This $4 Trader Joe’s Find Actually Gets Me Excited to Make Salads

Thao Thai
Thao Thai
Thao was the former Managing Editor of Cubby, our resource for families at home. She's a writer and editor based out of Columbus, Ohio, where she chases her kindergartener around while embracing the messy joy of parenthood. Her debut novel, Banyan Moon, comes out in 2023 from…read more
published May 31, 2022
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Trader Joe's canvas bag filled with groceries on countertop.
Credit: Sarah Crowley

I get excited by many things in life: lobster rolls dripping with butter, my mom’s crispy fish cakes, the ability to sleep in past 6 a.m. Salad, unfortunately, is not one of those things. Trust me: I have tried. I know the benefits of roughage! But when the lunchtime hour rolls around, my hunger pulls me towards a soft baguette or a bowl of noodles over a fresh salad every time. My rationale is that if I’m going to spend time in the kitchen, I want something hearty and satisfying, and many salads of my acquaintance tend to be sort of … sad. 

There is one exception: Northstar’s inimitable Uptown Salad, made at a local cafe here in Columbus, Ohio. This salad is an actual institution around town. After a friend moved away, she would occasionally text me to ask, “Have you had the salad recently?” as if we were talking about a long-lost friend. The salad has a whopping 10 ingredients (we counted), including roasted chicken, goat cheese, avocado, chickpeas, and, the best part of all, croutons. 

Oh my, the croutons. It actually feels a little sacrilegious to call them croutons. Instead of the thick, sometimes-stale cubes of bread you find in restaurant salads, these croutons are incredibly thin, crispy, and coated in herby butter. They make me feel as if I were eating something truly substantial (although, of course, with 10 ingredients, this isn’t exactly a light salad). When I called the restaurant to wax poetic about the croutons, the poor employee took mercy on me and revealed that they are made from the restaurant’s homemade focaccia.

Credit: Thao Thai

I haven’t come around to making fresh focaccia croutons yet, nor do I think I’ll really ever need to. While browsing Trader Joe’s one sleepy Sunday morning, I came across the Fig & Olive Crisps. I’ve served them before at dinner parties with a big smear of goat cheese on top, but on this visit, I looked at them with new eyes. The crisps’ shape and texture looked similar to the Northstar croutons, and I couldn’t help but think the fig and olives might add a sweet-savory flavor that harkens back to my beloved salad.

Credit: Thao Thai

When I brought them home, I immediately flung the contents of my vegetable drawer onto my counter and began putting together a colossal salad with greens, chicken, Parmesan, and, of course, a healthy scatter of Fig & Olive Crisps. I actually like to break them up a little for maximum salad coverage. They add a delicate, lightly sweet and briny flavor, giving a lovely complexity to the salad. One bite, and I was convinced. Salad can be worth making at home (and eating) — if you have the right croutons. The crisps add a touch that’s unexpected and special enough that I could even see myself serving the salad at a summer gathering for guests. 

Find it in stores: Trader Joe’s Fig & Olive Crisps, $3.99 for 5.3 ounces

What Trader Joe’s find do you toss in your salads? Tell us in the comments.

This post originally ran on Kitchn. See it there: The $4 Trader Joe’s Find That Actually Gets Me Excited to Eat Salads.