great for a hot summer's night |
Do you know Lorraine Pascale, my friends? I've been following her on Instagram for years. She was a model, then became a TV cook who wrote cookbooks, and has done another twisty-turn in her life and become a life coach. I got the idea for this recipe from a post of hers some time ago. I've whacked in a few extras, as hers was a very simple dish. But I like a bit of foodie bling - don't you? :-) So treat this dish as a guideline, and put in the things that you enjoy eating.
Serves 4-6:
ingredients:
155g. (1 cup minus a couple of tablespoons) uncooked quinoa
500 mLs (2 cups) chicken stock or just-boiled water
250g. (8 oz) cooked chicken - grab a roast chook from the supermarket, or poach a couple of breasts
50g. (1/3 cup) sultanas or raisins
50g. (3/8 cup) pinenuts, toasted
80g. (a healthy half cup) cashews, toasted
100g. (3.5 oz) bocconcini or fetta, chopped
120g. (a chubby 4 oz) of fresh pineapple (out of a tin if you can't be bothered), chopped into chunks
1-2 red jalapeño chillies, sliced finely
chopped herbs - (I used parsley, chives and basil) - lots! or not, as you choose
juice of one lemon (2-3 tbs)
salt and pepper - half to one tsp sea salt; freshly ground pepper as you prefer - we like lots
1 tbs red wine vinegar
3-4 tbs olive oil or citrus-pressed oil
Method:
Place the quinoa and stock/water into a medium saucepan, and give it a good stir
Bring to the boil, turn down to a simmer and let it bubble away, covered, for about 15 minutes
Take off the heat, put a clean tea-towel over it and let it sit for five minutes
In the meantime, shred or chop up the chicken
Toast your nuts; chop the herbs, and chillies, and pineapple and cheese
Throw everything into a large salad bowl
In go the lemon juice, oil, seasoning and vinegar - aaand ... toss
Gives 4 hearty serves or 6 side serves
Notes:
Nuts can be put into a small, dry frypan and allowed to toast over a low heat for a few minutes - watch carefully as they will burn all of a sudden, taking you by surprise and leaving you with dead, blackened husks :-(
toast your nuts in a dry pan |
quinoa simmered for about 20 mins. |
all tossed up and ready to eat |
tasty and good for you |
artwork © Sherry's Pickings |
What a great combo of flavours! Those toasted pine nuts are droolworthy!
ReplyDeletethanks angie! i do love pine nuts.
DeleteYum.
ReplyDeleteThanks!
DeleteThis looks delicious, pineapple is the surprise ingredient, very refreshing. I love burghul so I think I would go with that or mixed grains. So versatile. A delicious Christmas salad. Thanks Sherry
ReplyDeletethanks pauline. yep i love a bit of juicy pineapple in a salad - very refreshing!
DeleteThis quinoa chicken and pineapple salad is exactly my sort of thing. Lots of fresh healthly flavours here Sherry, I love it!
ReplyDeletethank you, Unknown! :-)
DeleteHehe wasn't it Weird Al that said Eat It? I like the sound of this even with the pineapple too!
ReplyDeleteyou're right lorraine. he did indeed say that. i had forgotten. yes if i remember rightly you are not a fan of fruit with meat:) but it does add a nice juicy bite here. cheers!
DeleteWell your timing on this recipe is perfect as I just so happen to have half a bag of quinoa left in the pantry! The pineapple is a fun addition here - it would bring a wonderful bright flavor to the finished dish. Yum!
ReplyDeletehi david
Deletei know some people aren't fans of fruit and meat together but i always like the juxtaposition of sweet and savoury. cheers!
This sounds delicious, and when you say pineapple - now you’re really talking. I’d sub the quinoa for couscous though.
ReplyDeleteyep couscous makes a great salad base. cheers!
DeleteI treat most recipes as guidelines. :-) A weakness that sometimes gets me into trouble! Anyway, this looks good. I DO like quionoa so I'll be using that. :-)
ReplyDeletehi KR
Deleteyes it's always tempting to put one's own spin on recipes isn't it? our most revered cook here in australia was margaret fulton who died recently at 95. she wisely said that a lot of the time you should stick to a recipe, as otherwise all you would do is put in the same herbs, spices etc that you put into every dish you make so everything ends up tasting the same. a very good point i thought...
I am a quinoa fan and so is my husband, which is unusual because most of the time we have different taste when it comes to food. Your salad looks delicious.
ReplyDeleteyou can have all the quinoa gerlinde:-) thanks! nice to see you here.
DeleteWell, we love quinoa (sorry Mr. P!) and this sounds easy and wonderful!
ReplyDeleteI don't mind it, but i think we'll stick to wholemeal couscous in future!
Delete