Tuna salad

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Tuna salad
Tuna fish sandwiches for the National School Lunch Program (1).jpg
Tuna salad sandwiches being assembled
TypeSalad
Main ingredientsTuna, mayonnaise

Tuna salad starts with a blend of two main ingredients: tuna and mayonnaise. The tuna used is usually pre-cooked, canned, and packaged in water or oil.[1] Pickles, celery, relish, and onion[1] are foremost among the ingredients that are often added. When the mixture is placed on bread, it makes a tuna salad sandwich.[1] Tuna salad is also regularly served by itself, or on top of crackers, lettuce, tomato, or avocado. Chopped boiled eggs may be added. Relish adds a piquant flavor yet, unlike commonly added vegetables, requires no chopping.

Dishes[]

In Belgium, the dish pêches au thon/perziken met tonijn ('peaches with tuna') is made from halved canned or fresh peaches stuffed with tuna salad.[2] It is widespread throughout the country, and, due to its ease of preparation, it is common fare at potlucks.

In the United States, tuna salad is often considered its own dish. However, it may be added to noodles with its standard ingredients (onions mayonnaise and celery) to make a tuna pasta salad. Tuna salad is also commonly seen in American salad bars.

History[]

Tuna salad has been eaten for over 100 years. The first written reference to tuna salad, in America, appeared in 1907, and by 1914 dozens of recipes had been published.[3] Tuna salad, especially with celery, is similar to chicken salad while also being much cheaper, a fact that helped its early rise in popularity.

Due to the high nutritional content of tuna salad, it assumed the reputation of a diet food in the 1960s.[3]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c Westmoreland, S. (2007). The Good Housekeeping Cookbook: 1,039 Recipes from America's Favorite Test Kitchen. Hearst Books. p. 426. ISBN 978-1-58816-561-9. Retrieved August 23, 2019.
  2. ^ Eric Boschman; Nathalie Derny (2008). Le goût des Belges, Volume 2 (in French). Brussels: Lannoo Uitgeverij. p. 9. ISBN 9782873865252.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b Andrew F. Smith (2012). American Tuna: The Rise and Fall of an Improbable Food. Volume 37 of California Studies in Food and Culture. Berkeley, Cal.: University of California Press. pp. 76–78. ISBN 9780520261846. OCLC 840601734.
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