Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Salty orange salad more refreshing than the fruit

-

There are people who eat fruit as a snack, and then there’s me. It’s not that I haven’t tried. Currently, as I stock up on fruit from the market, I have grand visions of reaching for an orange from the fruit bowl, peeling it with my hands, then enjoying the juicy pops of the sections as I eat them. Healthy! Refreshing! “Mother Nature’s candy,” I’ve even heard, clenching my smile to stave off an eye roll. It should be so easy, but I can never commit.

Inevitably, I reach for a piece of cake or chips instead (don’t worry, I balance my diet in other ways) and have at this point in my life overcome the guilt that used to accompany that.

No, I love fruit best when it’s cooked down into a sweet jam or marmalade, baked under a bubbling biscuit crust or even blended into ice cream or sorbet. Influenced by a Southern upbringing, my predilecti­on for eating fruit coated in sugar and butter is a difficult habit to break.

However, the one time I will happily eat fruit in a rawish state is citrus season. All those sweet oranges — Cara Caras, page and kishu mandarins and tangerines — are too wonderful to tarnish by cooking. Instead of eating them out of hand, though, I put in the smallest bit of effort and turn them into a salad. But there are no lettuce leaves or other vegetables in this salad to distract from the star ingredient­s. It’s just cold citrus slices, seasoned with a simple vinaigrett­e and garnished with a few salty toppings to balance all that sweetness.

On a platter, I layer slices of at least three different sweet orange citrus: something large like Cara Caras or organic navels, something small like clementine­s, and then always blood oranges for their deep ruby color. Then, I mix up a tame rice vinegar dressing enhanced with some of the citrus zest and a pinch of chile flakes to spoon over the top, absorbing into their membranes and mingling with their juices. The vinaigrett­e makes the oranges taste, um, orange-ier!

Paper-thin slices of celery add crunchy salinity, while crumbles of feta offer a creamy, condensed brine, and torn Castelvetr­ano olives provide a pop of fatty brackishne­ss. This trio of salty garnishes balances the sweet citrus perfectly, turning them into something one step removed from raw but exponentia­lly more fun to eat.

Cold and Salty Orange Salad

1 ½ pounds mixed orange citrus (Cara Cara, navel and blood oranges, tangerines and/or clementine­s)

1 ½ tablespoon­s rice vinegar 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive

oil

1/ teaspoon crushed red chile 8 flakes

Kosher salt and ground black

pepper

1 inner stalk of celery, thinly

sliced

1 ounce feta, preferably in

brine

4 green olives, pitted and torn into 3 to 4 pieces

Take one of the smaller orange citruses and, using a Microplane, finely grate the zest from half of it into a small bowl. Stir in the vinegar, olive oil and chile flakes, then season the vinaigrett­e with salt and pepper.

Working on a cutting board, remove the pith and peel from all the citrus. For citrus bigger than a tennis ball, cut between the membranes to free its wedge-like sections. For smaller citrus, simply slice across the sections to make thin rounds, about ¼-inch-thick, removing any seeds as you go. Transfer all the sliced citrus and juices to a serving platter big enough to fit them in a single-ish layer and preferably one with a lip to contain their juice. Spoon the vinaigrett­e over the slices.

Arrange the celery slices evenly over the citrus. If your feta comes with brine, drizzle a couple teaspoons of the brine over the salad. Roughly crumble the feta and arrange it over the salad, followed by the olives. Cover the whole salad with a sheet of plastic wrap or foil and refrigerat­e until cold, at least 1 hour or up to 2 days.

Uncover the salad and serve chilled.

Makes 2 to 4 servings.

 ?? (TNS/Los Angeles Times/Ben Mims) ?? Feta, celery and green olives add just the right amount of saltiness to a salad of sweet orange citrus.
(TNS/Los Angeles Times/Ben Mims) Feta, celery and green olives add just the right amount of saltiness to a salad of sweet orange citrus.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States