Thursday, May 28, 2026
Washington DC
New York
Toronto
Distribution: (800) 510 9863
Press ID
  • Login
RH NEWSROOM National News and Press Releases. Local and Regional Perspectives. Media Advisories.
Yonkers Observer
  • Home
  • World
  • Politics
  • Finance
  • Technology
  • Health
  • Culture
  • Entertainment
  • Trend
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • Politics
  • Finance
  • Technology
  • Health
  • Culture
  • Entertainment
  • Trend
No Result
View All Result
Yonkers Observer
No Result
View All Result
Home Health

The Café 2001 Green Pea and Potato Salad Recipe

by Yonkers Observer Report
March 16, 2025
in Health
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Potato salad is one of the dishes taken from the Western canon that’s become an essential in Japanese home cooking. It’s also a regular izakaya and yoshoku restaurant dish, from cheap and cheerful to high-end. Chefs tend to have a signature house potato salad, and mine is usually made with iburi gakko — a smoked rice bran pickled daikon. But potato salad can also be used as a satisfying way to enjoy the season, as the salads at Café 2001 tend to.

With that in mind we don’t use mayo in this one. Good mayo is divine but also envelopes all. This salad should be vibrant like the color and the moment of early spring.

This holds well until the next day and can also be made into croquettes.

At the cafe, I use potatoes from Weiser Farms and peas from Tutti Frutti, pea shoots and olive oil from Shear Rock — all available at the Sunday Hollywood Farmers Market.

Potato salad is one of the dishes taken from the Western canon that’s become an essential in Japanese home cooking. It’s also a regular izakaya and yoshoku restaurant dish, from cheap and cheerful to high-end. Chefs tend to have a signature house potato salad, and mine is usually made with iburi gakko — a smoked rice bran pickled daikon. But potato salad can also be used as a satisfying way to enjoy the season, as the salads at Café 2001 tend to.

With that in mind we don’t use mayo in this one. Good mayo is divine but also envelopes all. This salad should be vibrant like the color and the moment of early spring.

This holds well until the next day and can also be made into croquettes.

At the cafe, I use potatoes from Weiser Farms and peas from Tutti Frutti, pea shoots and olive oil from Shear Rock — all available at the Sunday Hollywood Farmers Market.

Potato salad is one of the dishes taken from the Western canon that’s become an essential in Japanese home cooking. It’s also a regular izakaya and yoshoku restaurant dish, from cheap and cheerful to high-end. Chefs tend to have a signature house potato salad, and mine is usually made with iburi gakko — a smoked rice bran pickled daikon. But potato salad can also be used as a satisfying way to enjoy the season, as the salads at Café 2001 tend to.

With that in mind we don’t use mayo in this one. Good mayo is divine but also envelopes all. This salad should be vibrant like the color and the moment of early spring.

This holds well until the next day and can also be made into croquettes.

At the cafe, I use potatoes from Weiser Farms and peas from Tutti Frutti, pea shoots and olive oil from Shear Rock — all available at the Sunday Hollywood Farmers Market.

Potato salad is one of the dishes taken from the Western canon that’s become an essential in Japanese home cooking. It’s also a regular izakaya and yoshoku restaurant dish, from cheap and cheerful to high-end. Chefs tend to have a signature house potato salad, and mine is usually made with iburi gakko — a smoked rice bran pickled daikon. But potato salad can also be used as a satisfying way to enjoy the season, as the salads at Café 2001 tend to.

With that in mind we don’t use mayo in this one. Good mayo is divine but also envelopes all. This salad should be vibrant like the color and the moment of early spring.

This holds well until the next day and can also be made into croquettes.

At the cafe, I use potatoes from Weiser Farms and peas from Tutti Frutti, pea shoots and olive oil from Shear Rock — all available at the Sunday Hollywood Farmers Market.

Potato salad is one of the dishes taken from the Western canon that’s become an essential in Japanese home cooking. It’s also a regular izakaya and yoshoku restaurant dish, from cheap and cheerful to high-end. Chefs tend to have a signature house potato salad, and mine is usually made with iburi gakko — a smoked rice bran pickled daikon. But potato salad can also be used as a satisfying way to enjoy the season, as the salads at Café 2001 tend to.

With that in mind we don’t use mayo in this one. Good mayo is divine but also envelopes all. This salad should be vibrant like the color and the moment of early spring.

This holds well until the next day and can also be made into croquettes.

At the cafe, I use potatoes from Weiser Farms and peas from Tutti Frutti, pea shoots and olive oil from Shear Rock — all available at the Sunday Hollywood Farmers Market.

Potato salad is one of the dishes taken from the Western canon that’s become an essential in Japanese home cooking. It’s also a regular izakaya and yoshoku restaurant dish, from cheap and cheerful to high-end. Chefs tend to have a signature house potato salad, and mine is usually made with iburi gakko — a smoked rice bran pickled daikon. But potato salad can also be used as a satisfying way to enjoy the season, as the salads at Café 2001 tend to.

With that in mind we don’t use mayo in this one. Good mayo is divine but also envelopes all. This salad should be vibrant like the color and the moment of early spring.

This holds well until the next day and can also be made into croquettes.

At the cafe, I use potatoes from Weiser Farms and peas from Tutti Frutti, pea shoots and olive oil from Shear Rock — all available at the Sunday Hollywood Farmers Market.

Potato salad is one of the dishes taken from the Western canon that’s become an essential in Japanese home cooking. It’s also a regular izakaya and yoshoku restaurant dish, from cheap and cheerful to high-end. Chefs tend to have a signature house potato salad, and mine is usually made with iburi gakko — a smoked rice bran pickled daikon. But potato salad can also be used as a satisfying way to enjoy the season, as the salads at Café 2001 tend to.

With that in mind we don’t use mayo in this one. Good mayo is divine but also envelopes all. This salad should be vibrant like the color and the moment of early spring.

This holds well until the next day and can also be made into croquettes.

At the cafe, I use potatoes from Weiser Farms and peas from Tutti Frutti, pea shoots and olive oil from Shear Rock — all available at the Sunday Hollywood Farmers Market.

Potato salad is one of the dishes taken from the Western canon that’s become an essential in Japanese home cooking. It’s also a regular izakaya and yoshoku restaurant dish, from cheap and cheerful to high-end. Chefs tend to have a signature house potato salad, and mine is usually made with iburi gakko — a smoked rice bran pickled daikon. But potato salad can also be used as a satisfying way to enjoy the season, as the salads at Café 2001 tend to.

With that in mind we don’t use mayo in this one. Good mayo is divine but also envelopes all. This salad should be vibrant like the color and the moment of early spring.

This holds well until the next day and can also be made into croquettes.

At the cafe, I use potatoes from Weiser Farms and peas from Tutti Frutti, pea shoots and olive oil from Shear Rock — all available at the Sunday Hollywood Farmers Market.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

Miley Cyrus reveals health scare ahead of ‘Something Beautiful’

1 year ago

Husband of House Speaker Pelosi attacked during break-in of San Francisco home, office says

4 years ago

New food pyramid is a recipe for health disasters

4 months ago

At Meta, Millions of Underage Users Were an ‘Open Secret,’ States Say

3 years ago
Yonkers Observer

© 2025 Yonkers Observer or its affiliated companies.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • Politics
  • Finance
  • Technology
  • Health
  • Culture
  • Entertainment
  • Trend

© 2025 Yonkers Observer or its affiliated companies.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In