Pear and Walnut Salad with Roquette and Parmesan


This is a contemporary salad which has actually been around for quite a while now and we regularly prepare it as part of our cooking holiday in France. I think it has achieved classic status.





The only thing that needs any preparation to speak of is the dressing, but the pears do need to be ripe and juicy – comice are perfect for this – and the parmesan needs to be shaved from a fresh block (if you haven’t got any to hand, a good strong cheese like stilton or feta will do very nicely indeed, but completely forget about using that dirty sock-flavoured sawdust sold in pots, laughingly labelled ‘Freshly Grated Parmesan’).





If you want to turn this from a starter into a main course just add some strips of dry-cured ham, smoked duck breast, or sauteed chicken livers.





Serves four





Ingredients:


2 ripe juicy comice pears


1 lemon


1 tblsp white wine vinegar


salt


1 tsp grain mustard


6 tblsp walnut oil


freshly ground black pepper


handful roquette


handful of fresh walnut halves, roughly crushed


small block of fresh parmesan





Method:


Peel and core the pears, then smear with a little lemon juice to prevent them turning brown.





Put the vinegar and a good pinch of salt in a screw-top jar and shake until the salt has desolved. Add the mustard and walnut oil, then shake again to emulsify – the emulsion will hold for ten minutes or so, but give it another jiggle just before you use it to dress the salad.





Assemble the salad: slice the pears lengthwise into thin segments and place them rustically on four serving plates along with the roquette, then scatter over the bruised walnuts. Drizzle with the vinaigrette.





Using a potato peeler, shave the parmesan over the salad, then ‘dust’ with a little ground black pepper.








About Author

Fred Fisher is an experienced chef who has worked with TV chef Rick Stein, among others. He runs relaxed friendly hands-on cooking holidays in the Dordogne, France. Contact him at enquiries@cookinfrance.com or visit the website at www.cookinfrance.com

Source: ArticleTrader.com


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