Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Watergate salad, also referred to as Pistachio Delight or Shut the Gate salad, is a side dish salad or dessert salad made from pistachio pudding, canned pineapple, whipped topping, crushed pecans, and marshmallows. [1] [2] [3] It is very quick and simple to prepare: the ingredients are combined and then often chilled.
Cover and refrigerate until the pistachio mixture is chilled and set, about 1 hour. To serve, gently fold 3/4 cup of the pecans into the pudding mixture and divide among 8 bowls.
Watergate Salad recipe. 1 (8-ounce) container whipped topping. 1 can crushed pineapple in juice. 1 box pistachio Jell-O. 1 bag mini marshmallows. Optional: 1/2 cup chopped pecans, 1/2 cup ...
10. The Best Winter Fruit Salad. Fruit salad doesn’t have to be reserved for summer alone. This one features cranberries, clementine, pomegranates and pears, all tossed in a honey-lime-poppyseed ...
Fruit salad: Worldwide Fruit salad Made with various types of fruit, served either in their own juices or a syrup. Also known as a fruit cocktail. Gado-gado: Indonesia: Vegetable salad A traditional dish in Indonesian cuisine, and is a vegetable salad served with a peanut sauce dressing, eaten as a main dish. Garden salad: Worldwide Green salad
A fruit salad is sometimes known as a fruit cocktail (often connoting a canned product), or fruit cup (when served in a small container). There are many types of fruit salad, ranging from the basic (no nuts, marshmallows, or dressing) to the moderately sweet (Waldorf salad) to the sweet (ambrosia salad). Another "salad" containing fruit is a ...
Snickers salad is a dessert salad consisting of a mix of Snickers bars, Granny Smith apples, Cool Whip or whipped topping, marshmallows, and often pudding served in a bowl. [1] [2] It is a potluck staple in the Midwestern United States. It is sometimes included in church cookbooks. [3]
In New Zealand, ambrosia refers to a similar dish made with whipped cream, yogurt, fresh, canned or frozen berries, and chocolate chips or marshmallows loosely combined into a pudding. The earliest known mention of the salad is in the 1867 cookbook Dixie Cookery by Maria Massey Barringer. [1] [5] The name references the food of the Greek gods. [6]