Deb Perelman's Winter Slaw with Farro

Serves 6-8

Ingredients

1/2 cup (100g) finely diced dried apricots

1/4 cup (60ml) white wine vinegar, plus more to taste

1 small-medium (2 pounds or a bit less than 1kg) head green cabbage

1 1/3cups (145g) cooked farro, cooled (from about 3/4 cup uncooked)

1/3cup (45g) roughly chopped roasted almonds

2 ounces (55g) Parmesan, thinly shaved on a grater with a vegetable peeler

3 tablespoons (45ml) olive oil, plus more to taste

1/2 teaspoon kosher salt, plus more to taste

1 pinch freshly ground black pepper, more to taste

Instructions

Place the apricots in a small bowl with the vinegar, and set aside while preparing the other ingredients. 

Cut the cabbage in half, and remove the core (and eat the core as a crunchy snack); then cut the halves again so you have quarters. With a mandolin or a knife, slice the cabbage into very thin ribbons. You'll have about 12 cups total, which will seem ridiculous, but it will wilt down with dressing on it. Pile it into your largest bowl. 

Add to the bowl the apricots and their vinegar, the farro, almonds, and most of the Parmesan, plus the olive oil, salt, and a good helping of freshly ground pepper. Toss to combine, and try to give it 15 minutes to let the ingredients settle a little before making seasoning adjustments; then add more vinegar, Parmesan, oil, salt, and pepper to taste. Perelman emphasizes this: "With so few ingredients and most of them fairly mildly flavored, you cannot skimp on seasoning or texture; I hope everyone toasts their almonds well and uses salt and pepper until all the flavors are lifted/present." 

Heap the slaw on plates in piles, and top with remaining Parmesan. The slaw's textures are best for serving to company at this point, but this will keep for up to 1 week in the fridge for great take-to-work lunches.

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Pasta With Marscapone and Spinach

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Winter Fruit Torte