Roasted Beetroot & Pearl Barley Salad with Goat Cheese

Once upon a time only the leaves on a beet plant were eaten. When the vegetable hung in the Gardens of Babylon; when it was sought after by the Ancient Romans and Greeks as an aphrodisiac, it was the red-veined leaves they all wanted. Everyone, bar the occasional apothecary, cared less about the taproots. Imagine that? The earthy, wine-colored ball of savoriness — believed to have been consumed by the Goddess of Love, Aphrodite, to increase her appeal — was ignored and left to rot, buried underground, for thousands of years.

It turns out the myth about Aphrodite’s consumption of beetroot has a basis in reality. According to PBS’s history of beets, they are “a natural source of tryptophan and betaine, both substances that promote a feeling of well-being. They also contain high amounts of boron, a trace mineral which increases the level of sex hormones in the human body.” This then explains the Ancient Romans and Greeks.

Roasted and peeled baby beetroot.
Roasted and peeled baby beetroot.

Beetroot was only served as food sometime during the 1500s, and another two hundred years would pass before it became popular. It came as no big surprise to learn that the northeastern Europeans were the first to embrace beetroot (think borscht), mainly because it proved such a winner in the root cellar through the freezing winter.

It’s only in relatively recent times that the health benefits of beetroot have been brought to our attention. Even had I known about those benefits at boarding school, where beetroot was so badly abused it was inedible, I would have still included it in my make-belief list of foods to which I was allergic. I didn’t know then what I do know now: that roasted or boiled young beetroot — sweet, earthy, antioxidant-packed beetroot — are so damned good and so damned healthy they should be mandatory on every school menu (abusive cooks aside)!

Fresh leafy greens and herbs from the garden.
Fresh leafy greens and herbs from the garden.
Roasted pumpkin seeds.
Roasted pumpkin seeds.
Echinacea petals and onion flowers to garnish the salad.
Echinacea petals and onion flowers to garnish the salad.

We are into our hottest month of the year here in Livingstone. When I lived in neighboring Zimbabwe, October was referred to as “suicide month” because of the intense heat that built up before the onset of the summer rains. I compare the temperature of where I lived then to where I live now — the Zimbabwean northern highlands versus Zambia’s Zambezi Valley — and I can’t help but laugh: if it’s suicide month over there, it’s as if the door to hell’s furnace has popped open down here.

So far, beets have grown well in our mostly boiling temperatures, which must seem counterintuitive to those in the northern hemisphere who regard them as a spring or fall vegetable. Over the past few days we’ve reaped a small crop, and it is around these baby beetroot that I developed the salad recipe below.

Beet salad.

Roasted Beetroot & Pearl Barley Salad with Goat Cheese

Yield: 4 servings

Ingredients:

  • 4-5 cups young beetroot
  • 1 cup pearl barley
  • 3 cups water
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • 1/4 cup red wine vinegar
  • 1 clove garlic, minced
  • 2 teaspoons honey
  • 1 heaped teaspoon Dijon mustard
  • salt and pepper
  • 1/2 cup pumpkin seeds, dry-roasted
  • small handfuls of basil, dill and flat-leaf parsley, mixed and finely chopped
  • large handful of baby spinach, chard and beet leaves, torn roughly (about 230 grams/9 ounces)
  • 100 grams/3.5 ounces soft goat cheese
  • Echinacea petals and onion flowers for garnish


Method:

  1. Preheat the oven to 200/400 degrees. Wash any dirt off the beetroot and wrap them in tin foil, individually if large, or in small bunches if small. Roast the beetroot in the oven until it’s easy to pierce through with a skewer. Times will vary depending on the size of the beetroot, between 35-60 minutes.
  2. While the beetroot is roasting, mix the pearl barley into the water and add the salt. Bring to a roiling boil, and then reduce the heat to a low simmer. Cover the pot and cook the pearl barley until it turns pale, soft, and has doubled in size, about 50 minutes. Remove from the heat and drain any remaining water. Fluff up with a fork, cool, and set aside.
  3. Remove the beetroot from the oven, open up the foil, and cool. Peel off the skins, cut in half or quarters, depending on the size, and set aside.
  4. In a small bowl whisk together the olive oil, red wine vinegar, garlic, honey and Dijon mustard until well-combined. Season and set aside.
  5. Transfer the cooled pearl barley into a large mixing bowl. Mix in half the salad dressing, the finely chopped herbs, and all but a tablespoon of the pumpkin seeds. Carefully combine the beetroot, followed by the baby spinach, chard and beet leaves, saving some for garnish on top of the salad. Mix in all but a few tablespoons of salad dressing.
  6. Neatly arrange pieces of goat cheese with the saved beetroot, leaves and pumpkin seeds on top of the salad. Spoon over the remaining dressing, and garnish with the echinacea petals and onion flowers. Serve with a ciabatta bread.

 

Roasted Beetroot & Pearl Barley Salad with Goat Cheese.

Annabel Hughes Aston is a writer and an award-winning chef in Livingstone, Zambia. She is the creator of "bush gourmet" cuisine.

18 Comments

  • Can’t believe I was lucky enough to get my timing right to be able to taste this fabulous looking salad with you!! I can vouch that it is as delicious as it is beautiful. A perfect meal for the hot weather, but would be equally good any other time too. Thank you for having me Annabel and Chris

    • As always, it was a pleasure to feed you! Thank you for your kind comment, and please come back again soon … xo

  • Delicious recipe, Bella! What a wonderful combination of ingredients. Beetroot is a popular food grown in people’s gardens in this area and I am always thrilled when it is produced for lunch or dinner. We always had beetroot in our garden at home in Cobh and as teenagers we used to eat masses of it. Luckily it was never abused by Mum when she cooked it! xxx

    • Oh golly … just thinking about that beautiful walled garden in Cobh takes me straight back into my all-time favorite childhood book, The Secret Garden. This recipe is a simple but tasty way to use beetroot, and very filling to boot! Thanks, as always, for your interest and support, Kate! xo

  • Interesting! And looks delicious ….

    • Thank you, as always, Georgie! Who would have known the humble beetroot had such an interesting history? 🙂

  • Food from the Gods – I am crazy about beetroot – roasted, boiled – I juice it in the mornings with carrots, apples and fresh ginger, and am very partial to it roasted, with loads of garlic! Thank you for this heavenly recipe!!!!

    • Thank YOU for your terrific comment, Lin! I so love your enthusiasm … and yes, food from the Gods, indeed! All the best to you, Annabel

  • Looks yum Bella! And what an interesting article. Hope you’re surviving the heat xox

    • Thank you, Bridgey. Surviving is probably the best word to describe getting through each day in this Death Valley heat, haha! I will be forever grateful to Chris for building me this little room in which there is an air conditioner. xo

  • Looks yum!!! And loving your food photography too 🙂

    • Thanks so much for your kind comment. I take that as high praise from such an inspiring photographer! All the best to you, Annabel

  • This one has just been sent straight to our Head Chef! With summer coming fast we are always looking for fresh delicious salad options and this one looks just perfect. Thank you!

    • Yay! It’s delicious, affordable … and very pretty. Let me know what your customers think of it all the way over there in New Zealand! Thank you, as always, for your interest, Louise … x

  • Your beetroot salad looks really gorgeous and enjoyed reading about how healthy it is. A shame that boarding school put me off beetroot for life.
    People have tried to convince me that beetroot done right is delicious. I still cannot force myself to eat the stuff. So reading your line that “beetroot should be mandatory in all schools (abusive cooks aside)” made me smile.
    Feel for you in your summer from hell. We had the worst summer on record here in Spain. It started early and scorched us relentlessly for months.
    Keep cool.
    P.S. i made your Dulce de leche dessert with mango (couldn’t find pineapple) mmmm delicious.

    • Hi Gillian … thanks so much, as always, for your interest. Beetroot is a funny one. It took me years to get over my negative perceptions formed at school, and when I did I couldn’t believe what I’d been missing all that time! Beetroot is now an all-time favorite. So glad you enjoyed the coconut dulce de leche. It’s a winner, isn’t it? All the best to you, Annabel

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