Roasted Seckel Pear, Endive and Radicchio Salad with Roquefort and Walnuts Recipe
A Perfect Fall Salad

Salads don't always have to contain green lettuces such as basic iceberg or Bibb. Other colors, textures and flavors can make an interesting combination. I love bitter lettuces, such as purple radicchio and white endive. Add pungent cheese, sweet and juicy pears, and crunchy walnuts to the mix, and then dress it in a Dijon-maple vinaigrette, and it becomes a festive fall salad that can be enjoyed as an elegant appetizer. Roasting the pears with a drizzle of maple syrup creates another level of flavor and intensifies their sweetness. I use Seckel pears, which are a small and quite firm variety of pear. They work extremely well when cooked and don't lose their texture at all, making them ideal in this salad.

Texture is what this salad is all about: the interplay of crunchy, crinkly, smooth, creamy and crispy. Radicchio, with its deep purple and white leaves, adds color and crinkly texture to the salad. Endive is firm and crunchy in its texture. Both lettuces have a slight bitterness that contrasts well with the sweetness of the pears and of the maple vinaigrette. Further play on texture comes from the creamy Roquefort bleu cheese and crunchy toasted walnuts. If you've never tasted a flavor combination like this, you might think this salad would be too strong, but the flavors are truly complementary.

Fall and winter are the best times to grow and enjoy lettuces, which flourish in cool temperatures. Even in cold areas, loose leaf lettuces can easily be grown in cold frames. Harvest only the outer leaves so that the inner leaves continue to grow. This salad, however, uses two specialty lettuces, which aren't often grown in home gardens. Many might recognize radicchio in salad mixes but think it is red cabbage. In fact it's a lettuce in the bitter chicory family. When it is grown, it looks a lot like a big, ruffly head of dark green cabbage, but only the deep purple inner core is harvested. Endive, almost tulip-like in its shape, is also in the chicory family. It's grown in complete darkness so that the leaves remain a pale creamy white. The small lettuce heads are cut so that their roots can grow new endive.

Roasted Seckel Pear, Endive and Radicchio Salad with Roquefort and Walnuts

Makes 4 appetizer servings.

4 Seckel pears, halved, cored and rubbed with lemon

2 tablespoons grapeseed oil, plus more for drizzling

2 teaspoons maple syrup, plus more for drizzling

1 tablespoon lemon juice

1/2 teaspoon Dijon mustard

Fine sea salt

Freshly ground black pepper

2 heads Belgian endive, sliced into strips

1 head radicchio, leaves torn

4 ounces Roquefort, crumbled

1/4 cup coarsely chopped walnuts, toasted

Preheat oven to 350 F.

Toss pear halves in a drizzle of oil and maple syrup. Place cut side down on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Roast until knife tender, about 8 minutes. Let cool slightly.

In a large bowl, whisk together oil, maple syrup, lemon juice and mustard. Season with salt and pepper. Add endive and radicchio; toss until coated. Divide among 4 salad plates. Top with crumbled Roquefort and chopped walnuts. Nestle 2 pear halves into each salad.

 

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