Remember this fun layered salad I had from Whole Foods while in Arizona?
I believe I said, “Mark my words, this will be the first thing I make when I’m on Canadian soil.”
Ok, so it wasn’t technically the first thing I made (not even close if you could see all the recipe testing I’ve been doing), but at least I remembered to make it at all. Miracles do happen.
With a salad this simple, it really wasn’t difficult to recreate at home. The most difficult part was judging how much of each vegetable/grain I would need and then figuring out how many mason jars and servings it would make. There are a lot of scribbles in my notebook!
The first thing I did was test out my own version of the Oil-Free Orange Ginger Dressing.
After a few trials, I was happy with the dressing, keeping in mind how light and simple the Whole Foods dressing was. This isn’t a thick or hearty dressing, but simply a light accent to highlight the flavours in the salad. I also added in fresh lime juice to give it a fun twist! Love that kick of lime.
Now, moving onto the salad. I decided to do without the barley in the salad, because I really didn’t want to cook 3 grains on the stove top. Two is plenty for this salad! While I cooked the quinoa and wheatberries on the stovetop, I chopped the vegetables. Oh and I did without the tomatoes because out of season tomatoes are just tragic, aren’t they?
After everything was ready, I started layering, while looking at the original Whole Foods salad as I went. I made four 500-ml mason jars worth, with some grains leftover. The salad will last for about 5 days in the fridge, so this works perfectly for easy lunches to make ahead of time. I’ve also included the exact measurements in the directions, if you’d like to replicate the mason jar layering.
Or, if you aren’t into layering, just dump it into a big bowl or container and mix it up! This is actually what I ended up doing because I brought the salad for a family get together on the weekend. Or you could layer it, I’m sure, in a large glass bowl too. The salad turned out incredibly fresh, light, and just like the one I remember devouring from Whole Foods.
Make Ahead Layered Salad With Oil-Free Orange Ginger Dressing
Yield
4 servings
Prep time
Cook time
Total time
Just like the Whole Foods salad, but now made in the comfort of your own home. With some advance prep work, you can enjoy this salad all week long.
Inspired by Whole Foods
Ingredients
For the salad
- 1 cup uncooked wheatberries (makes 2 & 1/4 cup cooked)
- 1 cup uncooked quinoa (makes 2.5 cups cooked)
- 1 cup edamame
- 1 cup diced carrots (about 2)
- 1.5 cups diced red pepper (1 large)
- 1.5 cups diced green pepper (1 large)
- 1/2 cup finely chopped fresh parsley
- Herbamare or kosher salt, to taste
For the dressing
- 2/3 cup 100% pure orange juice (or use freshly squeezed)
- 1/3 cup 100% pure apple juice
- 1 tbsp apple cider vinegar
- 1 tbsp fresh minced ginger
- 1 tbsp fresh lime juice
- kosher salt, to taste (I used 1/4 tsp)
Directions
- In a medium-sized pot, add quinoa and 1.5 cups water. Bring to a boil, reduce heat to low, cover, and simmer, until fluffy, about 15-20 minutes, watching closely so it doesn’t burn. Do the same for the wheatberries, in another pot, but add 2 cups of water and cook until tender and chewy, likely cooking for about 5 mins longer than the quinoa.
- Meanwhile, chop the vegetables. In a bowl or jar, whisk together the dressing ingredients and set aside.
- When the grains have cooked, grab your 500-ml mason jars (if layering), and add into each: 1/2 cup wheatberries, 1/4 cup green pepper, 1/4 cup red pepper, 1/2 cup quinoa, 1/4 cup carrots, 2 tbsp parsley, and 1/4 cup edamame per mason jar. You may have to push it down a bit. Repeat as necessary. Makes enough for 4 mason jars, with a bit leftover. Alternatively, you can just mix the salad together into a big bowl along with the dressing. Will keep in the fridge for 5-6 days.
Tip:
Dressing makes four 1/4 cup servings
Mark my words, this is one healthy salad that will keep you going all week long. Just don’t forget to have a piece of cookie dough fudge for dessert.
This looks SO good! I love whole foods salads with citrus dressings! I had a kale salad there once with a similar flavor combo and it was fabulous! Can’t wait to try this out!!!
I’ve been saying for about 2 months that I’m going to start making salads like this to bring to work, and I’ve yet to make one! They look so pretty and love how easy they are to assemble. Maybe I’ll actually find the inspiration to pack one tomorrow… or at least next week!
Thanks for sharing the recipe. :)
Have you tried Whole Food’s California quinoa salad?! It’s so good! It contains mangoes, raisins, edamame, quinoa, bell peppers, etc….and I thought “It’s so expensive, I could make it at home for less…but I just love it more when someone prepares it for me [then retails it for a billion dollars]”
yes I have and I loooove it! Thanks for the idea :)
This looks fantastic love!! I love summery foods like this, I feel spring is just around the corner and all of our beloved salads will be BACK and tastier than ever :)
I’m still swirling over the fudge you had the other day ;)
xxoo
That dish looks so amazing. Wondering, since I’m not real crazy about raw peppers, if I could lightly saute all the veggies then add them to the grains? I don’t think they would layer very well then, but they might make a tasty heated dish too.
yes Im sure that would work lovely too!
i so want this for my lunch today…
I love putting my meals-on-the-go in mason jars, they’re so handy and fit juuuuust well enough in my car’s cup holder! =)
Couldn’t agree more about out-of-season tomatos – abhorrent! But the salad looks yummy! I love salads that don’t include lettuce. The “extras” are always the best part! And sadly, I can’t make myself enjoy kale, no matter how hard I try…
I’ve been waiting for this recipe ever since you posted WF version during your trip. Thank you!!
I hope you enjoy it Angela. :)
HI
Thanks for including both the cup amount and about how many carrots, peppers etc would make that amount. Makes it easier to plan out the recipe.
thanks
Im glad to hear that’s helpful for you!
what a great idea!
That looks wonderful, especially due to the wheatberries. I can’t get enough of those things!
I’m super happy that you posted this; I love WF layered salads! Can you replicate some of their other varieties of layered salads too? :) :)
I’d love to make more layered salads in the future. I’ll put my thinking cap on.
Looks fantastic, colorful, and so healthy!
Hi Angela,
I am the only vegetarian/aspiring vegan in my household FILLED with carnivores. When I cook I only cook for me. How can I cut this recipe down so that it will only make 2-4 servings? I really have trouble with that. Thank you!!!!
Hey Sara, the recipe makes four 2-cup servings (with a bit of grains leftover), so if you want less I would just cut everything in half. Also, maybe just use one pepper instead of halving two.
Thank you so much for your help! And an idea for your cookbook might be a section for those of us cooking just for one :-) Just a suggestion though. Good luck with everything!
Thats a great suggestion. I will see how much demand there is for it in my survey. Enjoy the salad!
Yay! You are back with full posts on reader! :)
WOW! This looks amazing. Great idea!
Ohhh I remember buying that salad at the Wholefoods here in Hawaii and I loved it! I got to go check it out again today! I want to try making my own one day too it looks like so much fun and so colorful!
This looks awesome and I can’t wait to make it.
One question? You note the dressing makes 4 servings – do you used one serving per mason jar (the entire recipe of dressing for the entire recipe of salad) or do you split one serving amoungst all jars?
Let me know!
I use 1/4 cup dressing per mason jar (~2 cups salad). Does that help?
Yes it does, thank you!!
Sorry if this question was answered above but I didn’t see it. Do you pour the dressing into the jar when layering or keep it separate till time to eat?
Thats a great question and I forgot to address that. You can do either actually. The salad won’t get soggy if you put the dressing on before. However I do find that I can taste the dressing a bit better when I put it on just before serving. Otherwise it tends to soak in and you don’t taste it quite as much.