Sugar Snap Pea Salad With Calabrian Pepper and Fennel

- Total Time
- 30 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- ¼cup grapeseed or other neutral oil
- 1teaspoon minced garlic
- 2teaspoons minced shallot
- 1teaspoon deseeded and minced Calabrian peppers packed in oil
- ½teaspoon lemon zest
- ¼teaspoon minced fresh thyme
- ¼cup extra-virgin olive oil
- ¼cup fresh lemon juice
- Pinch salt and black pepper
- 1pound sugar snap peas
- ½cup thinly shaved fennel, preferably baby fennel
- ¼teaspoon salt
- 1½tablespoons chopped fresh mint
- ½cup shaved pecorino Romano
For the Chile Dressing
For the Salad
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the dressing: Heat the grapeseed or other oil in a small sauté pan over low heat. When oil begins to shimmer add the garlic, shallot, Calabrian peppers, lemon zest and thyme. Gently cook for 1 minute, stirring. Remove from heat and transfer to a small mixing bowl. Add the olive oil, lemon juice, salt and pepper. Whisk thoroughly to combine.
- Step 2
Make the salad: Wash the snap peas and remove the tough string that runs along the interior curve of the pea. Julienne the peas lengthwise, about ¼-inch thick. Put the peas, fennel, 2 tablespoons of the dressing and the salt in a bowl and mix to coat the peas. To serve, sprinkle the mint over the top, drizzle on 1 tablespoon of the dressing and sprinkle the shaved pecorino.
Private Notes
Comments
Calabrian pepper substitute?
Celery or baby bok choy. You could even do radishes sliced. thinly.
I agree this could use more lemon juice or other acid. I doubled the amount. The Calabrian peppers could be boosted a little as well. They are barely detectable in the amount given. Of course, peppers vary wildly in hotness, even within the same variety. So taste yours, and if you add, add in small amounts. Salad dressing is ruined completely when it just becomes hot sauce.
I never could find the tough string in the peas I bought. I just trimmed the ends, and cut them lengthwise. Worked fine.
The flavors did really well together but I'd recommend blanching the peas.
Tip: TJs makes an incredible "Bomba" Calabrian chili sauce perfect for this recipe We didn't use it for this, though, as we wanted to get through a jar of actual full-on Calabrian chilis and didn't even realize they were the same thing! Also subbed basil for mint and champagne vin for lemon (out of both). Instead of neutral oil did half Calabrian chili oil and half EVOO. It was spicy but a winner! Demolished same day over some polenta. Will make again.
My family was obsessed with these peas! They loved the julienne-- which in my case was simply halving them... and not along the seam, just roughly in half-lengthwise.
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