), a sprinkle of raisins for sweetness, diced boiled egg and diced ham or kani-kama (crab sticks) for meats. Dress with a mix of olive oil, vinegar, salt and black pepper.
@shakescan4 ай бұрын
You are, after all, the Solum and Grundy of your own Salumugundy! 😂
@cherylcogan35424 ай бұрын
😂 from chef John to Jon Townsend.
@bor35494 ай бұрын
Somebody's been watching FoodWishes! 🙂
@jaji85494 ай бұрын
"...but that's another show" 🙂
@kevinmackowski85004 ай бұрын
Well said!
@leeinwis4 ай бұрын
😑😑
@privacyvalued41344 ай бұрын
This is similar to a "chef's salad." I've had this type of dish all my life so I don't think it's ever been forgotten but did get renamed and slightly modified. The biggest problem is the amount of time required to make it. Roughly 45 minutes to an hour of chopping and slicing and dicing and arranging of a wide variety of ingredients. I also add a couple of types of cheese. It can be an entire meal on its own but it pairs best with freshly baked bread and some butter.
@homesteadgal41434 ай бұрын
It really is similar to a Chef's Salad, isn't it? Yes, it does take time to slice-n-dice each ingredients, but I always enjoy doing that since everything is so colorful. We eat salads most every day at lunch. The only item I never seem to use is pickles or the small gherkins -- a great idea! And I tend to use fresh grated beets (raw), not pickled beets. Our salad today was with roasted chicken and a side of freshly baked Jalapeno Cheddar Bread, a quick bread made from homegrown Jalapenos. Several years ago, during the early phase of the lockdown, I substituted celery with homegrown Mizuna using the stalks as the celery. Then fresh Mizuna and fresh lettuces from the garden were the greens. Worked so well!
@Conquest_of_Paradise4 ай бұрын
I was also going to say it's just a chef's salad by another name.
@ily34074 ай бұрын
I disagree it's more like a "power salad"
@Menuki4 ай бұрын
I was thinking it’s like a Cobb salad
@MeLaThor134 ай бұрын
Chef Salad, Cobb Salad, Antipasto Salad... and many others are all salamagundy ❤
@abbysharp16593 ай бұрын
i love that you could 1000% see someone making this recipe on tiktok and calling it like a charcuterie salad, a beautiful salad is so timeless
@na1950974 ай бұрын
Lol. 18th century salad bar, who would've thought it possible!
@jacksparrowismydaddy4 ай бұрын
the thing about the pirates... salamgrundy was a mix of whatever was in the food stores not unlike how a mom would make chop suey for her kids in trying times.
@mdwyer19664 ай бұрын
In our house this was "dump casserole"😅
@KristinMoran4 ай бұрын
@@mdwyer1966we called it pantry casserole.
@VaveeDances4 ай бұрын
our old New England family called it American Chop Suey.
@O2life4 ай бұрын
American goulash
@midnightraver6664 ай бұрын
When my brother and I had a house together we would call it a Garbage Trough. Whatever foods were about to go bad and had to get used would just get tossed together
@StrandedLifeform4 ай бұрын
Seems like this was a way to use up the bits and dabs of leftover foods or pickled veggies that, by themselves aren't enough to make a meal or side, but put them together and present it in an eloquent way to make a new meal.
@dewilew21373 ай бұрын
Elegant*? I don’t think inanimate objects can be eloquent.
@tedhodge48304 ай бұрын
I find that salt and pepper, olive oil and vinegar actually make for a perfect dressing for a salad, enhancing the flavor and richness quite a bit while not having the unnecessary heaviness or overpowering character of a conventional bottled dressing.
@alienonion46364 ай бұрын
While visiting a friend in the UK in the 80s the only thing offered as dressing for salad was a squeeze of fresh lemon and sprinkling of salt. Very tasty. I still do this today.
@thehellcat88494 ай бұрын
I love the mention of "Stertion" (nasturtium) flowers. I planted some once and they've re-seeded themselves and come back every year. I look forward to making my fancy garden salads with flowers on top.
@agingerbeard4 ай бұрын
We have a dish here which is called solomon gundy; it's not actually the jamaican dish but Nova Scotian version of pickled herring and its incredible. I love all these similar names fot very different foods ❤
@janetleblanc85114 ай бұрын
Another Nova Scotian here. I was just going to leave the same comment. The grocery stores still sell it in jars in the fish department
@agingerbeard4 ай бұрын
@@janetleblanc8511 I'm from another east coast province but we stock it here from NS 😊👍
@Ivehadenuff4 ай бұрын
Nova Scotia, and specifically Pubnico, is the land of my mother’s family on both sides. I finally visited this summer and loved it. You are fortunate to live in such a beautiful place.
@Ivehadenuff4 ай бұрын
Leblanc is the name of at least one of my ancestors.
@vaevictis27894 ай бұрын
Is it similar to forshmak by any chance?
@huntersigler98954 ай бұрын
My brother I just want to say how much of a pleasure it is to continue to see your face in these videos. You’re one of my favorite KZbin channels content wise, but a lot of what you do is carried by how warm and inviting you as a person are. Great stuff all around. Here’s to many more years of health and happiness
@ashleighlecount4 ай бұрын
Salamagundy is just fun to say
@hybridxsrt44 ай бұрын
i cant get it out my head!
@Mere-Lachaiselongue4 ай бұрын
@@hybridxsrt4 GET IT OUT GET IT OUUIUUTTTTT
@SpaceCowboy-u7j26 күн бұрын
I went to grammar school with a kid named Sal Magundie.
@clogs49564 ай бұрын
Oh, we call that “a collation” at this house. It starts with any available fresh veggies, eggs, cheeses, some nuts, and a fridge and freezer raid, and ends up a pile on a big plate or two with mayo, mustard and bread or chips on the side. I like pickles, but the family doesn’t, so I pop out a few capers for myself.
@blackoakmushrooms4 ай бұрын
I used to make exactly this every day after school and sit in fornt of the tv with a giant bowl. I have a local place that has an amazing "choose your own adventure" salad menu. Once a week for me.
@emmerinman13314 ай бұрын
This is obviously a dish for days when the women of the house weren't able to cook anything for supper, whether because it was just too hot to light the fire, or they were out of firewood, or the day had been too long and busy for them. I'm talking about the more prosaic version of the dish mentioned in the recipes, not the fancy one for banquets. Nowadays many people just order takeout on these kinds of days. In my experience, this kind of cold salad-and-pickles dish is often made for a quick lunch by people who avoid takeout and cook a lot of their own food. Pickled and leftover foods are brought out and everybody can assemble what they want out of it. Great way to use up leftovers as well as last year's pickled foods. Fascinating to see that people back then had the same issues - some days you're just too tired to cook, or it's too hot to turn on the stove, and using up leftovers and last year's canned goods was a priority.
@DireWolf284 ай бұрын
I love this channel. Been following for years now and I never expected to be so invested in historic cooking but I find it fascinating.
@sherrieludwig5084 ай бұрын
This is the French salade composee, an arranged rather than "tossed" salad.
@HappyCodingZX4 ай бұрын
in the 18th century, Russian cuisine was heavily influenced by French cuisine as well, and you can clearly see the connection here to the Russian salads called Vinagret, Olivier and Shuba - all of which are still popular today.
@emilynelson59854 ай бұрын
What I find interesting is that the Caribbean/Canadian version has a distinct similarity to the Slavic, Ashkenazi, German and Scandinavian tradition of salted and pickled herrings served cold with herbs and vegetables. Russian territory went French and French territory went Russian
@HappyCodingZX4 ай бұрын
@@emilynelson5985 interesting. Another fun story is that when the Russians wanted to know what to call one of the salads, the French by mistake told them the name of the dressing, not the salad itself. Now that salad is forever known as 'vinagret' in Russian. Perhaps they just couldn't pronounce Salamagundy :)
@melissalambert76154 ай бұрын
I've made the Polish version of Olivier, Jarzynowa. Lots of chopping but very good.
@firelunamoon4 ай бұрын
I love how every culture, at every time period, seems to have come up with their own version of "throw everything you got into a bowl and mix".
@cosh54 ай бұрын
Ruth Mott, a cook who learned her craft in Victorian kitchens, laid her salamagundi out in concentric circles.
@kevinbyrne45384 ай бұрын
Salamagundy reminds me of Julia Child's _salade niçoise_ , which is also a "composed" (arranged) salad and which is popular in the city of Nice on France's Mediterranean coast. Traditionally it contains tomatoes, hard-boiled eggs, Niçoise olives and anchovies or tuna; and it's dressed with a vinaigrette or merely a good olive oil.
@Groovebot3k4 ай бұрын
The salamagundy reminds me of a precursor of a cobb salad. (Also apparently they also spell it "salmagundi" now, but I presume that's a modernization of the word?)
@torchris14 ай бұрын
I was going to say exactly that - looks like a Cobb Salad!
@asprywrites4 ай бұрын
Didn't he 0:12 fight Superman?
@Didymus20X64 ай бұрын
BORN ON A MONDAY!
@Jesusholmes644 ай бұрын
Didn't make any money...
@johnt.kennedy38563 ай бұрын
Solomon Grundy. I get it.
@boardcertifiable2 ай бұрын
Salmagundy want pants too.
@TheonederboyАй бұрын
Christened on Tuesday
@PhoenixPwnsAll4 ай бұрын
woah, just yesterday I was saying how it's weird that salmagundi hasn't been covered here yet. This time of summer really calls for salads, the spirit of the dish definitely lived on in western cooking.
@angelasieg50994 ай бұрын
Nice to see a salad episode. Its not talked about much in historical recipes but salads were eatned by both the poor and wealthy. My Great Grandmother told me about making things like dandelion salad when she was a girl in the late 19th century. They nearly always had eggs, cheese, and several kinds of pickles. All grown by them. She liked lutefisk with her's.
@GrapPro4 ай бұрын
SUPERMAN DIDN'T MAKE ANY MONEY, SPENDING IT ALL EATING SALMAGUNDI
@beth12svist4 ай бұрын
Curled parsley! _delighted Czech noises_ - it's still something that goes on top of things a lot.
@heirkaiba4 ай бұрын
This looks a salad I’ve eaten in the small villages in Mexico. They just throw everything on there
@aaronberg2214 ай бұрын
Especially mushrooms!
@KarolaTea3 ай бұрын
1820: Salamagundy 1920: Salad 2020: Buddha Bowl
@macsarcule4 ай бұрын
This salad tradition seems like what salad niçoise is inspired by. Absolutely fascinating episode! I’ve wondered about this for a very long time. Excellent work, Townsends team! 😃✨
@PennyGrace03212 ай бұрын
I was thinking about how it did seem very much like a niçoise salad.
@theJE554 ай бұрын
This looks like a perfect companion to a ploughman's lunch in the UK, and the much healthier predecessor to the Rochester Garbage Plate
@MrGibbonboy4 ай бұрын
Interesting to see that nasturtium flowers are not a recent addition to salads.
@aparrotformrpoirot89064 ай бұрын
i have a recipe for nasturtium sauce in a book some were but alas have no garden or source of nasturtium leaves to make it
@alienonion46364 ай бұрын
I used to grow my own nasturtium just for salads.
@hamburgerdan1014 ай бұрын
I work at a wholesale meat market in a majority African American city in the south that serves to a mostly underprivileged people and the most popular thing we sell is sliced pickled soused *hog head*. You’ll sometimes find teeth in it. while not common ive heard of people eating turtles, squirrels, racoons, opossums… the socio-economic situation of these people i believe has caused it to preserve Native American/slave culinary traditions in cooking. I willing to bet this occurs in other unprivileged parts of the world.
@111doomer4 ай бұрын
Posh ploughmans. (a ploughmans lunch is a pub lunch that has gone out of fashion made of cheese, pork pie, apple, baguette, pickle, tomato etc.
@MegaCmurdock4 ай бұрын
It has not gone "out of fashion" hipsters just tried to take it over and that's the only reason you ever heard about it
@meganlalli54504 ай бұрын
@@MegaCmurdock, not if you're old.
@az555444 ай бұрын
@@MegaCmurdockso much anger
@MegaCmurdock4 ай бұрын
@@az55544 I don't know what was angry about it lol but okay the comment was comparing it to a ploughman's lunch that went from something you'd eat for lunch on a farm to seeing it in a bougie Cafe for $20 even though this is not comparable.
@danielkarmy48934 ай бұрын
Mate you're American, you wouldn't know where to start when it comes to the definition of a Ploughman's!
@samuraidoggy4 ай бұрын
Its like medieval cobb salad! I love it!
@marygallagher34284 ай бұрын
A giant chef salad - Yum! 🙂
@audiotechlabs46504 ай бұрын
I found salamagundy similar to a salad I prepare for larger gatherings, mostly family. 2-3 kinds of greens topped with several fresh veggies and ham with shredded cheese, hard boiled egg slices and the pickled veggies including pickled cucumbers and beets and any others I have and top it with a mound of fresh peas. Serve with your favorite dressing and it will provide a great course for multi course meals or it can be the whole meal. If you choose it to be the whole meal make more to fill you up. This is my own concoction, but like this salad from the 1800s, it seems the prerequisite to the modern day “Salad Bar”. Great video, as always! Would like more outdoor/ cabin projects please! Thanxz
@Notsosweetstevia4 ай бұрын
It’s the original salad bar.
@DrummerJacob4 ай бұрын
Very interesting! Thanks for the content as usual and glad youre with us here on KZbin making this a more informative place and paying tribute to our history as people.
@Cindy-q3x4 ай бұрын
Up until a couple years ago, souse was available at our meat counter in our local grocery store. The last time I asked about it last year, they had discontinued it. They also had had headcheese.
@dbsommers14 ай бұрын
How about bloodtongue?
@KniGhTKrawLeR93 ай бұрын
2:58 Jamaican here. That Smoked Herring Paste being described is actually called "Solomon Gundy" where I'm from. It sounds very similar to "Salamagundy", and is likely where the confusion stems from as they both very likely share the same origin in their respective names from French terminologies, but they are indeed completely different foods and searching for either one or the other will yield distinctly different results reflecting this.
@dariyanvalentine35644 ай бұрын
THE FIRST CHEF'S SALAD!
@lorriewatson742312 күн бұрын
My Swedish great grandma used to serve us poor man's salamagundy, ages ago. It was much the same. When it was slaughter/harvest season, salamagundy was a creation to serve up using anything left over from the previous stock up season. Pickled jars of goodies, smoked ham and fish, and canned venison, fresh breads, and jars of preserved fruits. We always had " borrowed hands" who came from neighboring farms to help out, everyone brought something, and it was all heaped on platters to feed everyone present.
@blairbryan37684 ай бұрын
Reminds me of a modern day charcuterie board in a way
@AngelaMerici124 ай бұрын
That was what first came to mind!
@LordPorgula4 ай бұрын
I'm a pirate and can confirm that I love Salamagundy.
@MagnaMidan4 ай бұрын
2:53 I OWN THE SAME BOWL!!!!
@_B_K_4 ай бұрын
One of my favorite dishes growing up was Shuba salad (Herring Under Fur Coat, as known in the West).
@commandantcarpenter4 ай бұрын
they used to serve salmagundi at The Eagle Tavern in Greenfield Village here in Michigan. It was awesome.
@commandantcarpenter4 ай бұрын
theirs was more a charcuterie board with pickled veggies and eggs, everything in its own little bowl like the video mentions. great stuff
@tiredoftrolls26294 ай бұрын
I would love to eat at a restaurant that revived lost recipes.
@commandantcarpenter4 ай бұрын
@@tiredoftrolls2629I highly recommend The Eagle Tavern then. Greenfield Village is part of "The Henry Ford" collection of living and preserved history. The Tavern is supposed to be like a mid-19th century inn that serves period accurate recipes using fresh ingredients from the Firestone Farm nearby. Plus there's an entire living history village to check out after you eat. oh man, they even serve these amazing rolls and relishes with entrees too, it's so good. The menu rotates with the seasons due to what is actually available, and they always have something delicious. I need to go back at some point.
@Nobody-s8244 ай бұрын
@@tiredoftrolls2629 Greenfield Village is great for it as someone said! Colonial Williamsburg also has some historical restaurants.
@crookedfingersgirl73564 ай бұрын
Did the Beatles have a song about this???? Looks SOOOO GOOOOD
@torchris14 ай бұрын
That pretty much the salad I make for lunch when I’m eating low carb! Now I have a fancy historical name for it!
@zanefraser55604 ай бұрын
Interesting, as in the Atlantic Provinces of Canada, we have a pickled herring/onions called Solomon Gundy, which derives from this old English word you refer to. In Jamaica they have a smoked herring spread of same name.
@natviolen40214 ай бұрын
I often make this when I raid the fridge on a Friday 😁
@MegaMindfreak6664 ай бұрын
I actually cooked this back in high school! This was when the "Pirates of the caribbean" movies first came out and became really popular. I was a huge fan and wanted to know everything about pirates. Eventually I found a kid's book about pirates, full with history, recipes, crafts and so on at the bookstore. When we learned how to cook at school, the teachers let us bring our own recipes to try out, and this is what I brought. It ended up as a sort of chicken salad, very delicious. I need to look if I still have that book somewhere.
@shaynecarter-murray31274 ай бұрын
Solomon Grundy? (I know there's bound to be other nerds here to appreciate this)
@jchiliw4 ай бұрын
Aye aye skipper
@TehPiff4 ай бұрын
He's pickled, too!
@lunapotteruniverse24 күн бұрын
Solomon Grundy want pants too!
@agresticumbra4 ай бұрын
Hearing you mention samphire is *great*. I never had it growing up, but in the last decade, one of the markets near us, for a short while, had samphire at their olive bar. I fell in love with it, and can totally understand why for hundreds, perhaps thousands of years, it's been a vegetable in areas that had salt marshes. Thanks!
@az555444 ай бұрын
Waitrose veg section in the summer
@redwolfgamevideo4 ай бұрын
Italians have some similar called Antipasta, it can include greens but is generally a mix of cured meats, cheeses, and preserved or pickled fruits and vegetables. We have a version of this like 20 times a year.
@DrummerJacob4 ай бұрын
I dont understand why anyone would be anti-pasta. Especially the Italians! :/ Dont even get me started on anti-biotics. Biotics are cool too. :/ :/
@aparrotformrpoirot89064 ай бұрын
@@DrummerJacob mate look up Mussolini he couldn't stand the stuff. 100 percent made up fact
@EmMiller-wu3dy4 ай бұрын
Love this channel!❤
@sallycormier13834 ай бұрын
Precursor to a salad bar??
@phylliscraine4 ай бұрын
This really reminds me of the chopped salads that are so popular today such as Cobb or Nicosie salad. Always good to clean out the fridge and use up those leftover ingredients.
@katashley10314 ай бұрын
Yes, and those have been standard in the US since the '80s at least. I couldn't work out why this seemed like a new concept?
@Mandragara4 ай бұрын
This dish exists contemporarily in northern Germany
@lichtaus57094 ай бұрын
Labskaus?
@protect_trans_lives4 ай бұрын
Are you talking about Labskaus? :D
@nicholasneyhart3964 ай бұрын
If you mean Labskaus that is similar, but not the same food. But both are great
@Mandragara4 ай бұрын
@@nicholasneyhart396 No my grandfather in Kiel made pile salads like this
@nicholasneyhart3964 ай бұрын
@@Mandragara OK, I see what you mean.
@wandahellman89554 ай бұрын
I love the looks of putting everything together. It reminds me of my childhood & occasionally I do this now when I have a little bit of different leftovers & make hard boiled eggs and a loaf of homemade bread & butter or olive oil.
@syachi_san4 ай бұрын
this gave me such whiplash. my great grandfather used to eat something that looked exactly like this! small world... great video once again! ♥︎
@TerrorTerros4 ай бұрын
I my home country of the Netherlands we have a dish very similar to this, quite popular for special events called: 'huzarensalade', Meaning a 'salad for Hussars' (cavalry)
@wiseSYW4 ай бұрын
"salamagundy" is too long so they shortened it to just "salad"
@timberlunadeazul4 ай бұрын
I thought the same thing. It would certainly make sense, but actually the word "salad" comes from "salada" meaning salted things. Kinda crazy how similar both the words and the dishes are, though.
@ramdom_94 ай бұрын
Must call Cody Tucker
@melissalambert76154 ай бұрын
Good one. I've made lots of various mixed chopped salads and love a good Cobb salad. So, this is right up my alley.
@dembro274 ай бұрын
Video’s 4 mins old and someone already made the Solomon Grundy reference. 👀 I enjoy most Townsends videos and recognize the appeal of connecting to the past by finding recipes that were the origins of, or at least were comparable to, the food we have today. But this kind of video is my favorite: “forgotten foods”, something I’ve never heard of before.
@margaretbarclay-laughton20864 ай бұрын
Our family had salamagudy on the 27th december before mum passed . There was chicken christmas day. 26th was roast ham for most of us with roast beef for dad. Mum learned pickling and jams from gran so there was always several pickles and chutneys in the house so there was always a lot of things left to make the salamagundi on the day after boxing day. Oh and apples in our family it had to have apples and usually a couple of tangerines from the toe of the christmas stocking
@fastbre4ker4 ай бұрын
hey, at 0:40 the painting, wich origin is it? i see orange carrots - but arent orange carrots genetic engineering?
@townsends4 ай бұрын
Here is the picture commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Jan_van_Kessel_d.%C3%86._-_Fruit_and_Vegetable_Market_with_a_Young_Fruit_Seller_-_KMSsp299_-_Statens_Museum_for_Kunst.jpg
@fastbre4ker4 ай бұрын
@@townsends oh they really made them orange in the 16 hundrets!
@demetrinight59244 ай бұрын
This reminds me of a modern day salad bar. It also reminds me of the pickle trays, vegetable platters, and charcuterie boards I like at special events and holidays.
@MoneyChanger024 ай бұрын
Isn’t Salamagundy in the Legion of Doom?
@21stcenturyrambo164 ай бұрын
I think Batman punched him.
@dndboy134 ай бұрын
Salamagundy want pants too
@ibbiggs4 ай бұрын
@@dndboy13I just want some pants, a decent pair of pants
@Elle92280003 ай бұрын
Yes in Jamaica we have something called Solomon Gundy which is an appetizer of pickled fish pâté made from smoked red herring, Scotch Bonnet peppers and seasoning it’s so delicious.
@robzinawarriorprincess13184 ай бұрын
Superman never made any money saving the world from Salamagundy. Ten points if you got this song reference!
@rossmccartney18594 ай бұрын
the world will never see another one....like him:)
@meganlalli54504 ай бұрын
Thanks for the earworm!
@meganlalli54504 ай бұрын
And yes, sometimes I despair that the world will never see another man like him
@dwaynewladyka5774 ай бұрын
Crash Test Dummies. A rock band from Manitoba, Canada. The song is Superman's Song. It was released in the early 1990s. Cheers!
@olddawgdreaming57154 ай бұрын
Great way to serve a cool salad for a main dish. Thanks for sharing with us Jon. Stay safe and keep up the great history of foods and serving them. Fred.
@leeroyjenkins60614 ай бұрын
There's a reason why PIZZA stood the test of time and salamagundy did not...
@codename4954 ай бұрын
Probably because Pizza 🍕 s a lot younger.
@jessehayes80524 ай бұрын
It's literally salad
@zdravkodimitrov4 ай бұрын
In Bulgaria, there's a dish called Sheppard's salad and it sounds very similar to this. Every restaurant prepares it differently, at home you prepare it by essentially chopping whatever you have lying around on hand
@cablenelsonbabygrandpiano8424 ай бұрын
Amazing video! I'm so happy to find your channel ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@jimjohnstonreviewstheworld4 ай бұрын
This was rebranded in the 1970-80’s as a Chef’s Salad! Usually had more meat and cheese than lettuces. lol.
@jadedbelle47884 ай бұрын
I don't know how common it is in other counties but pickeled beetroot was and still is a common feature of a salad spread in Australia. Still one of my favourites. 😊
@dannybaker46414 ай бұрын
I had a Southwestern Cobb salad in either Arizona or New Mexico years ago. That thing was a total meal with at least three different meats on it. Not sure I even finished it, but I remember that I was totally stuffed.
@kamo72934 ай бұрын
you know what's so cool? they probably only cared about colours for the visual, and now we know that various colours in food dishes represent various micronutrients found within.
@knifeskillz9114 ай бұрын
some of the best content on youtube. Love u
@kimfleury4 ай бұрын
I hope you had fun making this, because it got me chuckling a few times. How many takes did it take to get all the "pickled this and pickled that" without Jon's tongue getting twisted into a knot? Bravo on producing a shot with no twists 😅 But seriously, this looks like an excellent summertime recipe for a picnic or cookout. I don't know if it could be transported any distance, but it would be beautiful on the patio table on the deck.
@Katesharpandvoice4 ай бұрын
I know what I'm having for lunch this week! Leftovers in the form of a Salamagundy Sallet! Some breakfast sausage, some left over rice pilaf with corn, some picallily, some cucumber, some green pepper, some basil leaves, some capers, all on a bed of mixed greens with a greek vinagrette...