Roasted Beet Salad With Pistachios and Orange Vinaigrette
Beets are a winter essential, loaded with nutrition and low in calories as well. Some say this prominent vegetable may just hold the secret for keeping healthy in cooler months. This simple roasted beet salad with pistachios, dressed with a punchy orange vinaigrette is a wonderful way to incorporate beets into your diet going forward.
Beetroot
Beets (also called beetroot, table beet, garden beet, red or golden beet) are the taproot part of the beet plant. Like Brussels sprouts, beets are a complicated vegetable. Classification-wise beets fall into the root vegetable category. Typically deep red or purple, beets are available in various countries, throughout the winter season. Preparation-wise, beets are versatile, and can be roasted, boiled, and even shredded and eaten raw. In terms of taste, beets are mild enough to not overpower other ingredients but also can shine, as is the case with another favorite of mine, beet hummus. Although the green leafy part of beetroot is also edible, (and wonderful in pasta dishes) it’s the tuberous part that is consumed more widely.
Beets in History
Beets have been around for a long time, many believe as early as the Third Dynasty (third millennium BC). But in ancient times, beets were mainly used for medicinal reasons, or offering to the gods in addition to consumption. Apicius, a famous Roman gourmet, wrote a book called “The Art of Cooking” and it gave recipes with beetroots, like broths, and salads with mustard, oil, and vinegar.
All of these uses were for an older variant of beetroot, one that was long and thin, more similar to a carrot. Modern beets, as we know them today, did not appear in Europe till the 16th and 17th centuries. It took a few hundred years more for beets to gain popularity in Central and Eastern Europe where new cuisines with beetroot started appearing (borscht for example).
In Victorian times, beetroot was used to bring color to diets and as a way to sweeten desserts. It was industrialization that allowed for easier preparation and conservation of vegetables, so beetroot eventually became more available. After the Second World War, because of the rations, pickled red beetroot was the norm. Today, the most common variant of beetroot is round and deep red, but beets can also be yellow, white, and even red and white striped.
Beet Nutrition
Beets have an impressive nutritional profile overall, they are low in calories, yet high in valuable vitamins and minerals. They contain a little bit of almost all of the vitamins and minerals your body needs. I think that’s rather impressive. Beets are particularly rich in folate, a vitamin, which helps with heart health. They also contain a good amount of manganese and copper, which helps with energy production. Beets also have a high amount of vitamin C, nature’s immunity booster, making this root vegetable a winter essential.
Roasted Beet Salad With Pistachios and Orange Vinaigrette
Ingredients:
- 3 pounds medium beets, a mix of colors, if possible
For the Orange Vinaigrette:
- 1 large shallot, minced
- 1/8 cup white wine vinegar
- Kosher salt, to taste
- 1 teaspoon orange zest
- 1/8 cup chopped flat-leaf parsley
- 1/8 cup chopped chives
- 1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons Extra-virgin olive oil
- 1/2 cup chopped salted pistachios, lightly toasted
Directions:
- Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F. Wrap the beets in aluminum foil and place them on a baking sheet. Place in the oven and bake for about 1 hour. Or, depending on the beets' size, until the beets are tender. Remove the beets from the oven, open the foil, and cool.
- Once the beets are cooked, reduce the oven to 350 degrees F. Place the pistachios on a baking sheet, place in the oven, and lightly toast until fragrant about 5-7 minutes. Remove from the oven and set aside.
- For the Orange Vinaigrette: In a small bowl add the shallot, vinegar, pinch of salt, orange zest, parsley, chives, and oil. Mix well and season to taste with salt.
- Once the beets are cool enough to handle, peel and trim the beets and slice them into 1/2-inch thick. Arrange the beet slices in overlapping rows on a platter. Drizzle the vinaigrette over the beets. Garnish with the pistachios and serve.
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