On a grey and dank
Winter’s day, when even the thought of waiting at a bus stop or standing in the
playground whilst your toddler heads for his five hundredth go on the slide
fills you with frostbite dread, this little salad is a shining beacon of
lunchtime pleasure. Vibrant, tart and crisp. Everything a winter salad should
be.
I am a little ashamed to admit that when I encountered
a blood orange for the first time, it was not love at first sight. In much the
same way as I have done with my boys in recent years, my Mum proffered this
golden globe like a precious jewel to behold. A rare, seasonal treat, which
undoubtedly cost her an arm and a leg, but which she was excited and happy to
share with me.
I wasn’t a squeamish child, but I just could not see
past the word ‘blood’. I truly believed that this precious orange had been
tainted, so I failed to understand and share my Mum’s enthusiasm.
Making up for all those lost years I now gorge myself
on them. Particularly Sicilian blood oranges which, for me, are the best. And
what’s more, I don’t have to share. For now at least.
Ingredients
1 large bulb of fennel
4 blood oranges
40g good hazelnuts, toasted
¼ tsp Malden salt
1 tbsp lemon juice
2 tbsp cold pressed rapeseed oil*
Method
In a medium sized bowl, whisk together the salt and
lemon juice with a fork. Add the oil and whisk again. Set to one side.
Remove the leafy
fronds from the fennel and set to one side. Cut the fennel in half lengthways
and then, using a sharp knife or a mandolin, slice the fennel as thin as you
can. Put the sliced fennel into the bowl and turn well in the dressing.
Using a sharp knife,
slice off the top and the bottom off one of the blood oranges. Sit the orange
flat on a chopping board and remove the skin and pith by slicing the knife
downwards between the flesh and the skin. Work your way around the orange until
all of the skin and white pith has been removed and discarded. Set to one side
and repeat with the remaining three blood oranges.
Slice the blood
oranges through the centre into slices about ½cm thick. Roughly chop the
toasted hazelnuts.
Arrange the dressed
fennel on a serving plate and add the blood orange slices. Scatter the toasted
hazelnuts and fennel fronds over the top. Serve straight away.
*If you have a bottle of good hazelnut oil,
substitute 1 tablespoon of the rapeseed oil for hazelnut oil.
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