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salad

Pickled Beet Salad with Fennel and Nasturtium Leaf (vegan)

April 6, 2023 By Courtney West 1 Comment

Pickled Beet Salad with Fennel & Nasturtium Leaf (vegan/gf recipe) | seasonal plant-based recipes via The Sweet Miscellany Blog

Vibrant and packed with fresh spring flavors, this pickled beet salad is the perfect way to showcase seasonal produce! Thin slices of quick-pickled beets are layered with sliced fennel, vegan ricotta, and nasturtium leaves and flowers for a gorgeous spring salad. With only minimal cooking involved and just 20 minutes of hands-on prep time, this vegan salad is the perfect way to enjoy your homemade pickled beets.

I’ve long been a firm believer in the fact that things that are in season together go together. It may sound like a simple principle, but it’s one that frequently guides how I develop and share recipes here. And, it’s one that Erin French echoed in an episode of The Lost Kitchen that I just watched. By pairing things together that are being grown and harvested at the same time, you’re able to truly experience the season at hand. You’re able to actually see and taste that specific moment in time, which I think is an incredibly magical thing!

Pickled Beet Salad with Fennel & Nasturtium Leaf (vegan/gf recipe) | seasonal plant-based recipes via The Sweet Miscellany Blog

This pickled beet salad was born out of this guiding principle. I found myself with lovely candy-striped Chioggia beets and petite fennel from a local farm and knew I needed to pair them with peppery nasturtium leaves that were threatening to overtake my garden beds. I decided to pickle the beets because I was craving something tangy and bright. To make this vegan salad more substantial while also adding a creamy element, I added some of my homemade vegan ricotta. Each element is arranged on the plate in order to be a feast for the eyes as much as the belly!

Pickled Beet Salad with Fennel & Nasturtium Leaf (vegan/gf recipe) | seasonal plant-based recipes via The Sweet Miscellany Blog

Why You’ll Like This Recipe

  • It’s the perfect way to slow down and appreciate all of the beautiful colors, flavors, and textures of the spring season.
  • There’s minimal cooking involved (just 5 minutes to make the pickling liquid for the beets!) and just 20 minutes of active hands-on prep time.
  • Once you pickle the beets, the salad comes together fairly quickly, especially if you opt to use a store-bought vegan or regular ricotta.
  • It’s both vegan and gluten free.
  • It’s as enjoyable to look at as it is to eat!
Pickled Beet Salad with Fennel & Nasturtium Leaf (vegan/gf recipe) | seasonal plant-based recipes via The Sweet Miscellany Blog

How to Make Pickled Beets

The base of this salad is thinly sliced quick-pickled beets. They’re incredibly simple to make, and since we’re slicing them very thin, we don’t need to peel or cook them beforehand! You’ll start by scrubbing your beets very well. Or, if you prefer to peel them, you can do that instead. Slice off the very top and bottom of both beets. Using a mandoline or a very sharp knife, cut your beets into very thin rounds like you see in the photos here. Transfer your sliced beets into a wide-mouthed glass pint jar or similar sized container.

Pickled Beet Salad with Fennel & Nasturtium Leaf (vegan/gf recipe) | seasonal plant-based recipes via The Sweet Miscellany Blog
Pickled Beet Salad with Fennel & Nasturtium Leaf (vegan/gf recipe) | seasonal plant-based recipes via The Sweet Miscellany Blog

Next, make the pickling liquid. Combine the water, vinegar, salt, bay leaf, cracked black peppercorns, and garlic clove in a small pot over medium heat. Bring the liquid to a simmer. Let it simmer 5 minutes then remove it from the heat. Carefully pour the liquid over the beets until they are fully submerged. Allow the beets to pickle for at least 1 hour before proceeding for the recipe. You can easily do this 1 day (or even 1 week!) ahead of time. Keep any leftover pickled beets in the fridge and make sure to enjoy them within a month.

Pickled Beet Salad with Fennel & Nasturtium Leaf (vegan/gf recipe) | seasonal plant-based recipes via The Sweet Miscellany Blog

Tips for Composing this Pickled Beet Salad

Rather than tossing everything together like a standard salad, we’re intentionally “composing” all of the elements together on a plate. Here are some tips for composing a beautiful salad:

  • Add each element one by one. Start with the beets first, then the nasturtium leaves. Next comes the fennel, then dollops of tofu ricotta. Finish the salad by garnishing with dill or fennel fronds, nasturtium flowers (if you have them) and a sprinkle of salt and pepper if you like.
  • To keep the pickled beets from “bleeding” onto all of the other elements, you can blot them with a paper towel prior to composing your salad. It also helps to lay them down first on the plate!
  • Fennel has a tendency to oxidize (like an apple) once it’s sliced. You can either cut it right before you make and eat your salad. Or, you can keep the slices in cold water with a squeeze of fresh lemon juice until you need them. Just make sure to drain them before you create your salad!
  • Have fun with it and don’t rush the process! Think of it like you’re painting or drawing.
Pickled Beet Salad with Fennel & Nasturtium Leaf (vegan/gf recipe) | seasonal plant-based recipes via The Sweet Miscellany Blog
Pickled Beet Salad with Fennel & Nasturtium Leaf (vegan/gf recipe) | seasonal plant-based recipes via The Sweet Miscellany Blog

Looking for more springy salad recipes? Try this celery salad with blood orange, dates, and walnuts or this spring lentil salad with creamy dill dressing.

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Pickled Beet Salad with Fennel & Nasturtium Leaf (vegan/gf recipe) | seasonal plant-based recipes via The Sweet Miscellany Blog

Pickled Beet Salad with Fennel and Nasturtium Leaf (vegan)


5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star

No reviews

  • Author: Courtney West
  • Total Time: 1 hour 20 minutes
  • Yield: 2-3 servings
  • Diet: Vegan
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Description

Vibrant and packed with fresh spring flavors, this pickled beet salad is the perfect way to showcase seasonal produce! Thin slices of quick-pickled beets are layered with sliced fennel, vegan ricotta, and nasturtium leaves and flowers for a gorgeous spring salad. With only minimal cooking involved and just 20 minutes of hands-on prep time, this vegan salad is the perfect way to enjoy your homemade pickled beets.


Ingredients

for the pickled beets:

  • 2 medium beets
  • 1/2 cup white wine vinegar
  • 1 cup water
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons sea salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon black peppercorns, cracked
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 1 garlic clove, smashed

for the salad:

  • 2 cups nasturtium leaves, loosely packed
  • 1 small fennel bulb
  • 1/2 cup vegan ricotta
  • 2 tablespoons fennel fronds or dill, roughly chopped
  • sea salt, to taste
  • pepper, to taste
  • nasturtium flowers, optional for garnish


Instructions

Make the pickled beets first. Either scrub your beets very well or peel them. Slice off the very top and bottom of the beets. Using a mandoline or a very sharp knife, cut your beets into very thin rounds. Transfer your sliced beets into a wide-mouthed glass pint jar or heat-proof container.

Make the pickling liquid next. Combine the vinegar, water, salt, peppercorns, bay leaf, and garlic clove in a small pot over medium heat. Bring the liquid to a simmer. Let it simmer 5 minutes then remove it from the heat. Carefully pour the liquid over the beets until they are fully submerged. If you have pickling liquid left over, you can use it to pickle other veg or discard it. Allow the beets to pickle for a minimum of 1 hour before proceeding with the recipe. Keep your pickled beets in the fridge and enjoy them within a month or two.

Right before you’d like to serve your salad, prepare the fennel. Remove the fronds and stems from the fennel if they are still attached. Cut the fennel in half. Remove and discard the core (at the root end), then thinly slice the fennel. Save 2 tablespoons of the fronds and give them a rough chop. 

Choose the plate or platter you’d like to serve your salad on. Start by arranging some of the slices of pickled beet on the surface. You can blot the pickling liquid from the slices if you’d like to keep the appearance of the salad clean and tidy. Next, add some of the nasturtium leaves, then slices of fennel. Add dollops of the vegan ricotta next, followed by the chopped fennel fronds (or dill). Finish with a sprinkle of salt and pepper if you like and a few nasturtium flowers. 

This salad is best enjoyed soon after it’s made. If you prefer to only eat one serving at a time, I recommend only making one serving at a time as the salad does not hold up well once assembled. 

Notes

  • You can use any variety of beet you like here. The variety in the photos is Chioggia.
  • If your fennel does not have the fronds attached, use an equal amount of fresh dill. 
  • If you don’t have access to nasturtium leaves, you can use baby arugula or baby mustard greens in their place. 
  • I highly recommend using my vegan tofu ricotta for this recipe! You can find the recipe here. 
  • Prep Time: 15 minutes
  • Inactive Time: 1 hour
  • Cook Time: 5 minutes
  • Category: salad

Did you make the recipe?

I love to see what you’re making so feel free to tag me on Instagram @courtweststudio!

Filed Under: dairy free, dinner, farm to table, gluten free, Recipe, salad, savory, spring, vegan, vegetarian

Celery Salad with Blood Orange, Dates, & Walnuts (vegan)

February 17, 2023 By Courtney West 2 Comments

Celery Salad with Blood Orange, Dates, & Walnuts (vegan/gf recipe) | seasonal plant-based recipes via The Sweet Miscellany Blog

This vegan and gluten free celery salad with blood orange, dates, and walnuts ticks all the major texture and flavor boxes! It’s crunchy, creamy, nutty, tart, herbal, and a little sweet. Plus, it’s ready in just about 15 minutes with only 9 ingredients!

Celery Salad with Blood Orange, Dates, & Walnuts (vegan/gf recipe) | seasonal plant-based recipes via The Sweet Miscellany Blog

LOCALLY GROWN CELERY!!!! I can’t express how incredibly excited I was to be able to bring home some locally grown celery last week. Celery is a notoriously tricky crop to grow because it is really specific about moisture levels and temperatures (it likes it cool and wet). It’s rare (but not impossible) to find it down here in Houston simply because our weather is a bit unpredictable and all over the place. Luckily, this winter yielded some beautiful and insanely flavorful celery at Sunset Farm.

Since locally grown celery is a rarity, and it is always so much more flavorful than what you can find at the grocery store, I knew it needed to be the star of a recipe. Its vibrantly grassy and mineral flavors were just begging to go into a chopped salad with a simple creamy dressing. Toasted walnuts, dates, blood oranges and chives were added to the mix. Et voila! This crunchy, creamy, nutty, tart, herbal, and sweet salad was born!

Celery Salad with Blood Orange, Dates, & Walnuts (vegan/gf recipe) | seasonal plant-based recipes via The Sweet Miscellany Blog

Celery Storage & Prep Tips

Here in Houston, celery is typically a winter or early spring crop. My favorite way to store it is to fill a quart-sized mason jar with about an inch of water. Place the bottom (root end) of the celery stalks in the jar, making sure they have contact with the water. Place the jar in the fridge and make sure to use it within 1-2 weeks.

Celery is fairly straightforward to use, simple chop it up and add it to recipes! If you’re lucky enough to get a bunch with the leaves still attached, don’t throw them out! They have a flavor similar to parsley with hints of celery that can be used like an herb. If you’d like to enjoy celery in other recipes, try this trumpet mushroom chick-un salad or this winter minestrone.

Celery Salad with Blood Orange, Dates, & Walnuts (vegan/gf recipe) | seasonal plant-based recipes via The Sweet Miscellany Blog

What You Need for This Recipe

  • Celery Stalks – form the base of the salad and lend a crunchy texture and their characteristic grassy and mineral flavor.
  • Blood Oranges – add a tangy punch of brightness that lifts the salad and complements all of the other flavors. They also add a lovely pop of color.
  • Chives – add a subtle onion-y flavor that works well with the celery.
  • Toasted Walnuts – add a toasty and nutty flavor plus another layer of crunch aside from the celery.
  • Dates – add a subtle sweetness that works to round out all of the flavors in the salad.
  • Plain Vegan Yogurt – plain unsweetened yogurt lends creaminess to the dressing along with a subtle tanginess.
  • Vegan Mayo – adds creaminess to the dressing.
  • Non-dairy milk – helps to thin out the dressing.
  • Sea Salt – seasons the salad and helps balance all of the flavors.
Celery Salad with Blood Orange, Dates, & Walnuts (vegan/gf recipe) | seasonal plant-based recipes via The Sweet Miscellany Blog

Tips for Recipe Success

  • This salad is best with celery that has been finely chopped. To do this, simply chop each stalk into thin slices (about 1/8-inch thick) then measure out the amount needed for the recipe (2 cups).
  • If you want to have super-crunchy celery, make sure to let your chopped celery chill in a bath of ice water for a few minutes. This step is especially helpful if your celery is a little limp.
  • Chop the dates really fine. You want there to be small pops of sweetness in the salad rather than a bite with a big hunk of date that is overwhelmingly sweet.
  • Toast your walnuts! It brings out their nuttiness and makes them a little more crunchy.
  • This salad is best enjoyed as soon as it’s made since the dressing begins to draw excess liquid out of the celery and oranges. If you want to prepare the salad components ahead of time, I recommend keeping the dressing separate. Once you’re ready to enjoy your salad, toss everything together!
Celery Salad with Blood Orange, Dates, & Walnuts (vegan/gf recipe) | seasonal plant-based recipes via The Sweet Miscellany Blog
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Celery Salad with Blood Orange, Dates, & Walnuts (vegan/gf recipe) | seasonal plant-based recipes via The Sweet Miscellany Blog

Celery Salad with Blood Orange, Dates, & Walnuts (vegan)


5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star

No reviews

  • Author: Courtney West
  • Total Time: 15 minutes
  • Yield: 2 servings
  • Diet: Vegan
Print Recipe
Pin Recipe

Description

This vegan and gluten free celery salad with blood orange, dates, and walnuts ticks all the major texture and flavor boxes! It’s crunchy, creamy, nutty, tart, herbal, and a little sweet. Plus, it’s ready in just about 15 minutes with only 9 ingredients! 


Ingredients

  • 2 cups celery, thinly sliced
  • 2 blood oranges
  • 2 tablespoons chives, thinly sliced
  • 2 pitted dates, finely chopped
  • 1/4 cup toasted walnuts, chopped
  • 2 tablespoons plain unsweetened vegan yogurt
  • 2 tablespoons vegan mayo
  • 2 teaspoons non-dairy milk, such as oat or soy
  • 1/4 teaspoon sea salt


Instructions

Fill a medium-sized mixing bowl with a mix of ice and water. Submerge your chopped celery into the ice water and let it sit while you prepare the rest of the salad. This ensures it is nice and crunchy.

Cut the very top and bottom off each blood orange. Stand the orange on its end (with one of the cuts facing down flat on your cutting board) and carefully cut the peel and pith away from the flesh of the orange. Then, cut between each membrane to remove the segments of orange. Repeat with the second orange and place the segments into a mixing bowl.

Add the minced chives, finely chopped dates, and chopped walnuts to the mixing bowl along with the oranges. Strain the chopped celery from the ice water and add it to the bowl as well.

In a separate smaller bowl, mix together the vegan yogurt, vegan mayo, non-dairy milk, and salt until smooth. Pour the dressing over the salad and toss to combine. Taste the salad and add more salt as needed. Enjoy immediately!

Notes

  • This recipe yields 2 side (smaller) servings of salad. Feel free to multiply the recipe as needed if you’d like to make more!
  • This salad is best enjoyed the day it’s made so plan accordingly. If you want to prepare the salad components ahead of time, I recommend keeping the dressing separate. Once you’re ready to enjoy your salad, toss everything together. 
  • The amount of celery you need to yield 2 cups depends on the thickness of the stalks. Mine had thinner stalks so I needed the entire bunch but if yours has thicker stalks, you’ll only need about 4 stalks. 
  • Prep Time: 15 minutes
  • Category: side

Did you make the recipe?

I love to see what you’re making so feel free to tag me on Instagram @courtweststudio!

Celery Salad with Blood Orange, Dates, & Walnuts (vegan/gf recipe) | seasonal plant-based recipes via The Sweet Miscellany Blog

Filed Under: citrus, dairy free, farm to table, gluten free, grain free, Recipe, salad, savory, spring, vegan, vegetarian, winter

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