Change is Sometimes Not Hard: Roasted Cauliflower is Delish!
I've made a big change in the way I eat, but, looking back, I really did make it very gradually. After reading
The Ethics of What We Eat - Why Our Food Choices Matter I found it more difficult to justify the killing and/or abuse of animals for my food. I was down to eating fish and chicken for quite a long time, but most people know how chickens are treated on factory farms, and even on "humane" farms they do get slaughtered. Fish are treated abominably; they feel pain and suffer horribly. So now I am a vegetarian who eats an egg now and then and sometimes a small amount of cheese. I know my eggs come from a humane farm, but I've never been there to see just what it's like, and most cheese is from "dairy cows" whose lives are short and terribly unhappy. Much of it is imported. I'm not quite vegan, but definitely working on it.
If you're vegetarian or just love vegetable dishes, and you like interesting and delicious food a lot, you are probably looking for new recipes quite frequently. I don't like to spend hours in the kitchen for every dinner, so I peruse the internet but also buy cookbooks fairly often. Recently I bought
Fresh and Fast Vegetarian by Marie Simmons. So far I really love it, and if I get two great recipes (that become standbys) from a cookbook, I am thrilled. With this cookbook I think I'll net quite a few. I have made the Curried Lentils with Walnuts. Spinach and Cherry Tomatoes, and everyone who tasted it loved it. Last night I made Roasted Sweet Potatoes with Quick Black Bean Chili. It was pretty easy - although she says 30 minutes for total prep, I'd say 45, but that was the first time I made it. I know the Curried Lentils dish was much faster the second time I made it, and I was wondering why I had whined towards the end the first time I made it. The sweet potato dish is basically roasted halved (the long way) sweet potatoes or "yams", topped with a yummy, quick chili which includes a teaspoon of chipotle chiles in adobo sauce (I used more). She also has a vegetable broth recipe that is very simple, much easier than mine. Perhaps most important, she has recipes for various small items you can put on or serve with your dishes that are quick to make and really add interest and flavor. For example, a roasted cauliflower dish includes a suggestion for an orange gremolata topping that is simple to make (garlic clove, Italian parsley and orange peel chopped up) that turns a tasty dish into a more sophisticated one.
My one criticism of this book is that she gives a recipe and then has a sidebar in which she shows you how to "Make a Meal" of the dish by adding unnecessary and time consuming sides. Last night I did serve the sweet potato and chile dish with some fresh organic corn that was fantastic and of course very easy to steam. But I could also have thrown a green salad together...or more likely have just the sweet potato dish that covers a lot of ground nutritionally. I find some of her sides too labor intensive for me, and there is the danger of too many competing strong flavors. I think many if not most of these recipes stand on their own as a meal in a dish. I love that. If you have company, I can definitely see cranking it up with one of her fancier "Make a Meal" dishes on the side.
Ever notice how many recipes say "serves 4... or 6 or 8"? But two of you can finish off the meal that serves 4? Well, another reason to love this cookbook so far is that the servings are pretty close or right on target. By the way, no one is paying me to review or recommend this book.
Getting back to the title of this blog, one of the wonders of the world is roasted cauliflower - roasting does turn cauliflower into a pretty amazing vegetable. You don't have to line the baking sheet but clean up is faster with it. Here is a recipe which I adapted from several I found online:
Roasted Cauliflower
Ingredients
1 head of
cauliflower 1/2 inch wedges of onion or shallots
3 tbsp olive oil a few halved garlic cloves
1 small pinch of salt
some ground black pepper to taste
Method
Preheat the oven
to 450 F. Line the baking sheet with parchment paper. Wash and dry the cauliflower and cut into small (about one and a half inch) florets.
Place the
cauliflower florets in a bowl and pour the oil over them. Toss the cauliflower so
it’s coated with oil. You may need one more tablespoon of oil.
Add the onion or shallots and garlic cloves if
you are using them and toss well.
Put the vegetables on a baking sheet, so the cauliflower pieces are not touching. If
the cauliflower doesn’t fit, just put the rest on a second baking sheet. Place the
cauliflower in the oven and bake for 15 minutes. Stir, and bake another 5-10 minutes, checking frequently to see if the cauliflower is cooking too quickly; remove garlic when it is soft. If the cauliflower is cooking too quickly, turn heat down to 425 or even 400 degrees. Roast until the cauliflower is
browned and tender.
This is very delicious plain and also great on pasta, topped with chopped parsley, more pepper, and a squeeze of lemon. Save some pasta cooking water and add some of that so it won't be dry.
Enjoy and be well!