Like a lot of you out there, I’ve become borderline obsessed with the Ottolenghi cookbook Jerusalem. If I’m having a dinner party it’s not a matter of if I will use an Ottolenghi recipe, it’s just a question of how many. While the lamb meatballs and cardamom chicken are constant favorites, I rotate among almost all of the salad and vegetable recipes.
Part of what makes the salad recipes so great, is that they always look stunning. Almost as if I’d transported a platter full of goodness direct from the big table in the front of the Islington restaurant.
While I usually save some of the more labor intensive recipes for the weekend or the aforesaid dinner parties, I’ve taken to adding a few Ottolenghesque touches to our everyday fare as well. I realized early on that the addition of slices of red onion makes almost anything look stunning. Also, layering the salad on a platter rather than mixing it in a big bowl looks ever so professional. And finally any mixture of citrus zest and/or roasted nuts will make turn any otherwise ordinary vegetable into something extraordinary.
So here is last night’s Broccoli, Orange and Hazelnut Salad. No, I did not use a recipe from Jerusalem. But it sure looks like I did, doesn’t it? And I have to say, it tastes like it too.
broccoli, orange and hazelnut salad
1 head of broccoli
1 red onion
1 orange
1 lemon
salt
1/2 cup chopped, roasted hazelnuts
2 – 3 tablespoons olive oil
Cut the broccoli into small florets and steam until tender. You don’t want to over cook them, but you also don’t want them too crunchy/raw. When they are done lift them out carefully and lay them on a serving plate to cool. I don’t like plunging them into a cold bath to keep the green color, because I find they just end up getting soggy somehow. But if you lay them out in one layer, they should cool down pretty quickly.
Using a vegetable peeler, peel the rind off of the orange, being careful to leave behind the white pith. Chop finely.
Juice one half of the orange and place juice in a small bowl. Add the juice of 1 half lemon.
Cut the red onion in half, length wise through the root. Then slice along the root into thin slices. Place the onion in the bowl with the citrus juice, along with 1 tsp of salt, and let sit for at least 20 minutes.
To assemble salad: Scatter the marinated red onion on top of the room temperature broccoli. Top with the chopped hazlenuts and then the orange zest. Season with salt and pepper. Add about 3 tablespoons of the citrus juice and the olive oil, drizzling it on top. Bring to the table to let everyone see how pretty and professional it looks. Then you can mix it up and serve it.
thefarmgirlcooks
Mmm! This looks so fresh and unique. I hate to say it, but this farm girl will be buying broccoli this week 😉 Thanks for another great post, Elizabeth!
Heather Robinson
That’s it? It looks so pretty I would have thought it much harder. Hooray!
And ps this is exactly the kind of food I have been craving lately. I know in fashion, of course, there are fasion forecasters. Do you ever do consultancy work as a culinary forecaster? Just a thought because you often know what I want before I do!
Catherine
Looks fabulous! I love citrus flavoured dressings, broccoli, nuts and any kind of onion. What kind of vegetable peeler do you have that gets the zest off an orange? I am searching for a good dressing to use on a pear, citrus, mixed greens, and blue cheese salad? Am trying to replicate a salad I had in Southern California.
Elizabeth Minchilli
I love the Oxo vegetable peeler. It seems to be the only one that is always reliable.
fhp
Did this.
Ate this.
Loved this.
…..and I totally agree about the the plunge and the sog. I pull the vegetables out when they are just a little less done then what I like and let them cool naturally with the exception of string beans. They do sometimes loose their greenness without the ice cold plunge and don’t really get soggy.
Elizabeth Minchilli
You made it and ate it already? That was fast!
Victoria
Looks delicious. Another one of yours I must try. Thanks, Elizabeth.
Phyllis @ Oracibo
I simply love both the recipes and the photos from Ottolenghi’s cookbooks…eye and stomach candy. I couldn’t believe the selection of things when we visited the tiny take-away off Kensington Church St. (if memory serves!) simply gorgeous and I agree with you when you said you want to taste it all!
Elizabeth Minchilli
I’ve never been to the one in Kensington, nor the restaurant in Soho.