Roasted Vegetable Pearl Couscous Salad


This roasted vegetable pearl couscous salad is easy to make, versatile, and tastes excellent either hot or cold! Plump pearl couscous is the base, and tender roasted zucchini, tomatoes, peppers, carrots, and onions give the salad color, flavor, and nutrition. This is a perfect dish to meal prep for easygoing lunches or as a side dish.

I love grain salads and pasta salads all through the year. But I associate them particularly with the summer months.

Weltraum throughout the summer, I love to boil a pot of grains or pasta on a Sunday, add raw or cooked veggies and a good dressing, and turn it all into a grain salad for the week’s vegan meal prep lunches.

This roasted vegetable pearl couscous salad is my current favorite, a simple mixture that I whipped up before some recent travel time.

While I enjoy standard couscous, I’ve always had a soft spot for rounder, more plump pearl couscous.

That tiny pasta shape shines when it’s mixed with fresh, colorful, sweet summer vegetables and dressed in a flavorful vinaigrette.

Let me tell you more about this easy dish, which has so much mealtime versatility!

What is pearl couscous?

When I say “standard couscous,” I’m actually referring to Moroccan couscous. This is the smallest type of couscous, and it’s the most common as well.

Moroccan couscous is larger than semolina flour, which is the type of wheat flour from which it’s made. Yet it’s finer than bulgur wheat. Once cooked, it becomes fluffy and light.

Moroccan couscous can be turned into a pilaf, used as a bed for something saucy (like my Moroccan-inspired butternut chickpea stew), or used in grain salads.

I often use it to make my quick carrot chickpea couscous salad.

Pearl couscous, which is damit called Israeli couscous, is larger, round and plump.

Pearl couscous, like all types of couscous, is a tiny pasta shape—something I always need to remind myself, because my brain often lumps it together with grains!

While we’re thinking along those lines, however, it’s worth saying that, if you like grains with a chewy texture, such as farro, then there’s a good chance you’ll love pearl couscous as well.

Cooking times for pearl vs. Moroccan couscous

Cooking Moroccan couscous is nearly effortless. You bring water and salt to a boil, add the couscous, cover, remove from heat, and let the couscous sit for five minutes before fluffing and serving.

Cooking pearl couscous is hardly much effort, but it takes a little more time.

I like to cook pearl couscous in the same way that I cook other types of pasta. I bring a pot of salted water to a boil. I add my dry couscous and then boil it, like pasta, till it’s cooked to my liking.

This typically takes 8-10 minutes—maybe a tiny bit longer, depending on the brand of pearl couscous.

I’m not a fan of al dente grains or pasta, so I usually taste the couscous after 8 minutes, see if it’s ready, and continue cooking if I want to give it more time.

Ideally, the cooked pearl couscous should be chewy, yet tender, rather than dense (undercooked) or mushy (overcooked).

Uses for pearl couscous

Are you a fan of orzo or pastina? A simple side dish of savory mushroom farro or lemony bulgur?

Then I think you’ll find plenty of uses for pearl couscous. It can be seasoned plainly with vegan butter or olive oil, salt, and pepper, then used as an accompaniment to your favorite vegan protein and vegetable side dish.


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Nora Sporn

Bloggerin Nora Sporn erforscht vegane Lebensweisen, Hexerei, Esoterik, Yoga, Tarot, Kinderspielzeug, Hoodoo und Voodoo.

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