Radicchio With Green Olive & Pecorino Romano Dressing
Marc Weir
Serves
6 as a side dishPreparation
25 minsIngredients
| GREEN OLIVE & PECORINO ROMANO DRESSING | |
| 150g pitted green olives (the greenest you can find) | |
| ¼ cup olive oil | |
| 2 tablespoons chardonnay or white wine vinegar | |
| 1 clove garlic, crushed or finely grated | |
| 30g finely grated pecorino romano | |
| 10g flat-leafed parsley, chopped | |
| RADICCHIO SALAD | |
| 2 heads radicchio | |
| 1 small handful flat-leafed parsley sprigs | |
| 3 tablespoons olive oil |
I often use parsley sprigs in my salads, rather than just the leaves. What’s a parsley sprig you ask? Generally I call a parsley sprig the leaves at the top with a 3 to 4cm stem attached. When building a dish I generally use sprigs for structure, texture and height, which plays a strong part in a salad’s integrity. Also why waste something that can play a part in making something so visually appealing.
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Instructions
| 1. | GREEN OLIVE & PECORINO ROMANO DRESSING |
| 2. | In a food processor, or by hand, roughly chop the olives – you want a rough-textured look, not a fine paste. |
| 3. | Put the olive oil, vinegar, garlic and pecorino romano in a mixing bowl. |
| 4. | Whisk by hand for a few moments until mixed, then fold in the olives and flat-leafed parsley and mix until combined. |
| 5. | The finished mixture should look like a rough green salsa. |
| 6. | RADICCHIO SALAD |
| 7. | Remove any slightly wilted outer leaves of the radicchio, then trim the base to release the leaves. |
| 8. | Separate the leaves, give them a good soak in cold water and spin dry. |
| 9. | Take your largest mixing bowl and put in the radicchio leaves, parsley sprigs, about ⅓ of the olive dressing and the olive oil. |
| 10. | Mix gently until everything is coated, then arrange on a large platter and finely splatter the remaining olive mixture randomly over the top. Serve immediately. |
Recipes & food styling Marc Weir / Photography Amber-Jayne Bain
