Winning Friends With Salad
It’s not often that I would say this, but Bart and Homer clearly had it wrong: you can win friends with salad.
Each Thursday at the Impact HUB in SoMa, our coworking space, we close our computers at 12.42pm and gather around to share a bowl of salad and actually talk (in that satisfyingly old-fashioned face-to-face kind of way). Somehow this weekly gathering became known as the Sexy Salad Society, and we like to think of it as the most exclusive inclusive sexiest salad society in San Francisco (try saying that three times).
It’s usually simple fare - garden salad, beans, rice - but I think that’s part of the attraction. At $2/head, and for an allocated time of 18 minutes, you can’t kid yourself that you could buy something cheaper, faster or healthier from the neighboring shops or food trucks. And while you’re helping yourself to a simple, healthy lunch, you may as well make friends with the people you pass in the corridors or see at the printer.
I kind of like the fact that the food is unfussy. I have previously had workplace potlucks escalate into semi-competitive events (which is fun in the short-term but hard to sustain when you’re up at 11pm the night before making shortcrust pastry for your rustic quiche that you brought along because that’s just the kind of casually impressive mid-week cook you happen to be). It also emphasises that a meal doesn’t have to be fancy in order to create a special experience.
SupperShare’s co-founder Kim leads the charge every week to serve salad to the hungry masses as they connect with each other between bites. For her, a dining experience doesn’t have to be an expensive, long-winded affair, but an opportunity to break bread and make new friends. Beyond Sexy Salad Society, each week, SupperShare hosts use simple food as a tool to connect with others in more meaningful ways and to give back.
I’m on a mission to consume my body weight in peaches this Summer, so this week I made a peach tabbouleh. It’s one of the recipes that I discovered when looking through Nigel Slater’s book Tender the other week and it’s currently on high rotation in my household. It takes all of about 10 minutes to prepare, fits the $2/head budget, and yet somehow still feels quite indulgent. I guess that’s the magic of perfectly ripe Summer peaches. Kim teamed it with a simple Greek salad and Gigantes, an herbed white bean and tomato dish.
Some of my (new) Sexy Salad Society friends asked for the tabbouleh recipe, so I thought I’d post it here for our SupperSharers. Maybe it will inspire you to make some new friends in your workplace ... or serve at your next Supper!
Peach tabbouleh (Nigel Slater)
1 bunch flat-leaf parsley
Pour the bulgur into a bowl and just cover with boiling water, then set aside.
Finely chop the chilli, then roughly chop the spring onions, mint, parsley, and cilantro. Dice the peaches into bite-sized pieces.
Fluff the bulgur up with a fork, making sure it has absorbed all the water. Combine the chilli, herbs and bulgur in a bowl, stir in a glug or two of olive oil, lemon juice and loads of cracked pepper and salt. Scatter the peaches throughout, then serve.