A popular Southern dish is for beef neck bones. Since I was unable to locate a recipe online, I came up with this one on my own by combining some of my favorite oxtail, roast, and pig neck bone dishes. I decided to post it because it turned out well. Over mashed potatoes or steaming rice and peas, serve.
Prep Time: | 10 mins |
Total Time: | 10 mins |
Servings: | 6 |
Yield: | 6 servings |
Ingredients
- ¼ cup balsamic vinegar
- 1 tablespoon finely chopped dried cranberries
- 1 teaspoon white sugar
- 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
- ½ teaspoon salt
- 1 clove garlic, peeled and smashed
- freshly ground black pepper
- ½ cup extra-virgin olive oil
Instructions
- Whisk vinegar, cranberries, sugar, mustard, salt, garlic, and pepper together in a bowl until the sugar and salt are completely dissolved. Stream oil into the mixture while whisking continually; continue whisking until the oil emulsifies into the vinegar.
Reviews
Very good dressing – full of flavor. Shake really well to mix ingredients. Tastes better after it sets for a day for all of the flavors to meld.
This is a great salad dressing! It came out thick , so I think it could also be used as a sauce to marinate chicken, beef or pork. Just add more vinegar and/or water to thin it out.
I used raspberry balsamic vinegar. It was excellent
This is delicious!! I cut back on the sugar by 3/4 cup and it still tasted fine.
Love this recipe with Spinach, candied pecans and more craisins. We also found some Pear/Cranberry Balsamic vinegar that we used! Delicious!
This tastes awesome! I used an emulsion mixer to help make the cranberries and garlic smaller. It blended up great! This will be my go to vinaigrette from now on.
Great recipe! Hubs and I like it even better with a splash of cherry concentrate and a little less oil. It’s truly a versatile dressing and we like to triple it so there’s no excuse not to eat loads of greens!
I needed to add more sugar for my tastes, but this was excellent. I used my immersion blender to emulsify it and it stayed mixed for the 3 days it took to finish it off. Thanks!
Marianne mentioned on the Buzz and on Pinterest that this vinaigrette was yummy. Marianne has never steered me wrong!
This recipe follows a pretty typical formula for salad dressings, so you could use this subbing almost any oil or vinegar. I very much enjoyed this combination! I think next time I have this (tonight, as a matter of fact), I’ll also add some whole cranberries to my salad to go along with the chopped ones. Thank you very much, lisa weston, and I’m sure others will enjoy this, too!