Pear Harvest Salad with Hazelnuts & Brie

Pear Harvest Salad with Hazelnuts & Brie

If you want a fail-proof salad formula, with no recipe, just take a bed of greens and add a fruit, a nut, and a cheese. Drizzle with vinaigrette. This salad is a perfect proof point for that formula (which really never fails).

Happen to be planning your Thanksgiving menu? With pears, brie, and hazelnuts this dish fits right in. Looking for more of a salad-for-lunch kind of situation? Add cooked farro, which will add some heft.

Pear Harvest Salad with Hazelnuts & Brie
Pear Harvest Salad with Hazelnuts & Brie

Pear Harvest Salad with Hazelnuts & Brie

Published November 13, 2019 by

Serves: 2-4   |    Active Time: 20 minutes



Ingredients:

  • 3-4 cups baby arugula
  • 1 ripe bosc pear
  • 1/4 cup raw hazelnuts
  • 1/4 cup brie, sliced into bite-sized pieces
  • 1/4 tablespoons dried cranberries
  • 1/4 cup cooked and cooled farro, wheat berries or brown quinoa
  • 1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar
  • 2 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
  • 1/4 teaspoon dijon mustard
  • Generous pinch salt
  • Several cracks of black pepper, plus more for topping

  • Directions:

    1. Preheat an oven to 300°F and spread hazelnuts on a baking sheet. Place pan in oven, and toast nuts for 10-15 minutes, checking frequently. The nut should be golden brown (the papery skin will be dark, and begin to blister). Remove nuts from oven, and place in a cloth kitchen towel. Rub nuts in the towel to remove the papery skins (some won’t come off, but it’s fine). Set aside to cool completely.
    2. While the hazelnuts toast, place arugula in a serving bowl.
    3. Slice the pear in half. Cut off the stem, and remove the seedy center. Slice pear into 1/4-inch thick pieces. Arrange pears over top of the arugula.
    4. Top with dried cranberries, farro, and pieces of brie.
    5. When hazelnuts are cooled, scatter over the salad.
    6. Add balsamic vinegar, olive oil, dijon mustard, a pinch of salt, and a few cracks of pepper to a jar/container with a lid. Place lid on jar, and shake to combine.
    7. When ready to serve, drizzle vinaigrette over salad.

    Pear Harvest Salad with Hazelnuts & Brie

    Raspberry Popsicles with Dark Chocolate Drizzle

    Raspberry Popsicles with Dark Chocolate Drizzle

    Poison ivy and raspberry bushes—when I was a kid, these were the two plants my dad always pointed out to me on camping trips. This summer, as we hiked through Big Elk Meadows (which is not a meadow and there were no elk), the wild raspberries were copious. The dry creek was spotted with small bushes, each of them ripe with red gems. Those wild berries were far better than the ones growing in my own backyard, and not just because we were eating them outside. They were juicier and sweeter. We ate the ripest ones and left the others for the birds.

    These popsicles are an end of summer hoorah! A sweet-tart cool down for mid-afternoon.

    Raspberry Popsicles with Dark Chocolate Drizzle
    Raspberry Popsicles with Dark Chocolate Drizzle

    Raspberry Popsicles with Dark Chocolate Drizzle

    Published September 10, 2019 by

    Serves: 6   |    Active Time: 20 active minutes



    Ingredients:

  • 12 ounces fresh raspberries
  • 1/4 teaspoon lemon or lime juice
  • 2 ounces bittersweet chocolate chips
  • Optional: 1-2 tablespoons raw sugar or coconut sugar
  • Equipment: Popsicle molds and popsicle sticks

  • Directions:

    1. Place raspberries in a blender and purée.
    2. Place a fine-mesh sieve over a sauce pan, and pour raspberry puree through sieve in order to remove seeds. All of the juice should go through the sieve (into the pot), and you should be left with just seeds in the sieve. Discard of seeds.
    3. Place raspberry purée on stove over low heat and stir in lemon juice. Bring to a slow simmer, and add sugar to taste. Stir until sugar is completely dissolved. Allow mixture to cool, about 10 minutes.
    4. Pour raspberry mixture into popsicle molds with popsicle sticks and freeze for 8 hours, until frozen solid.
    5. When popsicles are frozen, prep the chocolate: melt chocolate in microwave (at 30 second increments, stirring in between each until smooth), or in a double boiler.
    6. Remove popsicles from molds, and drizzle with chocolate. Allow chocolate to set. Serve immediately, or store in air-tight container until ready to eat.

    Peachy Mint Green Smoothie

    Peachy Mint Green Smoothie

    Sometimes it feels like inspiration finds the maker, not the other way around. Take this smoothie. I’ve been pretty fresh out of inspiration (or maybe motivation, it’s hard to tell the difference), as evidenced by the slow roll of recipes here at Foraged Dish over the last month. I’ll plan out a recipe, and at the last moment decide I just would rather make something else. But while waiting for an extraordinarily delayed flight, I stopped by a small café at the La Guardia airport, and ordered a green smoothie. It was mint-forward, made with summer fruits, and quite good, even though you never expect airport food to be any good. I’ve had so much mint in the garden, it’s been in just about everything these days. Here’s my recreation of that smoothie!

    Peachy Mint Green Smoothie
    Peachy Mint Green Smoothie

    Peachy Mint Green Smoothie

    Published June 26, 2019 by

    Serves: 2   |    Active Time: 10 minutes



    Ingredients:

  • 1 banana, fresh or frozen
  • 1 peach, fresh or frozen
  • 2 large handfuls greens, such as baby spinach or baby kale
  • Leaves from 6-8 sprigs of mint
  • 1/3 cup plain greek yogurt
  • 1/2 cup water or juice (such as pineapple or peach juice)
  • Optional: 4 ice cubes
  • Optional: 1 scoop unflavored protein powder, such as collagen or whey

  • Directions:

    1. Add all ingredients to a blender and blend until completely smooth. Pour into glasses and enjoy.