Although I’m not 100% strict about it, I do try my best to eat seasonally as well as locally. Â This helps to keep our bodies in harmony with nature, and is more healthful for us as well as the planet. Â I know, easy for me since I live in Southern California. Â It’s true we do have access to such a bounty of wonderful fresh produce all year. Â But not even in sunny Southern California do I find locally grown melons and stone fruits in the dead of winter. Â You might find a few vendors at local farmer’s markets who sell berries grown in hot houses all year long. Â But I haven’t seen any farms with cantaloupes and watermelons in their fields in December. Â Â
Yet people love a good fruit salad for brunch or after dinner and for some reason I don’t see too many fruit salads without watermelon, honeydew, cantaloupe and strawberries even at this time of year. Â Sure these fruits look lovely together and are easy to cut up, but when was the last time you tasted a fabulous piece of watermelon on Christmas? Â It’s time to think outside the fruit salad box and try a combination that is a more natural complement to gingerbread and pumpkin and everything else you’re serving for your holiday brunches. Â I’ve been making this delicious fruit salad for several years and I am still obsessed with it. I use pears, apples, pomegranate seeds and dried fruit, but it’s the spiced-infused steeping liquid that takes it over the top. Â If you’ve never used star anise, it is amazing. Â It imparts a beautiful, floral, licorice flavor to the syrup. Â If you can’t find it, just sub a cinnamon stick.
Technically I think this would be considered a fruit compote, but we don’t worry about semantics here.  Whatever you call it it’s easy peasy, and the best part — you guessed it — do ahead!  Which is why this fruit salad is really SO perfect for Christmas morning or any of your holiday brunches.  I have also made it for a more healthful after-dinner dessert option which is always so welcome during a season of cookies and pies and cookies and chocolate and… cookies.  But actually my favorite way to eat it is with yogurt and some sliced almonds — what a scrumptious breakfast or snack that is!
Here’s hoping your Christmas is merry and bright and that you can spend it with the ones you love!
Winter Fruit Salad
Ingredients
- ¾ cup maple sugar or cane sugar I used maple sugar in these photos.
- 3 star anise or 1 cinnamon stick
- 1 2- inch piece of ginger cut into slices
- ½ of a vanilla bean split in half lengthwise
- 4 2- inch long pieces of lemon rind use a vegetable peeler
- 8 dried unsulphured apricots thinly sliced
- 4 dried unsulphured figs thinly sliced
- Juice of the zested lemon
- 3 firm Bosc pears or Asian pears
- 1 firm tart apple
- Seeds from half a pomegranate
Instructions
- Fill a medium saucepan with 4 cups water. Add the sugar, star anise, ginger, vanilla bean and lemon rind. Bring to a boil, and simmer until all the sugar is dissolved. Let it cool for just a few minutes, but still hot and then add the dried figs and apricots. Set aside to cool completely.
- Peel and core the pears and apple, if desired. Slice thinly crosswise (1/4-inch slices) and place in a large bowl. Sprinkle with the lemon juice and toss to coat.
- Once the syrup with dried fruit has cooled, pour it over the apples and pears. Cover the bowl and refrigerate overnight.
- The next morning, remove the fruit with a slotted spoon and transfer it into a serving bowl. You can remove or leave the ginger, vanilla beans, star anise and lemon zest. Sprinkle with the pomegranate seeds and serve.
Notes