The use of herbs not as garnish but as primary salad ingredient is one of the defining characteristics of Levantine and Persian table culture. Bunches of fresh parsley, mint, coriander, and dill eaten as leaves — not chiffonade, not minced — represent a different relationship to herbs than European cooking's garnish tradition. Ottolenghi's Jerusalem recipes consistently treat herbs this way: volumes that would seem excessive in French cooking are the correct measure here.
Fresh herbs (parsley, mint, coriander, dill, tarragon) used in large quantities as salad leaves rather than seasoning — torn or left whole, dressed lightly with lemon and olive oil. The herbs provide both flavour and texture in a ratio that European cooking rarely approaches.
Large-volume herb salad completely changes the flavour balance of a meal — placed alongside rich lamb or fatty cheese, the herbs provide chlorophyll-bright contrast that cleanses the palate between bites. This is their function: not flavour addition but flavour contrast. A meal without this element reads as heavy.
- Use only the leaves and tender stems — thick stems are bitter and fibrous - Dress at the last possible moment — herbs wilt rapidly once dressed - Light dressing only — the herbs themselves are the flavour; heavy dressing suppresses them - Mix varieties — single-herb salads are one-dimensional; the combination of parsley's minerality, mint's coolness, and coriander's citrus creates complexity - Serve immediately — dressed herbs wilt within minutes
OTTOLENGHI JERUSALEM — Technique Entries OT-01 through OT-25