This Vibrant Salad Will Have You Looking Forward to Winter-Produce Season

This salad of bitter radicchio, sweet citrus, and salty cheese will bring some brightness to your winter.

By
Sasha Marx
Senior Culinary Editor
Sasha is a senior culinary editor at Serious Eats. He has over a decade of professional cooking experience, having worked his way up through a number of highly regarded and award-winning restaurant kitchens, followed by years spent in test kitchens for food publications.
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Published October 21, 2024
Close-up of a large ceramic salad bowl filled with dressed Trevisano radicchio, mandarin orange segments, herbs, pistachios, and ricotta salata.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Why It Works

  • Fresh satsuma juice and a couple off-the-beaten-path pantry ingredients (pomegranate molasses and Calabrian chiles) give a boost to a simple vinaigrette.
  • The bitterness of trevisano is balanced with juicy, sweet-and-sour satsuma segments.
  • Sharp and salty ricotta salata, bright fresh herbs, and crunchy pistachios round out the salad.

Whenever people tell me they hate winter, I think of the argument about having a dark side from the opening scene of When Harry Met Sally. Most people dislike winter in a casual Sally Albright way. Then there are those of us in the Harry Burns camp who dread it constantly. I may not read the last page of a book first, but I do start complaining that the days are getting shorter on June 22. In the fall, when most people are enjoying the foliage and pumpkin-spiced-everything vibes, I am in full House Stark mode, warning anyone who will listen that winter is indeed coming. Once the fleeting joy of the holiday season comes and goes, things get very bleak, especially when it comes to cooking with fresh produce.

It's easy to get lost, staring into the infernal abyss of beets and parsnips. There are, however, a couple of winter treats that can help pull us all back from the edge: chicories and citrus. Other than late-summer tomato season, this is my favorite time of year for salad-making. I love working with varieties of bitter radicchio and endive, pairing them with bright and acidic oranges, mandarins, or clementines.

A Flexible Ingredient List

The following salad is one that I recently made at home, and while it's delicious as is, its ingredient list is adaptable rather than prescriptive. The main idea for this kind of winter salad is balancing bitter with sweet, while adding freshness, acid, a little heat, and some texture.

Overhead view of prep bowls containing the ingredients for radicchio salad.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

When shopping for produce, I think it's best to be flexible and go with whatever looks best at the market. The past couple of weeks my local supermarket has had some fantastic trevisano in stock, so I used that. But conventional radicchio or red endive would work as well.

Removing pith from mandarin segments.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

It's hard to beat the juiciness of satsuma mandarins, but if you can't find them, any other mandarin orange will work here. I use satsumas twice in this dish—juice goes into the vinaigrette, and whole peeled segments are tossed into the salad to give bright pops of sweetness. I take a little extra time to scrape away the white pith from the mandarin segments with a paring knife for a cleaner mouthfeel and a prettier look. This is obviously optional, but I think salads should be made with care.

Ingredients for the vinaigrette: crushed Calabrian chiles in oil, extra virgin olive oil, red wine vinegar, pomegranate molasses, satsuma mandarin juice, and salt.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

The only other ingredient that I went out of my way to pick up for this salad was a little ricotta salata cheese, but you could easily swap in a funky blue cheese or aged pecorino. The other ingredients I pilfered from my fridge and pantry. Adding fresh herbs to salads is a great way to use them up before they rot and liquify in the bottom of your crisper drawer. Toasted shelled pistachios bring some fat and crunch to the dish.

Dressing the Salad

For the vinaigrette, I combine satsuma juice with red wine vinegar, minced shallot, and two slightly nonconventional pantry ingredients—Calabrian chiles and pomegranate molasses. Keeping your kitchen stocked with flavor-packed pantry items like these makes it easy to throw together a meal or spruce up a standard salad dressing. Whisk in some olive oil and you're good to go.

Dressing and assembling the salad is a breeze. Always dress in a much bigger bowl than you think you need. I start with just the trevisano in a large mixing bowl, and drizzle half of the vinaigrette along the sides of the bowl, rather than dousing the leaves themselves. This makes it easier to control the coating on your salad ingredients without drowning them in dressing.

Tossing the salad with clean hands.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Use your hands (squeaky clean of course) to dress, toss, and coat rather than tongs or wooden salad utensils. After seasoning the radicchio with salt, I arrange half of the leaves in an even layer in a serving bowl. Push the remaining trevisano to the side in the mixing bowl, and add the mandarin segments and parsley leaves. I lightly toss them in the residual vinaigrette at the bottom of the bowl before layering half of them on top of the radicchio in the serving bowl.

Overhead view of a large ceramic bowl filled with the radicchio salad, dressed and topped with tarragon leaves, pistachios, and thin slices of ricotta salata. Bronze serving implements are close at hand.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Keep the tarragon separate and undressed; it's so delicate and wilts down quickly when coated in dressing and will just get stuck to the bottom of the mixing bowl. Scatter half of the pistachios, ricotta salata, and tarragon over top, before repeating this layering process once more with the remaining ingredients. Dig in and forget about winter, even if just for a moment.

February 2019

Recipe Details

This Vibrant Salad Will Have You Looking Forward to Winter-Produce Season

Prep 15 mins
Total 15 mins
Serves 2 to 4 servings

Ingredients

For the Vinaigrette:

  • 2 tablespoons (30ml) satsuma mandarin juice from 1 mandarin (see note)

  • 2 tablespoons (30ml) red wine vinegar

  • 1 small shallot (30g), finely minced

  • 1 tablespoon (15ml) pomegranate molasses

  • 1 tablespoon (15g) chopped Calabrian chiles

  • 1/4 cup (60ml) extra-virgin olive oil

  • Kosher salt

For the Salad:

  • 1 head (about 10 ounces; 285g) trevisano or radicchio, leaves separated, large ones torn into 3-inch pieces, small ones left whole (see note)

  • Kosher salt

  • 3 satsuma mandarins (about 10 ounces; 285g), peeled and separated into segments

  • 1 cup (12g) fresh parsley leaves

  • 1/3 cup (55g) toasted shelled pistachios

  • 1/4 cup (3g) fresh tarragon leaves

  • 2 ounces (55g) ricotta salata, shaved

Directions

  1. For the Vinaigrette: In a small bowl, combine mandarin juice, vinegar, shallot, pomegranate molasses, and Calabrian chiles. Whisking constantly, slowly drizzle in olive oil. Season to taste with salt.

    Whisking olive oil into the vinaigrette.

    Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

  2. For the Salad: Place trevisano in a large mixing bowl. Drizzle half the vinaigrette into bowl, coating sides rather than pouring vinaigrette directly over the leaves. Using clean hands, toss salad to coat, adding more vinaigrette as needed until trevisano is thoroughly coated but not dripping. Season to taste with salt. Transfer half the leaves to a large serving bowl.

    Pouring the vinaigrette down the side of the mixing bowl to dress the salad.

    Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

  3. Push remaining trevisano leaves to the side of mixing bowl; then add satsuma segments and parsley leaves to the bowl. Using your hands, gently toss to lightly coat with residual vinaigrette in the bowl, adding more vinaigrette if needed. Scatter half the satsuma segments and parsley leaves over the trevisano in the serving bowl, followed by half of the pistachios, tarragon, and ricotta salata.

  4. Repeat this layering process with remaining salad components. Serve immediately.

Special Equipment

Whisk

Notes

If you can't find satsumas, substitute with another type of mandarin/clementine.

If you can't find trevisano or conventional radicchio, red endive will work for this salad as well.

Make-Ahead and Storage

Vinaigrette can be refrigerated for up to three days; bring to room temperature and whisk to recombine before using. The salad is best enjoyed immediately.

Read More

Nutrition Facts (per serving)
307Calories
24gFat
19gCarbs
7gProtein
×
Nutrition Facts
Servings: 2 to 4
Amount per serving
Calories307
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 24g30%
Saturated Fat 5g23%
Cholesterol 9mg3%
Sodium 419mg18%
Total Carbohydrate 19g7%
Dietary Fiber 3g12%
Total Sugars 11g
Protein 7g
Vitamin C 41mg205%
Calcium 134mg10%
Iron 2mg9%
Potassium 560mg12%
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.
(Nutrition information is calculated using an ingredient database and should be considered an estimate.)

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