Heirloom Seeds and Plants from the Monticello collection
Plant history in your gardens with seeds and plants from Monticello and the Thomas Jefferson Center for Historic Plants.
Serves 6
2 tablespoons wine vinegar or tarragon wine vinegar salt
whole black pepper in a pepper mill
6 - 8 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
6 cups mixed salad greens, such as seasonal lettuce, spinach, endive, radicchio, and cress
fresh herbs, such as sweet basil, marjoram, mint, and summer savory, to taste
6 small scallions, trimmed
From Dining at Monticello, edited by Damon Lee Fowler.
Serve with Jefferson-era heirloom vegetables and herbs grown from seeds from our online Museum Shop.
HISTORICAL NOTES: Although salads are well documented at Monticello, the only two recipes for dressings in the family manuscripts appear to postdate Jefferson's death by some thirty years. Given that Jefferson favored imported olive oil and wine vinegar, the classic seems a likely staple at Monticello's table, prepared tableside with oil and vinegar brought to the table in handsome cruet sets. (One such set so captured Jefferson's attention in Germany that he sketched the clever design in his notes, and a set associated with the Trist family is part of the Monticello collection today.) The basic formula has not significantly changed. The proportions are of necessity approximate: they depend on the strength of the vinegar, the quality of the oil, and the delicacy of the salad greens, but the reader can confidently start with 1 part vinegar to 3 parts oil, adding more oil as needed to taste.
Plant history in your gardens with seeds and plants from Monticello and the Thomas Jefferson Center for Historic Plants.
A compact and early maturing variety, Tennis Ball Lettuce was popular in salads and in pickling.
Thomas Jefferson was a pioneer in tomato culture, planting the then relatively unfamiliar tomato from 1809 until his death in 1826. Native to South America, Spanish explorers introduced the tomato to Europe and around the globe.
Native to the new World and comprising a wide variety of species, Squash are among the most frequently mentioned vegetables in Jefferson's correspondence.