Fresh Fruit Salad with Orange Vanilla Bean Dressing

Fresh fruit prepared for a large group

Easy Fruit Salad with Orange Vanilla Bean Glaze

Fruit salad with orange vanilla dressing

This easy fruit salad with orange vanilla bean glaze is fresh, colorful, and ideal for serving a crowd. The dressing is a simple orange syrup infused with real vanilla bean, and it brings a bright, fragrant flavor to strawberries, blueberries, mandarin oranges, and grapes. It smells wonderful while it cooks, with the sweet citrus aroma of orange juice and zest balanced by the warm scent of vanilla.

The glaze is made by simmering sugar, water, orange juice, and orange zest until the mixture becomes slightly thicker. Once it comes off the heat, the vanilla bean seeds are stirred in so the dressing stays aromatic and smooth. After chilling, the glaze can be drizzled over the prepared fruit just before serving. This helps the fruit stay fresh and prevents it from sitting too long in extra liquid.

This make-ahead fruit salad is especially helpful when you are preparing food for a party, potluck, church meal, family gathering, brunch, or large group event. The fruit can be washed, sliced, drained, and refrigerated ahead of time, while the orange vanilla dressing can be stored separately. When it is time to serve, simply combine everything in a large bowl and toss gently.

Fruit salad and orange vanilla sauce

Easy Fruit Salad for a Large Crowd

When making fruit salad for a large group, the most important thing to know is which fruits hold well after being cut and which ones are best added at the last minute. Some fruits soften, brown, or release too much liquid quickly, while others stay fresh and attractive for several days when stored properly.

Best Make-Ahead Fruit Salad Tips

  1. Bananas and kiwi are best served within one hour of preparation. They soften quickly and do not hold as well in a large fruit salad.
  2. Apple and pear slices can be soaked for 10 minutes in a solution made with 1/2 teaspoon Diamond Crystal kosher salt dissolved in 1 cup of cold water. Drain, pat dry, and refrigerate. They can hold for up to 2 hours this way. Rinse briefly under cold running water before using to remove any salty taste.
  3. Strawberries, pineapple, and watermelon can generally be served within 2 days of preparation when stored properly in the refrigerator.
  4. Mandarin oranges, mangoes, blueberries, and grapes can generally be served within 3 to 4 days of preparation. Keep mandarin oranges in their container or can until you are ready to drain and use them.

These guidelines depend on the condition of the fruit when you buy it. If fruit is already overripe, bruised, or in poor condition, it will not keep as long. Use common sense: if something does not look or smell right, do not serve it.

Cold watermelon is another excellent choice for feeding a crowd. Large chunks of watermelon can be prepared ahead, arranged on large platters, covered, and kept refrigerated. When served ice cold, watermelon stays refreshing and can still taste great after a day or two of proper storage.

How to Store the Fruit and Glaze

For the best texture, do not store the fruit in a bowl full of glaze. A heavy layer of dressing can cause the fruit to break down faster and release extra juice. Instead, keep the prepared fruit covered in the refrigerator and store the orange vanilla bean glaze in a separate covered container.

When you are ready to serve, place the fruit in a large serving bowl, drizzle the chilled glaze evenly over the top, and toss gently. If the dressing has thickened too much in the refrigerator, thin it with 1 to 2 tablespoons of juice or water before adding it to the fruit.

Fruit Quantity Guide

Pineapple

An average pineapple, peeled and cored, should produce about 4.5 cups of fruit.

Strawberries

A quart of strawberries, hulled and quartered, is about 4 cups.

Blueberries

One pint of blueberries should fill about 2 dry cups and usually comes right to the top of the pint container. A pint will often weigh about 12 ounces, give or take a little.

Grapes

Seedless grapes weigh less on average than similar-sized grapes with seeds. One pound of seedless grapes measures about 2.5 cups.

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Fruit salad with an orange vanilla bean dressing

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Fruit salad with an orange vanilla bean dressing
Fruit Salad with Orange Vanilla Bean Dressing
Prep Time
20
mins
Cook Time
15
mins
Total Time
35
mins

This fruit salad has a bright, fresh flavor and a heavenly orange vanilla aroma. For best results, avoid using bananas, kiwi, and apples unless you are serving the salad shortly after preparing them.

If this is served as one of several side dishes, most guests will take about 1/2 cup, and the recipe should serve approximately 35 to 40 people.

Course:
Side Dish
Cuisine:
American
Servings:
22
(1 cup) servings
Ingredients
For the Dressing
  • 1 1/3
    cups
    granulated sugar
  • 2/3
    cup
    water
  • 1/3
    cup
    orange juice
    (juice of 1 orange)
  • 2
    tablespoons
    orange zest
    (zest of 1 orange)
  • 1
    vanilla bean
    , seeded
For the Fruit
  • 2
    quarts
    strawberries
    , sliced (8 cups total)
  • 2
    pints
    blueberries
    (4 cups total)
  • 2
    (23.5 ounce) bottles
    mandarin oranges
    , thoroughly drained (5 cups total)
  • 2
    pounds
    green seedless grapes
    (5 cups total)
Instructions
  1. Add the sugar and water to a small saucepan. Zest the orange over the pan, then cut the orange and squeeze out about 1/3 cup of juice. Add the orange juice to the saucepan and stir to combine.

  2. Bring the mixture to a boil. Reduce the heat to medium-low and simmer until slightly thickened, about 15 to 20 minutes. While the dressing cooks, split the vanilla bean and scrape out the seeds. Remove the dressing from the heat, stir in the vanilla seeds, and refrigerate until cold.

  3. Prepare the fruit. Wash the berries and grapes, hull and slice the strawberries, and thoroughly drain the mandarin oranges.

Make-Ahead Note

The fruit and dressing can be prepared to this point the day before serving. Store the fruit and dressing separately, covered, in the refrigerator.

  1. When ready to serve, place the fruit in a large bowl. Drizzle the dressing evenly over the fruit. If needed, thin the dressing with 1 to 2 tablespoons of juice or water. Gently toss until all the fruit is lightly coated.