• Recipes
  • Travel
  • Cookbook
  • Newsletter
  • About
  • Shop
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • Instagram
  • All Recipes
    • Thanksgiving
    • Christmas
    • New Years
    • Valentine’s Day
    • Spring Holidays
    • Summer Holidays
    • Fall
    • Winter
    • Spring
    • Summer

Breakfast, Sides + Desserts

    • Bread
    • Biscuits + Scones
    • Bars & Brownies
    • Cakes
    • Cookies
    • Custards + Puddings
    • Muffins
    • Pies & Tarts
    • All Baking + Sweet
  • Salads + Soups
  • Snacks + Sides
    • Toasts
    • Oats
    • Granola
    • Pancakes
    • All Breakfast
  • Dips + Spreads + Toppings

Mains

  • Beans + Grains + Bowls
  • Fish
  • Vegetables
  • Pasta
  • Vegetarian Proteins

Special Diets

  • Dairy Free
  • Gluten Free
  • Vegan
  • Vegetarian
  • Shop All
  • Shop The Cookbook
  • Shop The VideosShop Justine Doirons social videos on shopmy

My Most Used Items

  • Kitchen Essentials
  • All Time Favorites
  • Pantry
  • Tableware
Holidays
Vegetarian Proteins
Baking + Sweet
Snacks + Sides
All Recipes
  • Recipes
  • Travel
  • Cookbook
  • Newsletter
  • About
  • Shop
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • Instagram
Dairy Free, Gluten Free, Recipes, Salads + Soups, Special Diets, Winter
February 4, 2025

Winter Niçoise Salad

5 | 2 reviews

In the winter I like a salad that feels both fresh and filling, with a few cooked elements throughout. While I’m not always going full baked salad mode, a nice take on a Winter Niçoise Salad usually fits the bill. This is a very close rendition to a classic Niçoise Salad (made popular by the…

Prep Time 15 minutes mins
Cook Time 11 minutes mins
Course Appetizer, Main Course, Salad
Cuisine French, Fusion
Jump to Recipe
jump to reviews

In the winter I like a salad that feels both fresh and filling, with a few cooked elements throughout. While I’m not always going full baked salad mode, a nice take on a Winter Niçoise Salad usually fits the bill. This is a very close rendition to a classic Niçoise Salad (made popular by the city of Nice in France, thus the name!), but it’s key difference is that is uses winter chicories as the base. This provides both a hint of seasonality, but also a note of bitterness that I love. It balances a Niçoise salad’s traditional briny flavors, while also using a lemon dressing to create another level of contrast.

If you are looking for a winter salad to give you energy while not weighing you down, look no further than a Winter Niçoise. French food is amazing for a reason!

Table of contents

  • What is a Niçoise Salad?
  • Ingredients you will need for this Winter Niçoise Salad
  • Why is blanching important in this recipe?
  • What swaps can be made in this winter salad?
  • Looking for other salad recipes?

What is a Niçoise Salad?

Niçoise salad (or…Salad Niçoise as they would say in its birthplace) is a salad that originated in Nice, France. French cuisine is largely lauded for its heavier recipes, but in regions further South of Paris, the food is actually quite minimal and focuses on letting fresh ingredients do what they do best – stand alone.

And that’s exactly what the traditional Niçoise Salad does. It is a summer salad, with hard boiled eggs, tomatoes, anchovies or tuna, cucumber or green beans, olive oil and in some rare cases, a vinaigrette. The ingredients vary, but the presentation usually involved the ingredients being displayed in sections on top of the salad bowl or plate.

This mimics the traditional Niçoise Salad, but of course, with a few key tweaks that make it suitable for winter!

Ingredients you will need for this Winter Niçoise Salad

This salad includes the salad itself, but also the Herbs de Provence dressing. Here is everything you will need to make it:

  • 2 medium new potatoes, 200 grams / 7 ounces
  • 1/2 small red onion, 100 grams / 3.5 ounces
  • Diamond Crystal kosher salt
  • 1 cup green beans, 100 grams / 3.5 ounces
  • 4 large eggs
  • 1 small head of radicchio or butter lettuce, 100 grams / 3.5 ounces
  • 1 small green endive, 50 grams / 1.75 ounces
  • 1/4 cup castelvetrano olives chopped
  • 4 ounces jarred tuna preferably in olive oil

For the Herbs de Provence Dressing

  • 1 lemon or 3 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice
  • 1 tablespoon dijon mustard
  • 1/2 teaspoon Herbs de Provence
  • 1/4 teaspoon Diamond Crystal kosher salt, plus more to taste
  • 4 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, plus more to taste

Why is blanching important in this recipe?

Traditionalists will argue over if blanching is necessary (or even part of) a traditional Niçoise. For this recipe, I want my potatoes cooked but chilled, my green beans blanched, and my eggs boiled. All of which can easily be done with an ice bath at our side! While only the green beans are technically blanched, having an ice bath available does a few things:

  • It helps crisp up and mellow out the red onion (it’s like magic, I promise).
  • It shocks the potato to cool it and also prevent it from cooking further.
  • The green beans can easily blanch alongside the other ingredients.
  • Eggs don’t need a separate bowl to shock them, the ice bath is already ready!

All that to say, I think cooked ingredients make this salad better, and you only need one ice bath, so why not?

What swaps can be made in this winter salad?

I’ve heard you all like swaps, good thing I have them! See below for different options for you winter Niçoise salad:

  • POTATOES – you can swap these with other starchy vegetables like carrots, rutabaga or parsnips, or you can even omit them if you aren’t feeling like it!
  • RED ONION – yellow onion, sweet white onion, or scallions are great subs.
  • GREEN BEANS – swap these for asparagus or snap peas!
  • EGGS – either add more tuna, swap in edamame, or skip these all together.
  • RADICCHIO + ENDIVE – butter lettuce, escarole, romaine, or any leafy lettuce will do here!
  • CASTELVETRANO OLIVES – any olive can be a good substitute, but if you don’t like olives, try capers or anchovies to get the same brininess.
  • JARRED TUNA – canned tuna is also an option, or tinned fish like sardines or white anchovies are also great.
  • LEMON JUICE – swap for white wine vinegar or champagne vinegar!
  • MUSTARD – a whole grain mustard can be a swap, or you can use honey if you’d like a sweeter dressing that still emulsifies.
  • HERBS DE PROVENCE – a dried mix of oregano, thyme and marjoram is a great sub for these!

Looking for other salad recipes?

Here are a few favorites from the site!

Carrot and Cabbage Salad with Cumin Grains and Date Dressing

This grain and veggie-packed salad is a meal-prep meal that I find myself returning to again and again. It might not be the prettiest, but with tofu, date-cinnamon dressing, cumin mixed grains and shredded vegetables, it makes me happy with every bowl I eat. It keeps me feeling pretty phenomenal, too. If you are looking for an easy plant-based meal to keep you going with lunch for the week, I love this carrot and cabbage combo.
Check out this recipe

Baked Kale Salad with Brussels Sprouts, Honey Mustard, Apple and Cheddar

This baked kale salad is one of my favorite variations. It's packed with greens and high-protein grains, it is filling, and its flavors combine together perfectly. The crisp sweetness of the apple plus the sharp cheddar and honey mustard is a match made in salad heaven, just trust me!
Check out this recipe

Tahini Caesar Salad

This is a great salad formula to have in your back pocket. It is always a crowd pleaser and belongs at any dinner party. Think of it as a classic caesar flavor-profile, with a bit of a sesame twist from the tahini. I added fennel taralli on top for some extra flavor, but you can easily swap that for breadcrumbs!
Check out this recipe

And that’s it for this Winter Niçoise Salad!

If you make it, please tag me on Pinterest or Instagram so I can see! It’s my favorite thing to scroll through stories and see what you all are making.

And of course feel free to leave any questions, comments or reviews! This is the best place to reach me, and I’d love to hear from you <3

Winter Niçoise Salad

5 | 2 reviews
I love a salad in the winter that feels both fresh and filling, and a winter niçoise salad is the epitome of that. It channels everything I love about the fresh cuisine of Nice, France, but adds in winter chicories and an Herbs de Provence dressing to add a few notes of something different. It leaves me feeling full but not weighed down, which is the kind of salad I like to carry me through the winter months.
print recipe pin recipe
Prep Time 15 minutes mins
Cook Time 11 minutes mins
Servings: 2 servings
Prevent your screen from going dark

Equipment

  • 1 large pot
  • 1 slotted spoon or spider
  • 1 whisk
  • 1 microplane or rasp-style grater

Ingredients

  • 2 medium new potatoes , 200 grams / 7 ounces
  • 1/2 small red onion, 100 grams / 3.5 ounces
  • Diamond Crystal kosher salt
  • 1 cup green beans , 100 grams / 3.5 ounces
  • 4 large eggs
  • 1 small head of radicchio or butter lettuce , 100 grams / 3.5 ounces
  • 1 small green endive, 50 grams / 1.75 ounces
  • 1/4 cup castelvetrano olives , chopped
  • 4 ounces jarred tuna , preferably in olive oil
For the Herbs de Provence Dressing
  • 1 lemon or 3 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice
  • 1 tablespoon dijon mustard
  • 1/2 teaspoon Herbs de Provence
  • 1/4 teaspoon Diamond Crystal kosher salt , plus more to taste
  • 4 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil , plus more to taste

Instructions 

  1. Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Salt it liberally with about a tablespoon of salt.
  2. Add the potatoes to the water and boil until fork tender, 12-15 minutes.
  3. While the potatoes are boiling, prepare a large ice bath. You'll be using it for a few things so make sure it is in a large bowl.
  4. Thinly slice the red onion and add it to the ice bath. This will make them mellow, crisp, and easier on the stomach.
  5. Trim the edges of the green beans and set aside.
  6. When the potatoes are tender, use a spider to transfer them to the ice bath to cool them.
  7. Add the green beans to the boiling water and boil for 1-2 minutes or until bright green in color. Add these to the ice bath as well to blanch them.
  8. Add the 4 eggs to boiling water and boil for 7 minutes. See Note.
  9. While the eggs are boiling, remove the vegetables from the ice bath and pat them dry with a lint-free dish towel. Chop the potatoes into bite-sized cubes.
  10. Transfer the eggs into the ice bath to shock them when they are done boiling.
  11. Core the radicchio and tear the leaves into a large bowl. Tear the endive leaves into the same bowl.
  12. To make the dressing, whisk together the juice of one lemon (3 tablespoons), 1 tablespoon dijon mustard, 1/2 teaspoon Herbs de Provence, and 1/4 teaspoon Diamond Crystal kosher salt. Whisking constantly, gradually drizzle in 4 tablespoons of olive oil until the dressing is smooth and emulsified. Taste and add more salt or olive oil as preferred.
  13. Drizzle half of this dressing onto the radicchio and endives and toss. Portion this into two bowls.
  14. To plate, top the bowls with equal servings of the red onion, chopped potatoes, blanched green beans, castelvetrano olives, and jarred tuna. Peel and halve the eggs and add two to each bowl.
  15. Drizzle with the remaining dressing and serve!

Notes

If you prefer a jammy center, decrease the boiling time by 30 seconds. If you prefer a firmer yoke, increase the boiling time by 1 minute.

Hey! I’m Justine

A recipe developer, highly dedicated eater, and bread enthusiast with an archive of both savory and sweet.

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
  • Pinterest
  • X
More About Me

Trending Recipes

  • Biscuits + Scones
    Strawberry and Raspberry Scones

    Strawberry and Raspberry Scones

  • Beans + Grains + Bowls
    Spiced Carrot Soup

    Spiced Carrot Soup

  • Baking + Sweet
    Tiramisu Affogato

    Tiramisu Affogato

Sign up for the Newsletter

More like this

Salads + Soups

Carrot and Cabbage Salad with Cumin Grains and Date Dressing

Beans + Grains + Bowls

Charred Lemon Marinated Bean & Snap Pea Salad

Salads + Soups

Dill and Feta Egg Salad

Holidays

Cranberry Sauce Salad

Comments

  1. JudyB Avatar
    JudyB
    2/14/2025
    Reply

    5 stars
    Well, this was a treat! I had to substitute good olives for those little olives with the red pimento and then I forgot to put them in anyway so I just snacked on them 🙂 Everything else was amazing. And I had everything in my fridge or in my pantry. Thanks for a great recipe!

    Reply
  2. Maddie D Avatar
    Maddie D
    2/19/2025
    Reply

    5 stars
    Loved this recipe! It was quick, easy, filling, and something I would never think of putting together (like most of Justine’s recipes :))

    Reply

Leave a Comment

Made this recipe? Tell me all your thoughts or if you’ve got any questions!

Cancel reply

Your Rating:




Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Hey! I’m Justine

A recipe developer, highly dedicated eater, and bread enthusiast with an archive of both savory and sweet.

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
  • Pinterest
  • X
More About Me

Trending Recipes

  • Biscuits + Scones
    Strawberry and Raspberry Scones

    Strawberry and Raspberry Scones

  • Beans + Grains + Bowls
    Spiced Carrot Soup

    Spiced Carrot Soup

  • Baking + Sweet
    Tiramisu Affogato

    Tiramisu Affogato

Watch On

  • Shop
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • Instagram

seasonal recipes with a fresh twist
for the curious home cook

buy the cookbook
penguin random house

Copyright © 2026 Justine Doiron

website by mindy nguyen & made to thrive