Dungeness crab season in Oregon starts around the first
of December and runs all the way through mid-August. At my house the first crabs of the season get eaten
straight out of the shell (caveman style) with the option of drawn butter (which really isn't necessary), because the crab is so naturally sweet and tender, it really needs nothing more.
After the crab feed, which is AWESOME! I make a batch of crab cakes and the infamous Crab Louis Salad.
Crab Louis is a traditional old school salad that never
gets old for me. But it’s not the salad that
impresses me the most (even though the crab is pretty impressive), it’s the dressing.
What this dressing lacks in LOOK's, It makes up for in FLAVOR! |
We eat first with our eyes, so the salad has to be
pretty. But without the homemade Louis dressing,
it’s just another salad.
You can get a beautifully assembled crab Louis at almost
any good seafood restaurant, but it’s not authentic without the dressing.
I know that I am repeating myself about the dressing but it makes all the difference.
When I see a crab Louis on a menu I get so excited and immediately
want to order it. Imagining the mound of
fresh sweet Dungeness crab, crunchy cucumbers, sweet tomatoes, black olives, creamy avocado and
hard cooked eggs stacked on a bed of crisp lettuce.
Then "POOF", the excitement disipates when the waiter quickly burst my bubble and asks me, "What
kind of dressing do you want with your salad"?
(Duh, Louis Dressing?), and what makes it even more painful is when he cluelessly continues
to recite every dressing on earth except Louis...
Everyone has an opinion about what you need to stack on a Crab Louis. I like mine simple. You can dress up your salad mix or add more toppings, but be sure to serve it with Sauce Louis. My Louis dressing has more in it than most, but worth every
addition.
Chili Sauce is a universal word these days (American, Thai, Mexican, Sriracha, Rooster, What?). So when I list chili sauce in a recipe I think it might need a bit of clarification. So here is a photo of the bottle
CRAB LOUIS SALAD
Dungeness Crab Meat
Iceberg Lettuce
Tomatoes,
Cucumbers
Avacado
Black Olives
Hard Cooked Eggs
SAUCE LOUIS DRESSING
2 cups mayonnaise
¼ cup ketchup
¼ cup chili sauce
2 Tbsp. fresh lemon juice
1 Tbsp. Worcestershire
¼ cup sweet relish
½ tsp. kosher salt
2 large eggs, hard boiled and
chopped
2 oz. black olives, chopped
or (16 large pitted)
1 sprig green onion, minced
1 clove
garlic, minced
1 small stalk celery with leafy
top, minced
The fastest and easiest way to make the dressing is in a
food processor using the metal blade.
The only things that will need minor cutting will be the green onions and
celery, and they only need to be cut into about 2 inch lengths, so they fit in
the bowl.
1.
Pulse whole garlic and celery until minced.
2.
Add green onions, black olives and eggs. Pulse to chop but don’t puree.
3.
Add all other ingredients and blend to mix.
If you don’t have
a food processor, just chop as listed and mix everything together.
Thanks for sharing! It looks so good!
ReplyDeleteThis is one of the better Louie dressings I've had! The only change I made was leaving out the sweet relish since we're not big fans. Thank you for this one!
ReplyDeleteThank you Lori, it's one of my fav's :)
DeleteReally good dressing recipe! I did not have pickle relish and put in some Tabasco for a little kick!! Definitely a keeper
ReplyDeleteThank you. Now you have a new family recipe!
Delete