Thursday, April 9, 2026
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Farro Salad with Olives, Walnuts and Pecorino


This big-flavored farro salad was my contribution to a beautiful Easter spread with friends this year. It’s a favorite farro salad variation I’ve returned to for many years, and one I included it in my Near & Far cookbook. The ingredients are quirky and unexpected – wild amounts of pitted green olives, plenty of toasted walnuts, scallions, honey, olive oil, and something sweet like yellow raisins or dates alongside semi-pearled farro. I made four times the recipe below for Sunday. Leftovers are perfection tossed with some arugula and topped with a simple fried or poached egg.
Farro Salad with Olives and Pecorino in a large serving bowl

The Ingredients: Farro Salad with Olives, Walnuts & Pecorino

A few thoughts on key ingredients.

  • Farro: After years of experimenting, I always buy semi-pearled farro for this salad. The pearling process takes away some of the outer bran layer. You end up with a chewy, nutty grain that softens nicely while still holding its structure. Farro packaging uses a range of terminology, just look for semi-pearled or pearled. I often see this type of farro in Italian groceries, in bulk bins, or in the Italian section of markets (near pastas or pasta sauces). It takes about 10-15 minutes to cook.
  • Olives: In my original headnote I noted “massive Sicilian Castelvetrano olives are my choice here, but any great-tasting green olives will do – Cerignola, Lucques, or Sevillano – preferably from an olive bar, not a can.” But I’ll be honest, I haven’t made this in years without Castelvetrano olives. They work perfectly with the farro and toasted walnuts and pair beautifully with sheep’s milk pecorino.
  • Cheese: the finishing touch here is shaved pecorino cheese. I like to buy a mild textured (semi-stagionato) one that isn’t too young or aged too long – somewhere in the middle. It should be assertive enough to stand up to the other bold flavor in play, but not overly strong or salty. And use a good amount, I basically leave that up to you. As people dig into the serving bowl it breaks up into smaller flecks and clings to the walnuts and olives.
    Farro Salad with Olives and Pecorino in a large serving bowl
  • Chopped dates or raisins: You need a sweet component in this salad, and I tend to reach for whatever I have in the kitchen. This time I went with chopped dates, but golden raisins also work well. You could play around with dried cherries, or even chopped dried apricots.

Farro Salad with Olives and Pecorino on a large table at a party
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