Recipe: blood orange salad with beetroot and avocado

Blood Orange Salad with Beetroot and Avocado

Edited extract from Fruit by Bernadette Worndl, published by Smith Street Books, $55. Photography © Gunda Dittrich. Out November 2018

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Blood Orange Salad with Beetroot and Avocado

Blood orange salad with beetroot and avocado

A textbook Californian entrée salad.

It’s also excellent with crumbled goat’s cheese or burrata.

Ingredients 

1 each of small yellow, red and target beetroot (beets)

salt, to taste

3–4 blood oranges

1 small fennel bulb

1 avocado

2–3 mint sprigs

freshly ground black pepper, to taste

Dressing

1 teaspoon dijon mustard

60 ml (2 fl oz/¼ cup) olive oil

1 tablespoon elderflower vinegar (recipe at bottom of page)

juice of ½ lemon

juice of ½ blood orange

Directions

Preheat the oven to 200°C (400°F) (conventional). Place the beetroot in an ovenproof dish and pour in water to a depth of 2 cm (¾ in). Season with salt and seal well with foil. Bake for 40–50 minutes (depending on their size), until soft. Allow to cool a little, then peel with your hands and cut into wedges. Peel the blood oranges and remove the white pith. Thinly slice the oranges and arrange on four plates, along with the beetroot.

For the dressing, combine all the ingredients in a screw-top jar, seal tightly and shake well.

Shave the fennel and marinate in a little of the dressing. Halve the avocado and remove the stone, then spoon out and slice the flesh. Pick the mint leaves. Arrange all the ingredients on the orange slices and beetroot in a decorative way, drizzle over the dressing and season with salt and pepper.

 

Elderflower vinegar

Ingredients 

10 elderflower clusters (without stalks)

1 litre (34 fl oz/4 cups) white wine vinegar or white balsamic vinegar

2 cloves

Directions

Fill a large sterilised jar with all the ingredients, cover the top with a piece of muslin (cheesecloth) and fasten with an elastic band. Leave in a warm place and shake carefully every 1–2 days.

After about 14 days, strain the vinegar and transfer to sterilised bottles.

The vinegar will keep in a cool, dark place for up to 1 year.

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