Charlie Bird’s Farro Salad
Updated July 3, 2025

- Total Time
- 45 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1cup farro
- 1cup apple cider
- 2teaspoons kosher salt, more as needed
- 2bay leaves
- 8tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
- 2tablespoons fresh lemon juice
- 70grams Parmesan cheese, shaved with a vegetable peeler (½ cup)
- 70grams chopped pistachio nuts (½ cup)
- 2cups arugula leaves
- 1cup parsley or basil leaves, torn
- 1cup mint leaves
- ¾cup halved cherry or grape tomatoes
- ⅓cup thinly sliced radish
- Maldon or other flaky sea salt, for finishing
Preparation
- Step 1
In a medium saucepan, bring farro, apple cider, salt, bay leaves and 2 cups water to a simmer. Simmer until farro is tender and liquid evaporates, about 30 minutes. If all the liquid evaporates before the farro is done, add a little more water. Let farro cool, then discard bay leaves.
- Step 2
In a salad bowl, whisk together olive oil, lemon juice and a pinch of salt. Add farro, cheese and pistachio nuts and mix well. This salad base will keep for up to 4 hours at room temperature or overnight in the refrigerator (bring to room temperature before serving). Just before serving, fold in arugula, herbs, tomatoes, radish and flaky salt to taste.
Private Notes
Comments
When discussing these notes and peoples' tribulations with farro cooking time my wife - something of a farro aficionado - pointed out that there are pearled and non-pearled versions available. Apparently the non-pearled takes twice as long to cook. Perhaps this is the source of confusion over cooking times?
I used pearled (without knowing the difference at the time) and it was perfect - a little nutty with a very slight crunch but perfectly edible - in 30 minutes using hard cider as liquid.
This was good but with some adjustments:
Made this with Trader Joe's 10-minute farro so I used 1C apple cider and 1C water and only simmered for 15 minutes. I cut down on the olive oil and did NOT add salt. (The first time I made this the 2 tsp of salt overpowered everything and I had to throw the farro out.)
This is such a fantastic recipe, although as others noted, the salt added in to the farro is too much, especially once you put the salty parmesan on top. I roasted some sweet potato in chunks to add instead of the tomatoes to make a more autumn-y salad, I thought it was delicious and wished I had made more of the farro to make it last longer! The base easily lasted 5 days in my fridge and made for delicious lunches at the office.
This salad is perfection! While enjoying it, I thought about how easy it would be to serve at a small dinner party because all the prep work can be done ahead of time and the last few ingredients only take minutes to add to the base. I think this dish would pair well with some grilled fish and a loaf of good bread. This is really all you'd need to complete the meal.
If you think the salt overwhelmed the farro, it might possibly be because you didn't use kosher salt, which measures differently from table salt.
Cooking the farro in apple cider is absolute genius. Well done, chef Ryan Hardy. This salad is so delicious as written, that I’m feeling a little sheepish about posting my “improvement” for a summer version. I cut the farro to 3/4 cup and added fresh white corn kernels sliced directly off three ears into the salad. Thank you NY Times Recipes for teaching me that fresh corn does not have to be cooked!