Anonymous wrote:We do water-packed tuna, celery, onion, enough mayo to bind, fresh ground black pepper. Maybe a splash of rice wine vinegar.
Anonymous wrote:Recently I made tuna using kewpie mayo and some kimchi and topped it with furikake. That was really delicious.
Anonymous wrote:Does nobody else sub in plain Greek yogurt to replace some of the mayo in these dishes (tuna salad, chicken salad), or have I just missed it? Lightens the dish, adds a tang.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I usually do celery or water chestnut, shallot, capers, mustard, mayo, dill, S&P, sometimes pickle. I have made and enjoyed one with tarragon before.
I have been planning to make this one next https://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/giada-de-laurentiis/lemony-white-bean-and-arugula-salad-recipe-1922074
I am quoting myself to say this thread inspiref me to make the Giada recipe I linked for lunch. It is quite nice. It’s very much an “eat it from bowl” tuna salad as opposed to a “make sandwiches with it” tuna salad though.
The link above wasn’t to tuna salad.
Whoops - she has two that are named virtually identically, it seems. And truly the recipes are close, too - but one includes tuna and the other doesn't. This is the one with
https://mangeratrois.net/recipes/salad/1445-lemony-white-bean-tuna-and-arugula-salad/
Thank you, this does sound great! How does the maple syrup taste with the overall flavor profile? That’s the one item that really sticks out to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I recently had a tuna sandwich in Iceland that had lettuce, tomato, and cucumber. I never thought to add cucumber, but it was so good.
Diced cucumber in the tuna salad? Or sliced cucumber on the sandwich?