Facebook LinkedIn Email Pinterest Twitter Instagram YouTube Icon Navigation Search Icon Main Search Icon Video Play Icon Plus Icon Minus Icon Check Icon Print Icon Note Icon Heart Icon Filled Heart Icon Single Arrow Icon Double Arrow Icon Hamburger Icon TV Icon Close Icon Sorted 汉堡/搜索图标
Recipe

Fennel & Orange Salad with Red Onion & Olives

Scott Phillips

Servings:six.

This popular Sicilian salad is made with blood oranges when they are in season, but navel oranges work just as well. I like to bring the salad to the table with the layers intact and toss it at the table.

betway电子竞技俱乐部

  • One-half small red onion
  • 2 large navel oranges or blood oranges
  • 2 to 3 small fennel bulbs, trimmed (about 1 lb. total after trimming)
  • 1/2 cup kalamata olives
  • 3 Tbs. extra-virgin olive oil
  • 1-1/2 Tbs. fresh lemon juice
  • 3/4 tsp. kosher salt
  • 1 tsp. chopped fresh mint
  • Freshly ground black pepper

Nutritional Information

  • Calories (kcal) : 120
  • Fat Calories (kcal): 70
  • Fat (g): 8
  • Saturated Fat (g): 1
  • Polyunsaturated Fat (g): 1
  • Monounsaturated Fat (g): 6
  • Cholesterol (mg): 0
  • Sodium (mg): 240
  • Carbohydrates (g): 13
  • Fiber (g): 4
  • Protein (g): 2

Preparation

  • Slice the onion half lengthwise as thinly as you can. Put the sliced onion in a bowl and cover with cold water to mellow its flavor and keep it crisp. Refrigerate for at least 15 minutes.
  • 一次处理一个橘子,割掉ends. Set the orange on a cutting board, one cut side down. With a sharp knife, cut away the peel (the zest and white pith) by slicing from top to bottom, following the contour of the orange. Working over a bowl to collect any juice, release the orange segments by carefully cutting them away from the membrane that separates them. Remove any seeds and put the orange segments in another bowl, separate from the juice. Squeeze the membranes over the juice bowl.
  • Cut the fennel in quarters lengthwise and then trim away most of the core, leaving just enough intact to keep the layers together. Slice the quarters lengthwise as thinly as you can.
  • With a paring knife, slice the olive flesh off the pits lengthwise. In a small bowl, whisk together the extra-virgin olive oil, lemon juice, and salt. (The recipe can be prepared up to this point several hours in advance. If working ahead, wrap and refrigerate the fennel; don’t chop the mint until just before serving.)
  • Drain the sliced onion and toss it with the fennel. Put the fennel and onion in a shallow salad bowl or on a rimmed serving platter. Drizzle with the reserved orange juice. Arrange the orange segments on top and sprinkle with the olives and mint.
  • Drizzle the dressing evenly over the salad. Add several grinds of black pepper and serve immediately.

Serve this salad with roasted or grilled seafood.

Reviews

Rate or Review

Reviews (7 reviews)

  • knittingrozz| 03/10/2018

    Made this with dinner last night. It was delicious. My husband loved it too.

  • Kokinneke| 03/08/2015

    I agree with a previous reviewer: more mint and more orange. I am familiar with raw fennel but my guests were positively surprised of the blends of taste. A success. I will make it again for sure.

  • User avater
    Chellspecker| 01/14/2013

    I've made this many times, and find it a really nice change from lettuce and spinach salads. The winters are very grey here in Vancouver, and just when it seems like winter will never end, the blood oranges and other citruses are in the stores. This salad always cheers me up, its soft bright colours and zingy flavours bring a bit of Sicilian sun to the heart of Canadian winter. I made it tonight, and used regular Kalamata olives instead of dry-cured. The dry ones are almost too salty for my taste, but their inky black makes a great colour contrast to the salad's soft pastels. I forgot the mint, but scattered some fennel fronds on top and it was none the worse for it. Nice licorice-y basil would be nice too.

  • CookinginDallas| 05/10/2010

    This is an unusual salad with a flavor profile that works really well with grilled fish or chicken, or even a roasted chicken in winter. Guests usually find it a delightful surprise. I've found that the ratio of orange to fennel is a little low in the recipe as written, and that it needs a good deal more mint, at least a tablespoon, and a tablespoon of Italian parsley. Also, the dressing brightens considerably with the addition of the orange juice collected when sectioning the oranges and a tablespoon or so of mirin (japanese rice vinegar). Now that I have learned the technique and combination I tend feel free to combine until I like the flavor.

Show More

Rate this Recipe

Write a Review

Delicious Dish

Find the inspiration you crave for your love of cooking

细Cooking Magazine

Subscribe today
andsave up to 50%

Already a subscriber?Log in.

下载必威体育馆

View All

Connect

Follow Fine Cooking on your favorite social networks

We hope you’ve enjoyed your free articles. To keep reading, subscribe today.

Get the print magazine, 25 years of back issues online, over 7,000 recipes, and more.

Start your FREE trial