In season now — September – April (peak after frost)
Salad Easy American

Massaged kale caesar

Tender kale massaged until silky, tossed with a traditional egg-yolk-and-anchovy dressing and crispy breadcrumbs — the heartier Caesar that holds up for hours.

A large bowl of dark green massaged kale caesar with golden breadcrumbs and shaved Parmesan on top.
Prep
15 min
Cook
5 min
Total
20 min
Serves
4

Kale Caesar is what happens when a classic meets meal prep. The massaged kale holds up for 24 hours refrigerated — a genuine rarity in the salad world — and the dressing gets better as it sits. Use a single fresh egg yolk (traditional, or pasteurized for safety) for the richest, silkiest dressing; a mayo swap is there if you need it. A batch made Sunday is lunch all week: top with chicken, shrimp, or a soft-boiled egg and you've got a real meal, not a sad desk salad.

Massaged kale caesar

Serves 4

Ingredients (19)

Crispy breadcrumbs

Caesar dressing

To finish

You'll need

  • Large mixing bowl
  • Small skillet (for breadcrumbs)
  • Microplane or fine grater
  • Whisk
Source these from local growers See growers + what's in season →

Instructions

Nutrition

Estimated per serving · 1 serving
390 Calories
10 g Protein
17 g Carbs
32 g Fat
3 g Fiber
2 g Sugar
680 mg Sodium
Ingredient intelligence

What to look for when you shop

Best varieties

  • Lacinato (Tuscan/dinosaur) — long dark leaves; most tender and caesar-friendly
  • Red Russian — tender, frilly, slight purple tint
  • Curly kale — works but requires extra massaging
  • Baby kale (any variety) — skip the massaging entirely; use directly
  • Siberian kale — cold-hardy and sweet after frost

Ripeness

Leaves crisp, deep green or blue-green, unblemished. Yellow tips or wilted leaves indicate age. The bunch should feel heavy and smell fresh-green, not musty.

Imperfections are fine

Small holes from flea beetles are fine — actually an organic signal. A couple of yellow leaves at the bottom trim off. Slight dirt at the stem rinses.

Good substitutions

  • Romaine + kale mix (half and half) for lighter texture
  • Baby kale (no massaging needed) — cuts prep in half
  • Swiss chard (massaged) — earthier but works
  • Escarole (torn) — less massage, still hearty

In season

Kale is available nearly year-round, but is at its sweetest after the first frost (October – February). Spring kale is more peppery.

How much to buy

About 10 oz — one large bunch.

From a grower near you

Find your kale and egg producers on CollectiveCrop

Kale freshness shows up in a raw salad immediately — a local bunch massages to silky in two minutes, while bagged grocery kale stays leathery. Add a pastured egg yolk with deep orange color and the Caesar dressing goes from good to you'll-taste-the-difference-immediately. CollectiveCrop is how both the kale grower and the egg farmer become reachable; use pasteurized in-shell eggs (Davidson's Safest Choice) when feeding pregnant or immunocompromised eaters. For a salad built on raw ingredients, the starting material is the whole thing.

  • In season September – April (peak after frost)
  • For this recipe 10 oz / 1 large bunch + 1 fresh or pasteurized egg
  • Freshness Picked within this week
  • Imperfects welcome Second-grade produce works great here
  • Diet-friendly gluten-free (if using GF breadcrumbs)
  • While you're there Parmigiano-Reggiano · Fresh lemons · Good anchovies · Farm eggs (pastured; pasteurized in-shell for at-risk eaters) · Crusty bread (for croutons)

At the market

About 10 oz — one large bunch.

Best varieties

  • Lacinato (Tuscan/dinosaur) long dark leaves; most tender and caesar-friendly
  • Red Russian tender, frilly, slight purple tint
  • Curly kale works but requires extra massaging

Good to know

Tips

  • Pasteurized in-shell eggs (Davidson's Safest Choice) are widely available at most grocery stores and eliminate any raw-egg worry while keeping the traditional flavor and texture.
  • A pastured local egg yolk is deeper orange than a commercial one — your dressing will be noticeably richer in color and flavor. If you have access to farm eggs, they're worth it here.
  • Dress the kale 10 to 30 minutes before serving for peak texture. Most salads can't sit; this one improves.
  • Real Parmigiano-Reggiano in the dressing is non-negotiable. The grainy texture and umami depth are what separate this from a bottled caesar.
  • Leftover dressing is gold — keep it in a jar and use it on everything for a week.
  • For extra-crispy breadcrumbs, make a double batch and keep half in a sealed jar for topping grain bowls, pastas, and egg dishes.
  • Don't overdo it on the dressing. Caesar should coat, not drown — you can always add more.

Storage

  • Dressed salad: 24 hours refrigerated — a rare salad that holds up.
  • Undressed massaged kale: 3 days refrigerated.
  • Dressing alone: 1 week in a sealed jar.
  • Breadcrumbs: 5 days in an airtight container at room temperature (don't refrigerate — they soften).

Reheating

  • Not applicable — served cold.

Make ahead

  • Massage kale up to 24 hours ahead; store covered in the fridge.
  • Make dressing up to 1 week ahead.
  • Toast breadcrumbs up to 5 days ahead; cool and store airtight.
  • Assemble a few minutes before serving — the salad actually improves after 30 minutes.

Variations

  • Grilled chicken caesar: top with 1 sliced grilled chicken breast per serving.
  • Shrimp caesar: top with 6 to 8 grilled or pan-seared shrimp per serving.
  • Salmon caesar: flake 6 oz cooked salmon over each serving.
  • Kale and romaine: mix in 3 cups torn romaine for a lighter texture.
  • Soft-boiled egg caesar: top each serving with a halved 7-minute egg.
  • Bacon caesar: add 1/4 cup crumbled cooked bacon with the breadcrumbs.
  • Tahini caesar (vegan): replace mayo and anchovy with 1/3 cup tahini and 2 teaspoons capers; skip the Parmesan or use vegan.
  • Everything bagel caesar: add 1 tablespoon everything bagel seasoning to the breadcrumbs.

Swaps

  • Vegan: use vegan mayo, 1 teaspoon miso instead of anchovy, vegan Parmesan or 2 tablespoons nutritional yeast.
  • Anchovy-free: replace with 1 tablespoon white miso or 2 teaspoons soy sauce.
  • Gluten-free: use GF panko or skip the breadcrumbs; add toasted almonds for crunch.
  • Lower-fat: halve the mayo and replace with Greek yogurt; reduce olive oil to 2 tablespoons.
  • Dairy-free: skip the Parmesan; add 2 tablespoons nutritional yeast to the dressing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do you massage kale?

Kale is tough and fibrous raw. Massaging with salt and oil breaks down the cell walls, turning stiff leaves into tender, almost silky greens that taste sweeter and less bitter. It's the single most important step in any raw kale salad.

How long should I massage kale?

2 to 3 minutes of firm rubbing with your hands. The leaves turn darker green, shrink in volume by about half, and feel tender to the touch. Undermassaged kale feels leathery; properly massaged feels pliable.

What kind of kale is best for caesar?

Lacinato (also called Tuscan, dinosaur, or cavolo nero) — long dark blue-green leaves with the most tender texture. Curly kale works but is chewier. Avoid tough mature kale; go for younger, smaller-leaved bunches.

Is there anchovy in traditional caesar dressing?

Yes — it's the savory depth in classic Caesar dressing. Don't worry, it doesn't taste "fishy" — it tastes salty and umami. For an anchovy-free version, substitute 1 to 2 teaspoons of white miso or 1 teaspoon of soy sauce.

How long does kale caesar keep?

24 hours refrigerated — it's the only salad that actually improves after sitting. The kale softens further while holding structure, and the flavors meld. Perfect for meal prep.

Why a real egg yolk instead of mayo?

Traditional Caesar is built on a single fresh egg yolk emulsified into oil — it's what gives the dressing its silky richness and depth. For a farm-to-table recipe, a just-laid pastured egg is the whole point, not a shortcut to replace. Use a pasteurized in-shell egg (Davidson's Safest Choice is the US standard) if you want the traditional texture without food-safety worry, or source from a grower you trust.

Is raw egg safe?

For most healthy adults with a fresh, well-sourced egg, the salmonella risk is very low but not zero. Pregnant people, young children, older adults, and anyone immunocompromised should skip raw egg — use the pasteurized-egg or mayo variation instead. Pasteurized in-shell eggs (Davidson's Safest Choice) give you the traditional flavor with no risk.

Can I substitute mayo for the egg yolk?

Yes — it's the standard safer swap. Use 1/4 cup good-quality mayonnaise (commercial mayo uses pasteurized eggs) in place of the yolk, skip the oil-emulsifying step, and whisk everything together. The texture is slightly less silky but close, and the dressing is totally shelf-stable for at-risk eaters or quick weeknight assembly.

What do I serve this with?

Grilled chicken, shrimp, salmon, or steak (it's sturdy enough to be a main-course salad). Also great alongside pasta, in a grain bowl, or topped with a soft-boiled egg for lunch.

Can I add romaine to this salad?

Absolutely. A mix of massaged kale and torn romaine gives texture variety and a lighter feel — about 3 cups kale and 3 cups romaine. Dress both together.

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