Nectarine
3 recipes found

Melon Salad With Nectarines, Tomatoes and Basil
The principle behind this summer salad is “take what is great from what is right around you and do very little to it,” Hannah Shizgal-Paris, the chef of Roman’s, in Brooklyn, says. The recipe showcases cantaloupe and nectarines, but any firm-fleshed melon and vivid stone fruit will do. Everything depends on the quality of the produce at hand and the stage it’s in: If the melon is crunchy, you cut it thin; if starting to soften, cut it thick. Contrast comes from capers, pecorino, chile (less for heat than punctuation), and a pucker of lemon to finish. Be sure to season each ingredient separately and build the salad in layers, rather than dumping everything in all at once. Taste as you go, and keep it all nice and cool. It’s a dish only for this sun-drunk time. Eat it while you can.

Suya Spiced Grilled Chicken Thighs With Nectarines
Suya spice, sometimes known as yaji, is easy to love as an all round spice with its blend of ground roasted peanuts and smoky, fragrant spices. If you are new to it, think of it as a seasoning that can top everything: charred meat, chicken, fish and blistered vegetables. Here, it is sprinkled over grilled chicken served with a tangy salad of grilled scallions and nectarines. Let all the ingredients develop dark brown grill marks, as the char only enhances the flavor of the spice mix. Finish the dish with a sprinkle of chopped peanuts and a mound of additional suya spice on your plate.

Sweet and Spicy Summer Fruit Salad
Some of summer’s most notable offerings are stone fruit, tomatoes and basil. While they thrive in the sun, they gain even more flavor when dressed in a savory-spicy vinaigrette. In this spoonable salad, the components resemble a fragmented mosaic: Sweet stone fruit of any kind, from cherries to peaches to pluots, is cut small and tossed with juicy cherry tomatoes and aromatic basil in a chile crisp vinaigrette. The vinaigrette is simple to make, only requiring a bit of sugar to build on the fruit's natural quality, along with red wine vinegar to add fruity depth. Pair this salad with grilled or roasted meats, or just enjoy it on its own.