Roasted Fall Vegetables Salad with Maple Orange Cinnamon Dressing - - - > www.theroastedroot.net

. . . with chia seeds, golden raisins, pears, pecans, and maple-orange-cinnamon vinaigrette. BAM! Consider your mind blown.

Is squash not everyone’s favorite thing to happen ever right now? ย Particularly butternut squash? Which we shall henceforth refer to as BNS?

What we have here are roasted fall vegetables (BNS and beets) with a medley of other delicious goodies all smothered in the most fan-freaking-tastic dressing ever. I love this salad like I loved crushed velvet in 1995.

There. are. no. words.

Okay, there are actually a lot of them.

Yesterday, I posted Chocolate Peanut Butter Chia Seed Smoothieย along with a Health Warrior Chia Bar giveaway (which you should go enterโ€ฆRIGHT NOW!). I have been adding the white chia seeds to just about everything under the sun, and it turns out they’re great on salads.

Health Warrior white chia seeds

When Alexis from Hummusapien postedย Butternut Squash Salad with Orange Maple Cinnamon Dressing, I just knew I needed to put a ring on it.ย And by put a ring on it, I mean add chia seeds to it.

I snagged that salad hard. I added some goodies. I feverishly tweetedย Alexis because I could barely believe my mouth while I was eating it. If you were wondering how one can eat an entire butternut squash in one sitting, you’re looking at it. Via this salad.

Roasted Fall Vegetables Salad with Maple Orange Cinnamon Dressing - - - > www.theroastedroot.net

The maple orange cinnamon dressing is 98% of the reason I decided to make this salad. I changed up the ingredients from the original recipe just slightly, but hereโ€™s the gist: Orange zest. Orange juice. Balsamic vinegar. Olive oil. Maple syrup. Cinnamon. Jedi mind trick.

Roasted Fall Vegetables Salad with Maple Orange Cinnamon Dressing - - - > www.theroastedroot.net

Mothers: trying to get your chillins to eat squash? Roast them. The squash, not the chillins. Roasted butternut squash is crispy on the outside, soft on the inside and pretty much tastes like a baked French fry. Except cooler. Like crushed velvet in 1995 cool.

If you are wanting to introduce more beets into your life, now is the perfect time. The beets I’ve been picking up from the grocery store have been sweet, flavorful and juicy – you can put them in this salad!

Fall Roasted Vegetable Salad with butternut squash, pecans, maple-orange-cinnamon dressing and more! - - - > www.theroastedroot.net

Fall Roasted Vegetables Salad

5 from 2 votes
All the best parts of fall in one salad!
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 50 minutes
Total Time 1 hour
Servings: 2 Large Salads

Ingredients

Salad:

  • 1 small butternut squash peeled and chopped into ยฝโ€ cubes or sliced (2 cups)
  • 1 large red beet chopped into ยฝโ€ cubes (2 cups)
  • 1 ripe bosc pear sliced
  • ยฝ cup pecans
  • 1/3 cup golden raisins
  • 10 ounces spring green mix or greens of choice
  • 1 teaspoon white chia seeds

For the Maple Orange Cinnamon Dressing:

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F.
  • Peel the butternut squash and either slice it into ยฝโ€ slices or dice it into ยฝโ€ cubes (or both).
  • Lay the butternut squash on a baking sheet and drizzle enough olive oil over the pieces to coat them well.
  • Sprinkle the butternut squash with salt.
  • Peel and chop the beets and lay the pieces on a large piece of foil. Fold the foil, completely covering the beets, creating a foil packet. Place this packet on the baking sheet next to the butternut squash.
  • Place the baking sheet in the oven and roast the vegetables for 50 minutes, or until the butternut squash is browned and crispy. Remove from the oven and allow the vegetables to cool.
  • In a small bowl, whisk together the ingredients for the dressing.
  • In a large serving bowl, add all of the salad ingredients (including the roasted vegetables). Toss in desired amount of Maple-Orange-Cinnamon Dressing and serve!

Nutrition

Serving: 1Serving (of 2) ยท Calories: 796kcal ยท Carbohydrates: 70g ยท Protein: 10g ยท Fat: 55g ยท Fiber: 12g ยท Sugar: 49g
Author: Julia
Course: Salads
Cuisine: American
Keyword: dairy free recipes, easy healthy recipes, gluten free recipes, gut healthy recipes, healthy recipe
Did You Make This Recipe?I want to see it! Tag @the.roasted.root on social media!

Julia Mueller
Meet the Author

Julia Mueller

Julia Mueller is a recipe developer, cookbook author, and founder of The Roasted Root. She has authored three bestselling cookbooks, – Paleo Power Powers, Delicious Probiotic Drinks, and The Quintessential Kale Cookbook. Her recipes have been featured in several national publications such as BuzzFeed, Self, Tasty, Country Living, Brit.co, etc.

Read More About Julia

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5 from 2 votes (2 ratings without comment)

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Questions and Reviews

  1. I roasted the BNS and beets as instructed but unfortunately the BNS got mushy while the beets were perfect. I did check the oven after 30 minutes and thought the BNS needed a little more time. But i should have taken it out after 30. So obviously oven temps vary. But the recipe has great flavor! Thank you for posting it!!!

    1. I’m thrilled to hear you enjoy the recipe! I’ve noticed butternut squash can require less time than beets too. It may make sense to roast them on separate pans to be sure they both turn out with the perfect doneness. I haven’t tried this myself but I think it would work great the next time I try that salad. xoxo

  2. Just started on this recipe, because it sounds so good. Iโ€™ve done lots of baking and cooking, and so I have to ask: why not measure all the vegetables by weight? It would certainly help the person shopping and preparing things to get the ratios right. I actually discovered this recipe elsewhere with all the measurements in milliliters – measuring anything that is not a liquid in milliliters is pretty silly.

  3. This is one of the best comfort salads I have ever made. My daughter loves it and so does my sister and her husband. Three times I have made it now and it just never gets old ๐Ÿ™‚

    1. Hi Lyn, I’m so happy to hear it! I’m a huge fan of that salad, myself…I always put it on repeat throughout the chilly fall and winter months.Thanks so much for the sweet note!! xoxo

    1. Hi Cheri! I love adding roasted veggies that are fresh out of the oven to salads and don’t mind that the salad becomes slightly warm. If you prefer your salads cool and crisp, I would refrigerate the veggies first. Definitely a matter of personal preference ๐Ÿ˜‰ Let me know how you like the salad!

  4. Julia, I love the colors in that salad, it is beautiful! I love finding new salads to make for lunch, and this looks perfect. I’m pinning it now!