Winter Green Salad With Walnuts, Apples, and Parmesan-Anchovy Dressing Recipe

This salad of chicories, parsley, apples, and walnuts, and a punchy vinaigrette manages to deliver enough levels of flavor and texture to eat like a full on meal.

Overhead view of winter green salad with walnuts, apples, and parmesan-anchovy dressing, served on a square white plate.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Why It Works

  • Bitter radicchio is tempered with the addition of milder endive varieties and parsley leaves.
  • A punched-up caesar dressing stands up to the bitter greens.
  • Toasted walnuts and apple add textural interest and help balance the bitterness and acidity of the dressed greens.

Ever since tasting April Bloomfield's awesome fall green salads at The John Dory (now shuttered), that combination of crisp, bitter greens, and savory anchovy dressing has been one of my favorite combinations.

Winter greens by their very nature are hearty in both texture and flavor. Radicchio, with its dark purple, frilly cabbage-like leaves are the bitterest of the lot, so I like to cut them with sweeter greens like Belgian endive. The latter are grown completely underground to incur a process called etiolation, a natural occurrence in plants that grow in low-light conditions. In an effort to reach the light, rapid growth takes place, resulting in weaker cell structure, and no formation of chlorophyll. This is good for us when more tender leaves and a less bitter flavor are what we're after. Tight, pale yellow or pure white endives are what to look for.

Similarly, frisée (or curly endive) is sweetest at its core, where the sunlight has yet to reach, and the small leafy stems are still pale yellow and tender. For the best tasting frisée, you should discard the tougher dark green outer leaves (or save them for soup), using just the pale green and yellow cores.

The anchovy dressing is a heavy-on-the-anchovy variation of a classic Caesar dressing. Mayo-based, with lemon juice and Worcestershire sauce adding acidity and bright depth.

With a few slivers of apples to add sweetness and some crunchy toasted walnuts, it becomes a simple salad that manages to hit you with enough levels of flavor and texture to eat like a full on meal.

December 2012

Recipe Details

Winter Green Salad With Walnuts, Apples, and Parmesan-Anchovy Dressing Recipe

Prep 5 mins
Active 15 mins
Total 5 mins
Serves 4 servings
Keep Screen Awake

Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup store-bought or homemade mayonnaise

  • 1 ounce finely grated parmesan cheese

  • 6 whole anchovy fillets, mashed into a paste with the back of a fork

  • 2 teaspoons juice from 1 lemon

  • 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce

  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper

  • 2 whole Belgian endives, core removed, leaves cut into 1/8th-inch slivers

  • 1 cup, shredded radicchio

  • 1 quart loosely packed frisée (curly endive) fronds, pale green and yellow parts only (about 2 heads' worth)

  • 1 large tart apple such as Fuji or Granny Smith, cut into 1/8th-inch matchsticks

  • 1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley leaves

  • 2 cups toasted walnuts

Directions

  1. Combine mayonnaise, parmesan, mashed anchovy, lemon juice, and Worcestershire sauce in a medium bowl and whisk to combine. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

  2. Toss endive, radicchio, frisée, apples, and parsley with dressing to taste. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Add nuts and toss briefly. Serve immediately.

Special Equipment

Whisk

Read More

Nutrition Facts (per serving)
692 Calories
58g Fat
39g Carbs
14g Protein
×
Nutrition Facts
Servings: 4
Amount per serving
Calories 692
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 58g 74%
Saturated Fat 8g 39%
Cholesterol 24mg 8%
Sodium 897mg 39%
Total Carbohydrate 39g 14%
Dietary Fiber 10g 37%
Total Sugars 21g
Protein 14g
Vitamin C 26mg 128%
Calcium 191mg 15%
Iron 3mg 17%
Potassium 826mg 18%
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.
(Nutrition information is calculated using an ingredient database and should be considered an estimate.)