
A chunky Greek salad with purslane, stonecrop/sedum grape tendrils, and wild bee balm flowers is a good hot weather dish.
Midsummer means a lot of things, but heat and garden weeds are probably two that many of us are familiar with right now.
A few weeks ago, there was a dinner on the farm I was going to contribute a dish too, and, as my partner’s family is proud of their Greek heritage, I thought it would be fun to do wild Greek salad. It’s a great thing to make when the weather is warm and the tomatoes are coming on, as well as some the weeds that might be growing alongside them.

Purslane is at peak of volume right now. I’ll gather about 50 lbs of it for serving at the Wild Harvest Festival this year.
Greek salad, as I was taught to make it, should be chunky, with relatively large pieces of tomato and cucumber (one restaurant I worked at put a plethora of different diced vegetables in it, which was also good) mixed with a few salty bites of feta and the occasional olive here and there.

Stonecrop leaves, purslane tips, and grape tendrils make refreshing additions to a Greek salad.
The chunky, crisp canvas is a perfect place to add a few summer wild edibles and I thought it would be a fun way to show off two of my favorite edible succulents together: purslane (verdolagas) and stonecrop.

Stonecrop/Orpine/Sedum purpureum is another edible succulent that may be hiding in your garden. These tops are too old, but you could clip a few leaves. They’ll be stronger tasting at this older stage of growth.
Purslane is very common, and loves to grow in the disturbed soil of a garden. Stonecrop/orpine is typically planted as an ornamental, but I’ve come across at least two different places now where I’ve noticed garden escapees that have formed wild colonies (it doesn’t seem too aggressive as compared to some other edible ornamentals like Aegopodium/snow on the mountain).

The tender leaves of stonecrop are what you’re after, preferably a little younger than these.
Both succulents are good to eat, but it would be remiss of me to not mention that I will generally add less stonecrop to a salad than purslane. Purslane is mild and pleasant tasting to me (the flavor is slightly stronger after cooking). Stonecrop has a much stronger flavor, a sort of rich green taste that some people will not like if they eat a leaf raw.

Mixing the salad. You want the ingredients to be chunky here, larger than you might typically put in a salad.
That being said, one thing I always try to drive home to people when they’re trying a new plant that has a stronger flavor, is that what something tastes like raw, is not necessarily what it will taste like after it’s been seasoned and mixed with other ingredients.

Wild oregano flowers (bergamot/bee balm/Monarda fistulosa) add a nice pop of color and flavor to all kinds of things this time of year.
If you find the taste of stonecrop leaves strong for your palate by themselves, I really suggest you still add a few for the experience of understanding how flavors become part of a whole when eaten in combination with other things, if nothing else.

Another fun chef trick hidden in the recipe is that I soak sliced red onions in water before adding to a salad, which helps both to calm them and keep them crisp.
The other fun addition here, that also functions as a nod to the Greek and Mediterranean aesthetic, are the young, meristematic tendrils of wild grape vines. I love snipping a few tendrils to add to a salad as much for their curling shape as for the pleasant, tart crunch they add to all kinds of dishes. The tendrils are a nice, whimsical garnish, bound to come up in dinner conversation.

The young tender meristems of grape vines may be small, but they’re easy to gather and are a good addition to salads for their texture and flavor.
At first glance, the young tendrils of grape vines might seem too precious or small to warrant harvesting, but keep in mind you need only a small handful of them to grace a salad. If you haven’t tried grape tendrils yet, nip one off a vine the next time you see them-they’re nice and tart with none of the pronounced tannins that raw grape leaves have.
Wild Greek Salad with Purslane, Stonecrop and Grape Tendrils
Ingredients
- 1 (8oz) medium heirloom tomato highest quality possible that has never seen a refrigerator
- 1 oz (a good handful) tender tips of purslane, washed and cleaned (see note)
- ½ -1 oz tender stonecrop tips or leaves to taste
- 1 small handful wild grape tendrils 3-4 inches in length
- 1 oz good feta cheese in block form or more to taste. Do not use pre-crumbled feta which is dry and overly salty for my tastes.
- 1 oz 1/3 cup sliced kalamata olives Castelvetrano olives make a nice alternative
- ½ oz red onion shaved as thin as possible sliced the correct way (see note)
- Pinch Kosher salt and fresh ground black pepper
- 1 English cucumber
- A few leaves of torn fresh basil to taste
- 2 T Smudes sunflower oil or EVOO or to taste
- 2 teaspoons red wine vinegar or to taste
- Wild bergamot flowers to garnish, optional
Instructions
- Immerse the red onion in cold water for at least 30 minutes before assembling the salad.
- Core the tomato then cut in half horizontally. Cut each half into wedges slightly larger than you would for a regular salad, the pieces should seem a bit large.
- Cut the ends from the cucumber, then cut it into 1/3rds, you will not need all of it. Take one third and cut it in half lengthwise, then again, to make 1/4 ‘s. Cut the seeds out, then cut the cucumber strips into 1 inch pieces and reserve.
- Mix together all ingredients, adding the cheese at the very end and mixing gently to avoid breaking it up to much.
- Double check the seasoning for salt, pepper, herbs, cheese and acid, adjust until it tastes good to you, and serve. The salad can be made ahead of time (avoid refrigerating it as it will denature the texture of the tomato) but you should add the herbs and cheese right before serving to keep their fresh flavor.
- Serve the salad garnished with monarda flowers if using, as well as extra grape tendrils, if you like.
Notes
Slicing onions the "right" way
One, if not my biggest pet peeve in the whole world is onions cut the long way. To cut them the right way, cut the top and bottom off the onion, then cut it in half vertically through the first cuts. Lay the two halves of onion cut-side down on a cutting board, and slice them the short way. Reference my picture of onions in the bowl as a guide.Purslane
Use just the tender tips here. If you have lots of purslane, you might consider blanching it which will make the stems tender.
Yummy salad and Greeks love purslane either by itself as a salad or mixed into Greek salad. One point though. Greeks ALWAYS peel their cucumbers!
Indeed. English cucumbers don’t need to be peeled though.
Yes they don’t need to but always are in Greek salads in Greece. I’ve lived here in Greece a looooong time!
I always learn so much from your recipes. I have stonecrop growing in my yard. Yay! Now what’s with the right way / wrong way of slicing an onion. Anything more than aesthetics?
Thanks Jessica. Onions sliced the long way have an unpleasant mouthfeel and are too long, I used to tell my cooks they looked like tapeworms. The exception here are shallots, which I may slice into rings and fry occasionally.
Hi Alan, Been enjoying Flora and appreciate the recognition of your recipe testers! One confusing bit in your directions on this one. You write “One, if not my biggest pet peeve in the whole world is onions that have not been cut perpendicular to their flower stalk/roots.” Is that supposed to read “…have been cut…” rather than “have not been cut”??? A cut perpendicular (actually “orthogonal” if we’re talking 3 dimensions) to the stem axis gives you onion rings, which is not what you want, and not what is in the onion photo.
You’re correct. It’s so easy, but much harder to explain succinctly than it is to illustrate. Thanks Carla. I edited it for clarity.
I gather a related plant for salads and garnishes that is also called stonecrop but is very different from the variety in your photos. Mine is a very small groundcover succulent that has tiny yellow flowers in the spring. It has a juicy crunch like purslane but has more of a slight lemony taste. The chefs I supply do use it raw, and everybody seems to like it. It does take a lot longer to collect than something with big leaves though.
Thanks Coop. I’m using Sedum purpureum here. What’s the plant you’re referring to?
The recipe sounds wonderful, hope to try it this year. Purslane is pretty delicious. one question, do you have a date on your posts? Not sure when you say something is in season if it really is or if I’m reading an old post. thanks
For a number of reasons I don’t have dates on them. Blame the internet and the power of google. Sorry.