Stone Fruit Caprese Salad

Classic caprese salad tossed with nectarines, peaches, cherries, and apricots. This stone fruit caprese salad is so delicious and refreshing and filled with summer vibes.

Stone Fruit Caprese Salad | Cooking with a Wallflower

Who is excited for stone fruit season?

I know I am! As soon as it’s almost summer, I’m hitting the farmer’s market looking for my favorite peaches and nectarines. Of course, there’s the cherries and the apricots and apriums too. So many different fruits to choose from and to eat my way through.

Stone Fruit Caprese Salad | Cooking with a Wallflower

The farmer’s market is the best place to shop for all of your summer fruits because there’s so varieties for you to choose from. It’s not just yellow peaches or white peaches, yellow nectarines or white nectarines. There are a variety of types with different levels of sweetness. So if you like a little more tartness, you can choose that. Or if you like your stone fruits on the sweeter side, you can pick that. And the best part is that you can try all of it so you know what you’re buying.

Stone Fruit Caprese Salad | Cooking with a Wallflower

Since stone fruits are in season for just a couple months, why not add them into a classic summer salad? This stone fruit caprese salad has all of summer embodied in it. Sweet ripe tomatoes, fresh basil, stone fruit of all sorts, fresh mozzarella or burrata, and a drizzle of honey balsamic vinaigrette. So simple yet so delicious. I can eat this salad for days.

Stone Fruit Caprese Salad | Cooking with a Wallflower

Whisk together balsamic vinegar, honey, and olive oil until combined. Add sliced grape tomatoes and mix until the tomatoes are covered in the vinaigrette. Let the tomatoes sit for about 10-15 minutes to marinate.

Stone Fruit Caprese Salad | Cooking with a Wallflower

Add cherries, sliced apricots, sliced nectarines, and sliced peaches. Toss until combined. Add torn up pieces of mozzarella or burrata. And lastly, add basil leaves. By the way, just maybe invest in a cherry pitter because slicing the cherries and removing the pits were kind of a pain. lol. And I prefer to use mozzarella rather than burrata for this salad because the cream inside of the burrata doesn’t get everywhere.

Stone Fruit Caprese Salad | Cooking with a Wallflower

Serve this stone fruit caprese salad cold.

Enjoy!

Stone Fruit Caprese Salad | Cooking with a Wallflower

Stone Fruit Caprese Salad
 
Prep time
Total time
 
Classic caprese salad tossed with nectarines, peaches, cherries, and apricots. This stone fruit caprese salad is so delicious and refreshing and filled with summer vibes.
Author:
Recipe type: Salad
Serves: 4 servings
Ingredients
Honey Balsamic Vinaigrette
  • 4 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
  • 2 tablespoons honey
  • ½ cup olive oil
Stone Fruit Caprese Salad
  • 6 cups grape or cherry tomatoes
  • 1 apricot, sliced
  • 1 nectarine, sliced
  • 1 peach, sliced
  • 2 cups cherries, sliced with pits removed
  • 8 ounce fresh mozzarella
  • 2 sprigs of basil with leaves torn
Directions:
  1. Whisk together balsamic vinegar, honey, and olive oil until combined. Add sliced grape tomatoes and mix until the tomatoes are covered in the vinaigrette. Let the tomatoes sit for about 10-15 minutes to marinate.
  2. Add cherries, sliced apricots, sliced nectarines, and sliced peaches. Toss until combined. Add torn up pieces of mozzarella or burrata. And lastly, add basil leaves.
  3. Serve this stone fruit caprese salad cold.

 

9 comments

  1. Stuffedmeatloaf says:

    I am a purist, so I have to object to the use of the name Capresi Salad for this dish. A Capresi Salad is Tomatoes, Mozzarella and Basil. I’m all for upgrading, putting on your own flair, changing presentation, etc., but I feel like this one has too many modifications with the addition of cherries, apricots, nectarines and peaches this is no longer a Capresi Salad.

    That being said, it looks like a wonderful summer fruit, tomato and mozzarella salad.

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