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Screen Shot 2017 04 04 at 6.11.35 PM
Screen Shot 2017 04 04 at 6.11.35 PM
Lifestyle

Bon Appétite’s Newest Recipe is Making the Internet Go Nuts

This article is written by a student writer from the Spoon University at DePaul chapter.

It’s no mystery that salad can be pretty underwhelming. It’s never the star of the meal and is often ignored- unless you’re paying $11.25 to have greens fit for a Kardashian. The now infamous “hand salad,” created by Bon Appétit, however, is nothing but an embarrassment of lettuce.

Anatomy of the “Hand Salad.”

The “hand salad” is made up of a firm lettuce and a yogurt lemon dressing on the side. Instead of combining the two to make a traditional salad, this recipe insists using the dressing as a dip. It also seems to lose all health benefits that a salad would have by having a bowl of dressing as a main ingredient. “We call this a hand salad because lettuce and dip just doesn’t sound like nearly as much fun,” said the writer, Amiel Stanek.

This is not the first time a “hand salad” has been written about on Bon Appetit. Last May, the same author wrote a recipe for a similar lettuce and dip combo. This time, the dressing was a buttermilk base with grapefruit and mixed seeds.

Nearly a year later, a “hand salad” recipe was written again for the magazine’s $40 Dinner Party piece. In this article, Stanek addressed the weird nature of the salad. “Okay, so my editors have told me that the last time I tried to write about “hand salad”—basically big pieces of lettuce in a bowl with dressing in a bowl, chips and dip style—some people on The Internet had a cow. ‘THAT’S NOT A THING,’ they raged, ‘WHY ARE YOU TRYING TO MAKE THAT A THING?!'”

When the recipe was posted on Twitter, the Internet just couldn’t deal. Here are some of the best responses:

Many Twitter users spent the day trolling the magazine for this ludicrous recipe, while some went so far as to say that they would walk out of a restaurant is they saw “hand salad” on the menu. Regardless, this take on the traditional salad is unforgettable.

Cody Corrall is a writer, photographer, and podcast producer based in Chicago. Follow them everywhere @codycaptures.