Pomato Ricotta Salad

Here thee, it’s another alternative to mayonnaise in one of your favorite summertime side dishes. What have I got against mayonnaise, you might be wondering? Not a whole lot. I like the old may-o. It’s one of the mother sauces of French cuisine, so nobody can argue that it deserves respect. But this potato and fresh tomato salad has none of it. Yet it’s perplexingly rich and refreshing at the same time. Savory and sweet. Summery and wintery. Potatoey and tomatoey.

That pretty much sums it up. It was by no means a difficult day in the kitchen when, after unloading a sack of Greenmarket purchases, I chose some ingredients to toss together in a bowl. My favorite find of the day had been a huge bag of extra-ripe and partially smushed tomatoes, which I paid only five dollars for. Of course, not all of the dozen or so were that bad. Some were good to great, so those I used those to chop up fresh in this salad. The rest of them I gave a rough chop and simmered into fresh tomato sauce, which I might need to freeze before I can finish it all.

discount tomatoes from the Greenmarket, partially smushed, and perfect for sauces

the better ones of the bunch

I’d just wanted to make potato salad and keep it in the fridge a few days. I’ve seen lots of varieties of it in my days but never had one with fresh tomatoes in it. But with my surplus of tomatoes it seemed like one of those ideas that makes you say, why not? And when I remembered a half-canister of ricotta in my fridge, the mantra received an encore.

the farmers’ stand selling these red potatoes had a sign that read: “just dug”

Torn fresh basil and a bit of chopped parsley goes a long way in turning this dish from so-so to subtly spectacular. A drizzle of Balsamic vinegar is nice, too.

I served this on a bed of fresh arugula at first, but with the leftovers I ate it straight out of the bowl, and preferred it that way. Arugula is pretty overpowering stuff. (Or maybe my bunch just wasn’t so “baby.”) Unlike mayonnaise, ricotta is something you might actually want to eat alone, so I’m not sure about bludgeoning it with too many greens. As for seasoning, a touch of salt and pepper is all that this really needs. That is, as long as you have good, flavorful tomatoes, and don’t want to make them feel bad.


Pomato Ricotta Salad
(makes about 2 servings)

2 medium waxy potatoes, such as red, yukon gold or fingerling
2 medium ripe tomatoes, diced
1/4 cup ricotta
1 teaspoon chopped parsley
handful fresh basil, torn
dash of sea salt and freshly ground pepper
1-2 teaspoons Balsamic vinegar, for drizzling
1 teaspoon extra-virgin olive oil, for drizzling (optional)

Boil the potatoes until a fork goes through easily. Drain and run under cold water. Let cool completely. Dice to 1/2″ – 1″ cubes. Combine in a medium bowl with the diced tomatoes, parsley, basil, ricotta, a pinch of salt and pepper, and gently mix. Serve with a drizzle of Balsamic vinegar and optional olive oil.

Cost Calculator
(for 2 servings)

2 potatoes (at $1.50/lb): $1.00
2 tomatoes (at $5/bag of 12): $0.83
1/4 cup ricotta (at $2.50/15 oz. container): $0.35
parsley and basil (from home plant): $0.20
2 teaspoons Balsamic vinegar, 1 teaspoon optional olive oil, pinch of salt and pepper: $0.25

Total: $2.63

Health Factor

Five brownie points: So I just compared the nutrition facts on my container of part-skim ricotta with a jar of light mayonnaise and was pretty disappointed with the findings. For some reason ricotta just tastes, sounds and seems lighter than the egg yolk and vegetable oil emulsion that mayonnaise is. A 1/4 cup of the ricotta has 20mg of cholesterol and 5 grams of fat, while a tablespoon of the mayonnaise has “<5mg” of cholesterol and 3.5 grams of fat. A tablespoon is less than a 1/4 cup, but I’m a little surprised about the cholesterol — I guess Hellmann’s is really onto something with their “light” varieties. The main plus about using ricotta instead of it, though, is that it boasts calcium for that fat. Tomatoes and potatoes both offer trace amounts of calcium, as well as potassium and Vitamin C. Keeping the skins on the red potatoes provides a little more fiber, and of course, tomatoes are great sources of lycopene.

Green Factor

Six maple leaves: Tomatoes are finally in season, locally, and I feel a little extra “green” for gobbling up the farmer’s less desirable ones. While they’re available year-round, this is actually the time of the year when potatoes are harvested, too, so if you want them “just dug,” as I was sold on, now’s the time to get them. The ricotta was a generic supermarket purchase I’m still working on, so no points for that. My herbs are doing very well right now on the windowsill, which are as local for me as it gets.

7 Responses

  1. KBO
    |

    Ooh, I hate me some mayo, which means, since I live in the Midwest, that I have avoided almost all potato and pasta salads. Only recently did I discover I can make a mean oil/vinegar based bowl of awesome. Can’t wait to try this.

  2. Trev
    |

    Great idea with the Ricotta.

    I’ve been on a warm new potato salad kick with a fancy mustard/vinegar dressing for some time now.

  3. Michelle
    |

    I loved the idea of a potato and tomato salad, and whipped one up for my lunch today! I didn’t have any ricotta, so I mixed a small amount olive oil with some red wine vinegar with sage and pepper and used it as my “sauce”. I also added roasted garlic and pine nuts. It’s much more “Italian” tasting, but very very fresh. Thanks so much for the inspiration!

  4. Michelle
    |

    And by more “Italian”, I think I just mean overwhelmingly garlicky. Hah.

  5. Olivia
    |

    Man, I love it when potatoes are described as “waxy”. I know that it’s to denote hard potatoes from grainier ones, but it just sounds so satisfying.

    Which greenmarket do you get your cheap tomatoes from? The USQ ones are insanely pricey at times…

  6. BE
    |

    You’re a genius!
    love it.

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