I have mixed feelings about cauliflower, mostly negative. I don’t
even like cauliflower cheese: for me the lumps of weirdly textured white stuff,
strangely tasteless, yet still bitter, just ruins good cheese. However, I have tried it roasted to within an
inch of its life, until lightly charred, and the florets are pretty good (the
stalks are still horrid, for some reason). So, I regarded the large one (roughly
the size of my head) which arrived in our recent veg box with a somewhat jaded
eye, especially in light of my recent not entirely successful attempts at
making swede edible (see here).
The first thing to do with it was fairly easy – to make most
dubious vegetables more edible, apply (lots of) heat and spice. Toss
cauliflower with lemon juice, oil and paprika, then roast in a fairly hot oven
(about 200 degrees fan) for about half an hour, until nicely charred. Lovely. I
served this with merguez spiced chickpeas, yoghurt and flatbread. All wonderfully
beige.
Roasted cauliflower, further excellent beige stuff in background |
For my next cauliflower trick, I made cauliflower cheese cakes (despite my feelings about cauliflower cheese), from New Kitchen Basics, definitely one of the best cook books I have bought this year. I went for it mostly because you start by blitzing up the florets, and a large part of my issues with caulis is the texture. So – first, blitz or finely chop your florets (about 125g for six cakes, about right to serve two). The recipe says pea sized, but mine were a bit finer, see above feelings about texture.
Blitzed cauliflower |
Mix the blitzed bits with an egg, mustard, breadcrumbs and cheddar (ish – I used Black Bomber) cheese. Place the mixture into greased muffin tins and bake for fifteen minutes. I grated some parmesan on top as an extra, because more cheese is rarely a bad thing.
Ready for the oven |
They were…delicious, actually. Main flavours cheese and mustard, with a bitter cauliflower undertone to stop them being two sweet. So good I will actually in future choose to buy a cauliflower, in order to make this. A cauliflower conversion.
The final deliciousness, served with roast fennel and potatoes with pesto |
And a close up, because why not? |
I adore those cheese cakes - but then I love roast cauli too. Excellent news that you've found this happy place too.
ReplyDeleteOoh; thank you for the reminder. I made them earlier in the year and wolfed the whole tray in one session. Might be an excellent thing to accompany cold leftover meats over Christmas!
ReplyDeleteI hate cauli, but the husband loves it, so those cheese cakes might just be the thing to help us find some middle ground. And last night I was watching an episode of The Chef Show and someone made pizza using cooked riced cauli as the main ingredient, mixed with cheese for the pizza crust, which I thought was interesting.
ReplyDelete