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Bowl of cherry pistachio salad with a spoon

Filed Under: Food Tagged With: recipe, salad

Cherry Pistachio Salad Recipe

May 5, 2025 By Lucy Mercer Leave a Comment

I’m in my bagged salad era. When I’m ready to make a meal, I don’t reach for knives, instead, I reach for scissors and snip open packets of greens and small packets of crunchy mix-ins and packaged dressing.

What I like about this: convenience and no waste. What I’m ambivalent about: they’re kinda always the same. Ranch or Asian or a variation on the savory-and-sweet combo that I love (usually involving Craisins and a creamy cheese).

When I’m ready to cook again in my kitchen, I look for unusual recipes with some of my favorite ingredients, like this Cherry Pistachio Salad recipe found on NYT Cooking. It makes a smart addition to a barbecue menu — the rich fruit and snappy onion offer a fresh counterpoint to saucy chicken or pork ribs.

In fact, this recipe has become a much-requested accompaniment for our 4th of July potluck dinner.

This recipe has a handful of ingredients, but can be time-consuming to assemble (remember how spoiled I’ve become by opening my supper salad bag with scissors). Get a kitchen helper to pit the cherries, using a cherry pitter or methods like placing the fruit on the mouth of a bottle and using a chopstick to force the pit into the bottle.

Cherry Pistachio Salad Recipe

adapted from NYT Cooking

Serves 4 as a side dish

Ingredients
1 1/2 pounds black cherries
1/2 cup raw pistachios, unshelled
1 bunch green onions
2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar
1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
Salt to taste

Instructions

  1. Using your favorite cherry pitting method, halve the cherries and discard the pits. I like to use a cherry pitter tool. Add halved cherries to a bowl.
  2. Coarsely chop the pistachios and toss in bowl with cherries.
  3. Trim the scallion ends and tippity-tops, then cut into two long pieces, separating the white bottoms from the green tops. Using tongs, hold the bottoms over a stovetop burner and cook them until they’re charred on the outside.
  4. Place the cooked scallions on the cutting board and mince them until they’re a paste. You can add salt here, if you’d like. Add to a small bowl and stir in apple cider vinegar and olive oil. This is your vinaigrette.
  5. Cut the green scallion tops into long-ish pieces, about an inch or so, and place in bowl with cherries and nuts.
  6. Pour the charred onion vinaigrette over the salad and toss. Taste for salt and add, if needed.
  7. This salad is especially pretty on a platter or low-rimmed bowl.
  8. In the off chance that there are leftovers, store them in a sealed container in your refrigerator for a couple days.

More Recipes from A Cook and Her Books

Smoked Fish Dip Recipe (To Live For)

Mississippi Pot Roast Instant Pot Recipe

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