Chilled Jellied Salad

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Tomato aspic is one of my family’s favorite Thanksgiving recipes. Adobe Stock photo

Tomato Aspic

BY JILL PALMER

Tomato aspic is one of my family’s favorite Thanksgiving recipes. Adobe Stock photo
Tomato aspic is one of my family’s favorite Thanksgiving recipes. Adobe Stock photo

Back in the ‘60s, folks in Mississippi used to serve chilled Jell-O salads on hot summer days. In my southern-origin family, chilled jellied salad (or as we call it, tomato aspic) is served as one of our favorite dishes at our Thanksgiving dinner celebration.

Aspic is basically a tomato Jell-O containing all kinds of meats and vegetables of your choice. You either love it or you hate it. In our family, we develop the Jell-O base, then drop in the extra ingredients before the Jell-O can chill and solidify. In our aspic, we include: cilantro, diced shrimp, diced onions, diced celery, lemon juice, bay leaves and diced green olives. But you can include whatever your Thanksgiving-loving heart desires. It’s a great treat for people who love exoctic tastes. Even if you aren’t a person for strange foods, it’s always worth a try.

Ingredients

3 envelopes KNOX unflavored gelatin

3 cups cold tomato juice, divided

2 cups tomato juice, heated to boiling

¼ cup lemon juice

2 tbsp. sugar

1 ½ tsp. Worcestershire sauce

4 dashes Tabasco Sauce

2 bay leaves

1 tsp. salt

Diced shrimp

Diced celery

Diced green olives

Cilantro

Directions

Sprinkle gelatin over 1 cup of the cold tomato juice in large bowl; let stand 1 minute to soften gelatin. Add hot juice; stir 5 minutes or until gelatin is completely dissolved.

Add remaining 2 cups cold juice, lemon juice, sugar, Tabasco and Worcestershire sauce. Pour into glass pan or individual bowls/ring molds.

Refrigerate 1 hour, add shrimp, celery, green olives, bay leaves and cilantro.

Optional: add thin layer of mayonnaise to full dish or add to your own individual serving.

Enjoy!

Jill Palmer is an intern at The Weekly Sun and a student at Silver  Creek High School.