This wheat berry salad is festive, textured, and wonderfully hearty, which makes it perfect for the winter months. It features kale, radicchio, warm Medjool dates, candied walnuts, and a tangy apple cider vinaigrette. This is a wholesome dish for holiday gatherings, and it’s also a salad that you can make ahead and store for a few days.
When the weather turns cold, my salads become warmer and more hearty. This wheat berry salad is a perfect example of a dish that’s colorful and refreshing, as salads should be, but well-suited for winter.
Part of the salad’s heartiness is thanks to the wheat berries themselves. Once cooked, wheat berries are a nicely substantial whole grain.
There are also crucifers (kale) and chicories (radicchio) present. These leafy vegetables each has a little more heft than, say, mesclun or butter lettuce.
Finally, for texture, crunch, and sweet notes that offset the bitterness of the vegetables, there are candied walnuts and warm, chopped dates.
I can’t think of too many salad dishes that offer so much variety of texture and temperature, not to mention flavor.
Of course there are no hard and fast rules about when a dish beckons. If you’ve got wheat berries in your pantry and a bunch of kale in the fridge, then you can make this salad at any time of year.
If you’re new to cooking with wheat berries, then you’re in for a treat. They’ve always been one of my favorite grains to work with, and grain salads are my favorite use for them.
Wheat berries are similar to farro, but with a rounder, firmer shape and a slightly longer cooking time. The similarities between these grains is thanks to the fact that they’re both a form of wheat.
Wheat berries are kernels of whole wheat. Technically, this could be any variety of wheat. Most wheat berries sold for cooking in the US are kernels of hard red winter wheat, hard red spring wheat, or soft wheat.
On the other hand, farro refers specifically to kernels of Emmer wheat. Emmer is an ancient wheat variety that’s popular in Mediterranean cuisine, and especially in Italy.
You can find wheat berries in the bulk sections of many health food stores or natural groceries. It’s also possible to order them online.
Lately, I’ve been cooking with Hayden Mills White Sonora Berries and love them; I also love that they cook a little quicker than other wheat berry varieties.
Whereas rice, barley, and farro all cook within 35-45 minutes, wheat berries demand a little more patience.
You can expect to simmer them for 50-90 minutes, or until they’re tender. The cook time will depend on the variety of wheat berry that you’re working with, but you should put aside an hour at least.
Soaking wheat berries overnight before boiling can shorten their cooking time a little, to 45-50 minutes. If you do this, be sure to drain the soaking water and use fresh water for cooking.
Kale is available year-round in many places, and I appreciate the brassica’s density and substance for cold weather salads.
I’m a big fan of Tuscan (lacinato) kale, and that’s what I like to use here. However, chopped curly kale is also a fine base for the wheat berry salad.
At some point in the past few years, I fell head over heels for any and all chicories. Since then, most of my winter side salads have been loaded with endive, escarole, frisée, and radicchio.
Radicchio is my favorite type of chicory, so it’s fitting that I use it for the wheat berry salad. Its burgundy color makes the salad look especially festive and fun.
Wheat berries themselves give the salad a lot of texture, but crunchy diced celery, dried fruit, and nuts add to that effect.
The nuts in question are vegan candied walnuts, which are especially delicious and super crispy.
If you don’t have time to make candied nuts, toasted, chopped walnuts are fine to use instead. And you can swap the walnuts for pecans (candied or regular) as well.
Finally, there are the dates. But let me say a little more about those.
The instruction to pan-sear Medjool dates might alone come as a surprise, let alone going to that effort for a salad.
But it’s worth it, I promise.
First and least importantly, you’ll sear the dates with a little oil. This makes them easier to chop and prevents them from clumping together when you mix them into the salad.
The real reason to cook your dates like this is to bring out their caramel-like flavor. Just as heating sugar will result in caramelization, so too does heating these wonderfully sweet fruits.
The cooking method—4-6 minutes in a frying pan over medium high heat—could be called light searing or pan-sautéing.
The dates acquire pleasantly browned edges in the pan. The slight crispiness helps them to hold their own in a sea of other wheat berry salad ingredients with big personalities.
Before mixing the salad, you’ll need to set aside some time to boil your wheat berries.
Wheat berries can be stored in an airtight container in the fridge for up to four days, and you can also freeze them for up to eight weeks. It’s easy to get a head start on the salad if you make the grains in advance.
When I make wheat berries at home, I always boil them in a large pot of water, just as I’d do for pasta. Increasingly, I prepare most of my grains this way.
It’s a choice that I write about in A Grain, a Green, a Bean. The upshot is that I think it leads to better consistencies—fewer mushy or dry/burned pots of grains—and requires less mental energy than using a precise grain-to-liquid ratio.
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The wheat berries will need between 50-90 minutes of simmering on the stovetop. You’ll know that they’re done when they’re tender, yet still chewy.
Begin by halving lengthwise and pitting the dates. Press them gently to flatten them, then add them to a small frying pan with some olive or avocado oil.
Lightly pan-sear the dates for about 3 minutes on each side, or until they’re gently caramelized, glistening, and hot.
Allow them to cool for a few minutes, then chop the dates roughly.
The wheat berry salad dressing is an appropriately bold, punchy apple cider vinaigrette.
You can read more about this dressing, which is a favorite of mine, in the original recipe post. Preparing the vinaigrette is as simple as shaking/whisking.
Finally, the fun part: mixing.
This step is self-explanatory, but do be sure to use a large mixing bowl, so that everything can be tossed together without overflowing!
As you can see, I add chopped green onion tops to the salad for extra savoriness and a little bite.
Taste the salad right before you serve it. Feel free to adjust salt and pepper to taste, and add as many extra drizzles of the vinaigrette as you like.
Finally, plate and enjoy the salad. A few extra chopped green onion tops can be a nice finishing touch, but this isn’t a salad that needs too many flourishes.
One of my favorite features of kale salads is their sturdiness over a few days of fridge storage. This is definitely a salad that can be mixed ahead of time, and it’ll actually acquire more flavor as the ingredients mingle.
My only recommendation, if you choose to make it ahead, is to store the candied walnuts separately and add them right before serving, so that they retain their crispiness.
If you don’t have kale around, you can try arugula, roughly chopped baby spinach, thinly sliced collard ribbons, or chopped escarole in its place.
There’s also room to substitute the radicchio: I think that any member of the chicory family (red or white endive, frisée, etc.) would be fine to use. The addition of thinly sliced raw fennel would add nice crunch and some new flavor notes.
While wheat berries should technically be the star of a wheat berry salad, they aren’t the only grain that will work in this recipe.
Cooked farro, short-grain brown rice (a gluten-free option), barley, and spelt berries are all good substitutes for the wheat berries.
From a nutrition perspective, the offer similar benefits of dietary fiber, and the other forms of wheat will be similarly rich in protein.
For me, the challenge and joy of winter cooking is to create color and brightness within a leaner, darker season.
This salad is so wonderfully celebratory and special. I hope that it’ll bring joy to your table and your plate!
xo
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I knew I had to make this when I saw the photo. It was really tasty and the colors were so fun. I loved the balance of flavors with bitter, sweet, nutty, and tangy. My wheat berries took about 90 minutes on the stoveโฆIโve made them in the rice cooker before as well with good results. This was my first time preparing radicchio myself, and Iโm glad you encouraged me to try it. Iโm looking forward to your new book! We use The Vegan Week a lot and appreciate that the recipes are so nutritional.
Hi Molly,
Thanks for the kind feedback! I’m so glad you liked the salad, and of course it means a lot to me that you cook from THE VEGAN WEEK. Hope you’ll find recipes you love in A GRAIN, A GREEN, A BEAN, too ๐
Gena
This really is a great salad- the flavors and textures go so well together! I used butter lettuce instead of kale, as Iโm not a huge fan of kale. I didnโt have walnuts, so I used pecans instead. And those dates! Seating the dates was genius!
So glad that you like the salad, Coby! Butter lettuce sounds like a nice modification.
absolutely a winner – such great flavors. Love love love the carmelized dates, the dressing, the radicchio etc. My husband and I agree that this was as good as (or even better) than what we have tasted in farm-to-table restaurants.