Receta Insalata di arance e finocchi (Orange and Fennel Salad)
It might be the season, but coming right on the heels of our recent post on Sausages and Grapes, today’s post once again features a mixture of sweet and savory ingredients. Whereas that post combined fruit and meat, today we’ll take a look at a fruit and vegetable combination from Sicily: Orange and Fennel Salad. To my mind, it has everything you could hope for in a salad: it’s beautiful, healthy and delicious.
Orange and Fennel Salad is also quick and easy to prepare. All it is, after all, are slices of orange and fennel arranged on a plate—’composed’ in culinary lingo—and dressed with olive oil and seasoned with salt and pepper, perhaps with few olives and fennel fronds for garnish. Both of the main ingredients in Orange and Fennel Salad, however, need to be prepped in a certain way, so I’ve included step-by-step photographic directions here to show you how.
Salads are usually classified as contorni, or side dishes, in an Italian meal, but when it’s presented decoratively as we’ve done here, Orange and Fennel Salad can stand alone as an antipasto or, as its own salad/fruit course. It’s a refreshing way to end a substantial meal.
Ingredients
Serves 4-6 people
3-4 fennel bulbs, preferably not too large
4 or 5 oranges
Best quality, extra-virgin olive oil
Salt and pepper
A few black olives for garnish (optional)
Directions
First, prep the fennel: Take your fennel bulb and inspect it. The one I’m working with today is rather large and bit discolored, as you can see—not uncommon for most fennel you will find in supermarkets. It’s hardly ideal, but with some careful trimming and slicing, we can turn this rather sad piece of vegetable into something salad-worthy.
Trim the fennel bulbs top and bottom.
then slice each quarter very thinly from top to bottom, making sure that each slice has a bit of the base, which will hold the slice together:
Second, prep the oranges: Trim them top and bottom.
Then take a paring knife and cut from top to bottom along the sides, between the pith (the bitter white stuff just under the peel) and the flesh. (If you’re like me, you’re likely to take a bit of the flesh off, too, but no worries.)
Once the orange is peeled, trim off as much of any remaining pith as you can.
Then slice the orange horizontally into thin, rounds.
Third, compose the salad: Arrange the fennel and orange slices decoratively on a serving plate (or, even better, on individual plates if you have the time). Season with salt and, if you like, freshly ground pepper. Garnish with the black olives if using and drizzle everything very generously with the olive oil. And for an elegant final touch, if you like, top with bits of fennel frond.
Notes on Orange and Fennel Salad
This is one of those simple dishes that relies entirely on the goodness of its ingredients. You should look for a best quality, fruity extra-virgin olive oil, the kind that is dark green in color. And since Orange and Fennel Salad is a Sicilian dish, the oil would ideally be from Sicily. Here in the States, I’d recommend Frantoia brand olive oil, one of my favorites for any dish, Sicilian or not. It’s not cheap, but then no good olive oil is.
I like to compose my Orange and Fennel Salad, but for a homier tossed version, cut the fennel into strips (removing the base that keeps the layers together) and the oranges into sections and toss them with the oil, salt and pepper as you would a typical Italian salad. There’s no need for vinegar in this salad—even if most recipes I’ve seen in English call for it—since the juice of the oranges will mix with the oil to make a dressing. But I have seen Italian recipes that call for some additional orange or lemon juice. Garnishing with black olives is an optional but lovely touch, as are the fennel fronds. Some recipes call for bits of walnut, which would be particularly nice this time of year.
Insalata di arance e finocchi (Orange and Fennel Salad)
Ingredients
- 3-4 fennel bulbs, preferably not too large
- 4 or 5 oranges
- Best quality, extra-virgin olive oil
- Salt and pepper
- A few black olives for garnish (optional)
Instructions
Prep the oranges: Trim them top and bottom, then take a paring knife and cut from top to bottom along the sides, between the pith (the bitter white stuff just under the peel) and the flesh. Once the orange is peeled, trim off as much of any remaining pith as you can, then slice the orange horizontally into thin, rounds.
Compose the salad: Arrange the fennel and orange slices decoratively on a serving plate (or, even better, on individual plates if you have the time). Season with salt and, if you like, freshly ground pepper. Garnish with the black olives if using and drizzle everything very generously with the olive oil. And for an elegant final touch, if you like, top with bits of fennel frond.
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