youtube pinterest twitter facebook instagram vimeo whatsapp Bookmark Entries BURGER NEW Chevron Down Chevron Left Chevron Right Basket Speech Comment Search Video Play Icon Premium Nigella Lawson Vegan Vegetarian Member Speech Recipe Email Bookmark Comment Camera Scales Quantity List Reorder Remove Open book
Menu Signed In
More Guest recipes Recipe search

Chicory and Blood Orange Salad

by , featured in Sarah Raven's Garden Cookbook
Published by Bloomsbury
Print me

Introduction

Putting fruit in a salad may seem a bit retro but, don't worry, this salad looks beautiful and is ideal as a light winter first course when you're heading towards a rich meaty main. A squeeze of lemon with the orange juice in the dressing sharpens it up and gives it the strength to stand up to the bitterness of the leaves. To make the salad more substantial, add roasted walnuts.

Image of Sarah Raven's Chicory and Blood Orange Salad
Photo by Jonathan Buckley

Ingredients

Serves: 4-6

For the salad:

  • 2 small heads of Belgian chicory of Belgian chicory
  • 1 small head of Treviso chicory (if not available, use all Belgian chicory)
  • squeeze lemon juice
  • 2 blood oranges

For the dressing:

  • 3 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1 tablespoon walnut oil
  • juice of ½ blood orange
  • juice and grated zest of ½ lemon
  • salt
  • black pepper
  • 1 heaped tablespoon walnut (roughly chopped) - optional

Method

Chicory and Blood Orange Salad is a guest recipe by Sarah Raven so we are not able to answer questions regarding this recipe

  1. If using small chicories, you can peel away the leaves one by one and eat them just as they are, without slicing. If you can only find big chicons, cut each frond in half long-ways and squirt immediately with lemon juice. Meanwhile, roast the roughly chopped walnuts, if using them, for 3 minutes in a hot oven or dry-fry them in a pan.
  2. To end up with pith-free segments or slices of orange, cut a slice off both ends of the orange and then peel it as you would an apple: hold the orange with your non-preferred hand and, with a small serrated knife held with the blade pointing upwards, make short up and down sawing movements, going round and round the fruit until it is completely skinned. There should be no pith left on the orange. You can then follow each layer of skin down to the heart to cut the fruit into skinless segments, or slice the whole orange horizontally as thinly as you can, into cartwheels. Remove the pithy centre of each segment.
  3. Make the dressing by mixing the olive and walnut oil, orange juice, lemon juice and zest, salt and pepper, making sure that it has a sharp enough taste. If you're using ordinary oranges - which have a sweeter flavour than blood oranges - add more lemon juice to make it good and tart. Scatter the walnuts, if using them, over the top.

Tell us what you think

Thumbprint Cookies