Soba noodles with crisp rainbow vegetables and a spicy sesame seed dressing
This riotously bright salad is crunchy, light and, with its flavour-packed dressing, intensely savoury, making it the perfect antidote to January. A ribbon peeler or mandoline will help with the prep enormously. Serves six.
200g soba or glass noodles
50g frozen soya beans
1 tbsp sesame oil
2 carrots, peeled, then grated or cut into thin ribbons
150g red cabbage, finely shredded
100g mooli or radishes, cut into matchsticks or thin slivers
1 green apple
3 spring onions, finely sliced
1 small bunch coriander, roughly chopped
1 handful mint leaves, roughly torn
1 handful basil leaves (or more coriander), roughly chopped
40g toasted sunflower seeds
25g toasted sesame seeds (a mixture of black and white looks good), to serve
For the dressing
1 thumb-sized chunk fresh ginger, peeled
½ garlic clove
50g tahini
Juice of 1 lime
1 tbsp sriracha (or your favourite style of chilli sauce)
1 bird’s-eye chilli, stalked removed (optional)
1 tbsp soy sauce
1 tbsp demerara sugar
(or honey)
3 tbsp sesame oil
25ml water
Cook the noodles in boiling water according to the packet instructions, and add the soya beans for the final minute of cooking, to blanch. Drain and rinse under cold water until cool and no longer clumping together, then put in a large salad bowl and toss with a tablespoon of sesame oil to coat (this will help keep the noodles apart).
Add the carrots, red cabbage and mooli or radishes to the bowl. Peel, core and finely shred the apple directly into the bowl, then add the spring onions and coriander. Add the picked herb leaves and pop the bowl in the fridge while you get on with the dressing (covered, if you’re not eating straight away).
Roughly chop the ginger, put it in a food processor with the garlic and tahini, and blitz until finely chopped. Add the lime, sriracha, chilli (if using), soy sauce and sugar, and blitz again. With the motor running slowly, add the sesame oil bit by bit, followed by the water, and process until the dressing is the consistency of double cream. If the dressing looks as if it has split, put a tablespoon of tahini in a bowl, then slowly whisk in the split dressing – it should quickly come back together. Toss the dressing through the salad and season to taste; it may need more lime juice. Scatter the sesame seeds on top and serve.