In season now — April – June
Salad Easy Italian

Shaved asparagus salad

Raw asparagus shaved into ribbons, dressed with lemon, olive oil, and shaved Parmesan — a 10-minute no-cook spring salad that looks like it came from a restaurant.

A white plate piled with thin green asparagus ribbons, shaved Parmesan, and a lemon wedge.
Prep
10 min
Cook
1 min
Total
10 min
Serves
4

Shaved asparagus salad is proof that a peak-season vegetable barely needs a recipe. Ten minutes with a vegetable peeler, a lemon, some olive oil, and a hunk of good Parmesan turns one bunch of asparagus into something that looks like it came from a farm-to-table restaurant. This only works in April and May with genuinely fresh spears — don't try it with January asparagus from Peru.

Shaved asparagus salad

Serves 4

Ingredients (10)

To finish

You'll need

  • Y-shaped vegetable peeler
  • Cutting board
  • Large mixing bowl
  • Microplane (for lemon zest)
  • Vegetable peeler (for shaving Parmesan)
Source these from local growers See growers + what's in season →

Instructions

Nutrition

Estimated per serving · 1 serving
180 Calories
7 g Protein
6 g Carbs
14 g Fat
3 g Fiber
3 g Sugar
380 mg Sodium
Ingredient intelligence

What to look for when you shop

Best varieties

  • Thick green — the ideal for shaving; ribbons come off wide and pretty
  • Jumbo/colossal green spears — even easier to shave, more dramatic ribbons
  • Purple — sweeter raw than green; keeps its color when not cooked
  • White — mild and nutty raw; peel the lower half before shaving (outer layer is tougher)

Ripeness

Tips tight and dry. A gentle snap at the base should break cleanly. Flexibility is not okay for this recipe — floppy spears indicate age and will be unpleasant raw.

Imperfections are fine

Mixed thickness in a bunch is fine; use only the thicker spears for shaving and save the thin ones for roasting. Trim the very base of any tough-looking spears.

Good substitutions

  • Shaved zucchini — summer equivalent; use with same dressing
  • Shaved fennel — anise-sweet; add orange segments
  • Raw sugar snap peas, halved lengthwise — spring alternative
  • Thinly sliced raw brussels sprouts — winter version

In season

This recipe is worth making only in peak asparagus season (April – June) with fresh local spears. Out-of-season asparagus is too tough to eat raw.

How much to buy

About 1 lb (450 g) — one bunch of thick spears.

From a grower near you

Find your asparagus grower on CollectiveCrop

Raw asparagus only works when the spear was cut recently — the crisp, grassy sweetness fades to something tough and stringy within a few days. Supermarket asparagus shipped across hemispheres loses it on the first leg. CollectiveCrop is how the local grower becomes findable during the April-to-June window. Shaved raw, dressed in lemon, and showered with Parmesan, the difference is the whole dish.

  • In season April – June
  • For this recipe 1 lb / 1 bunch
  • Freshness Picked within 3 days
  • Diet-friendly vegetarian · gluten-free
  • While you're there Fresh lemons · Parmigiano-Reggiano (or local hard cheese) · Pine nuts or local toasted nuts · Fresh mint or parsley · Good olive oil

At the market

About 1 lb (450 g) — one bunch of thick spears.

Best varieties

  • Thick green the ideal for shaving; ribbons come off wide and pretty
  • Jumbo/colossal green spears even easier to shave, more dramatic ribbons
  • Purple sweeter raw than green; keeps its color when not cooked

Good to know

Tips

  • Thick spears make pretty ribbons. Buy the biggest asparagus you can find.
  • Dress just before serving — raw asparagus turns limp 15 minutes after it meets acid.
  • Shave Parmesan with a vegetable peeler for graceful curls, not pre-grated shreds. Parmigiano-Reggiano is worth the upgrade here.
  • Toast the nuts. A quick 3-minute toast in a dry skillet triples their flavor.
  • For presentation, arrange in a loose nest on the plate instead of tossing flat — the salad looks more airy and alive.

Storage

  • Shaved undressed asparagus: 4 hours in ice water, or 24 hours covered in the fridge.
  • Dressed: doesn't store — weeps within 15 minutes.
  • Leftover trimmings and ends: save for asparagus stock or frittata.

Reheating

  • Not applicable — served cold.

Make ahead

  • Shave asparagus up to 4 hours ahead and hold in ice water; pat dry before dressing.
  • Whisk together the dressing up to 2 days ahead.
  • Shave Parmesan and chop herbs within 1 hour of serving.

Variations

  • Asparagus-arugula: layer the ribbons over 2 cups of peppery arugula.
  • Asparagus with burrata: center a ball of torn burrata on the platter; drape ribbons around it.
  • Asparagus and peas: fold in 1/2 cup raw fresh peas or halved sugar snap peas.
  • Asparagus carpaccio: pile the ribbons thinly and top with shaved Parmesan, capers, and a drizzle of truffle oil.
  • Lemon-tahini version: swap olive oil and lemon juice for 2 tablespoons lemon tahini thinned with water.
  • With poached egg: top each plate with a soft-poached egg for a spring main course.

Swaps

  • Vegan: skip Parmesan; double the nuts and add 2 tablespoons nutritional yeast.
  • Nut-free: replace nuts with toasted sunflower or pumpkin seeds.
  • Dairy-free: omit the cheese or use a salty plant-based alternative.
  • No mint: fresh basil, dill, or flat-leaf parsley all work well.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you really eat asparagus raw?

Yes — and spring asparagus is where raw shines brightest. Peak-season tender spears have a grassy, sweet flavor that's actually muted by cooking. Shaved thinly, they're delicate, crunchy, and fresh.

What's the best way to shave asparagus?

A vegetable peeler — hold the spear flat on a cutting board, stem-end pointing away, and drag the peeler from base to tip in long strokes. A mandoline works but eats your fingers; a peeler is safer and gives prettier ribbons.

Do I need to cook asparagus before eating it?

No, not when it's fresh. Woody or old asparagus is unpleasant raw (tough and bitter), but a fresh spring spear is tender and sweet. If unsure, snap a raw bite off the tip — if it's crisp and grassy, the bunch is raw-salad ready.

What part of the asparagus do I use?

The tender upper three-quarters of the spear. Snap off the woody end; the rest gets shaved. Reserve the tips whole for garnish — they look beautiful scattered on top.

How thick should spears be for shaving?

Medium-to-thick (3/8 inch or wider) — thin spears are too floppy to peel easily. For this salad, bigger is better. Save thin pencil spears for roasting.

Can I make this ahead?

Shave the asparagus up to 4 hours ahead and store in a bowl of ice water — it stays crisp and curls slightly. Drain and pat dry before dressing. Dress right before serving; the salad weeps within 15 minutes.

What do I serve this with?

Grilled fish or chicken, pasta, a spring brunch spread alongside quiche, or piled on top of a simple crostini with ricotta. It's also excellent as the green next to a bowl of pea soup.

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