Cauliflower Gruyere & Thyme Gratin

Cauliflower Gruyere & Thyme Gratin

With gusto, I let fall into my home. I'm not talking about pumpkins or mums, either. I'm talking about the breeze.

I’m rarely home alone but when I am I take advantage of it. This time, I threw open all of the windows and let the breeze rip through the house. There are only two times of the year that allow you to do this at 3pm on a Sunday afternoon, and fall is one of them (Spring is the other; summer is far too hot and winter far too cold). I put Elephant Revival on and turned the volume up high as if to drown out other noise, even though the house was silent. I threw my hair into a messy bun on the top of my head (or tried— half of my hairs fell out, and I didn’t bother putting them into place), and I whipped out the pots and pans. 

It was going to be a good afternoon: I had cheese to melt. 

Cauliflower Gruyere & Thyme Gratin

Even though cauliflower is a fall crop, I abuse the fact that modern grocery stores carry it all year around. I can't lie about this with over 19 recipes using cauliflower on this blog, and almost none of them fall-related. 

This cauliflower gratin is rich and hits your "I really just want cheese for dinner" spot, but feels a little more grown up because 1) you're eating vegetables and 2) the cheese is gruyere, which I almost can't say out loud without second guessing myself (groo-year? gru-air?). There's even a little thyme stirred in. 

It pairs well with a glass of red wine, a cold beer, or a dry cider. Fancy enough for something like Thanksgiving dinner, you could cook this cauliflower gratin up for party. But best of all, you can just reheat it as a lazy couch dinner. 

Cauliflower Gruyere & Thyme Gratin

I hope you'll invite fall into your home like I did: it will come out bubbling and strings of cheese will follow as you serve yourself the first bite. Maybe, if it's cool enough, you can get away with wearing your slippers, too. 

Cauliflower Gruyere & Thyme Gratin

Cauliflower Gruyere & Thyme Gratin

Published September 26, 2017 by
   |     Print This Recipe

Serves: 8   |    Total Time: 60 minutes



Ingredients:

  • 2 pounds cauliflower florets (about 2 heads)
  • Water, for steaming
  • 1/4 cup butter
  • 2 tablespoons corn starch or arrowroot powder
  • 2 cups whole milk
  • 1-1/2 cup shredded gruyere, divided
  • 1/2 cup parmesan
  • 1 tablespoon fresh thyme leaves
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • Dash cayenne

Directions:

  1. Pre-heat oven to 375°F.
  2. Fill a medium pot with 1 inch of water and place steam basket in pot. Place cauliflower in steam basket, and heat over medium heat until water is simmering. Allow cauliflower to steam for 5 minutes, or until tender. Remove from heat. Drain any water from cauliflower, and then put cauliflower in a 8x8inch baking dish.
  3. Now, in a small sauce pan, melt the butter. While the butter melts, whisk together the milk and corn starch or arrowroot powder until no clumps remain. Pour milk into melted butter and whisk. Bring to a simmer, whisking constantly so as not to scald the milk, for 5 minutes. Add 1 cup of gruyere cheese. Continue to whisk and simmer until sauce thickens (it should be thick enough to coat the back of a spoon), and cheese is fully incorporated. Remove from heat.
  4. Stir thyme, black pepper, salt, nutmeg, and cayenne into cheese sauce. Pour cheese sauce over cauliflower and use a spoon to ensure the cauliflower is all coated and the sauce is distributed.
  5. Top with remaining gruyere and the parmesan. Place in oven, and bake for 35-45 minutes, until sauce is bubbling and top is golden brown. Allow to cool 10 minutes before serving.

4 Comments

Mash Potatoes with Brown Butter & Hazelnuts

Mash Potatoes with Brown Butter & Hazelnuts

Usually the words "secret ingredient" bring visions of mashed banana, finely chopped veggies, or some other secretly healthy add in. Like chocolate cake made with zucchini, or cookies made with avocado instead of butter. But not this recipe. Oh no. 

The secret to getting rich, buttery potatoes in this recipe? (Hint hint, it's in the title, so not that secret!) It's the same thing I will sneak into baked good to make them taste extra rich. Browned Butter. 

Mash Potatoes with Brown Butter & Hazelnuts
Mash Potatoes with Brown Butter & Hazelnuts

If you have not tried it yet, use browned butter in the next batch of cookies or coffee cake you make. You will never look back. You will fall, like I have, deeply in love with the caramelized flavor of butter that has been gently heated until golden. 

Brown butter's nutty flavor pairs well with things like dessert, but in this recipe it adds dimensions to mashed potatoes you've never visited before. These mashed potatoes take one look at gravy and laugh: there is no need. They are soft and creamy and rich on their own. Eat a bowl for dinner, or try them out at breakfast, like I did. Do not be ashamed. 

I top them with toasted hazelnuts to accentuate the nutty flavor of the browned butter and add texture. Then, a sprinkle of chives for color! But if you like to just keep things simple and traditional feel free to skip these and focus on just the browned butter. That's the most important part (and maybe the potatoes).

Mash Potatoes with Brown Butter & Hazelnuts

Mash Potatoes with Brown Butter & Hazelnuts

Published July 4, 2017 by
   |     Print This Recipe

Serves: 6   |    Total Time: 40 minutes



Ingredients:

  • 5 yukon gold potatoes, chopped into quarters (skin them if you like, I leave the skins on)
  • 1 cup water
  • 3/4 cup whole milk
  • 3 tablespoons butter 
  • 1/4 cup hazelnuts, roughly chopped and toasted (optional)
  • 1 tablespoon chives, minced (optional
  • Salt & pepper to taste

Directions:

  1. Pour 1 cup of water into a pot and fit pot with a steamer basket. Place potatoes in steam basket, and heat over medium-low heat with lid on for 25-30 minutes. Test softness by pricking potatoes with a fork: fork should easily piece potatoes and centers should be soft (if they're not, keep cooking!).
  2. While the potatoes cook, brown the butter: heat butter in a sauce pan over low heat until it melts. Continue to heat over low heat, stirring occasionally, until it begins to foam. Watch closely to prevent it from boiling over, and continue to heat until the butter becomes golden and fragrant. Here is a great tutorial.
  3. Strain the water from the potatoes, and place them in a mixing bowl. Mash the potatoes using a potato masher or a fork. Add milk and 2 tablespoons butter and continue to mash until it reaches your preferred consistency (I prefer my mans potatoes a little bit chunky). Add salt and pepper to taste.
  4. Drizzle remaining tablespoon of browned butter over top of potatoes just before serving. Optional: Add toasted hazelnuts and chives as garnish.

2 Comments

Late Fall Salad

Late Fall Salad

I spent the last week experimenting a bit with what I ate. Driven by curiosity, I spent a week eating all of the traditional breads and grains. Months ago, I had wanted to see how my body reacted to eating wheat bread because, having chosen a more "paleo" diet out of lifestyle choice rather than because of any allergic reaction, I didn't really know what my body would do with it. 

So, I made fresh focaccia and smothered it with avocado, just to see what would happen. A headache ensued, and I figured the two were related. Still, results didn't seem conclusive, since a few weeks later when I tried again, seeking some sort of pattern in reaction, I got no headache at all. Which of course begged the question: was it the bread that caused the headache in the first place? 

I had to know. This last week I wrote down everything I ate, adding in some bread here and there. To be honest, I'm in such a habit of not eating grains that I had to make a real effort to buy bread rolls. I wrote down exactly how I felt afterwards, and tried to just generally listen to my body.

Have any of you done this before? A week-long experiment to see how you feel? It was harder than I thought it would be: Hard to change the way I eat, for one, but also hard to feel sure of yourself as you write anything down. I found myself doubting what I was feeling and what I wasn't. 

Late Fall Salad

Honestly the swirls of doubt muddied my conclusions. My journal would go like this: 

  • 1 piece of bakery bread toasted with goat cheese, steamed asparagus. Reaction: sharp headache. But I also think I drank too much coffee. 
  • 8 crackers, Cauliflower Parsnip Soup, Grass-Fed Sausage. Reaction: none. I did only eat 5 crackers though. 
  • Ciabatta roll with goat cheese, tomatoes with basil, balsamic reduction. An apple and a square of chocolate. Reaction: Pounding headache and brain fog. Am I just stressed?
  • And on. Every bullet clouded with a line of doubt. 
Late Fall Salad

How is anyone supposed to draw any conclusions when they are filled with this much conflicting information! So instead I am going to focus on what I know: 

  1. Eating a couple of crackers here and there (or, ehem, crust on pumpkin pie) will likely not make me feel horrible
  2. Eating a full piece of bread for breakfast might give me a headache, shorten my patience, and just generally cause inflammation. But since I'm not positive, I should continue listening to my body and feeling out what works and what doesn't. 
  3. My body knows best. I should listen to my body and try not to doubt it. I should also be open to what it's telling me, and maybe do something about all of that stress I noted, because that can't be good. 
  4. Sometimes you just need a big old bowl of veggies. And when that's what you need, you should make this salad. 
Late Fall Salad

Late Fall Salad

Primal, Gluten-Free, Grain-Free    |       |    Print This Recipe

So many of fall’s favorite flavors in one bowl!

Serves: 6   |    Total Time:



Ingredients:

  • 1 bunch dinosaur kale
  • 10 ounces arugula
  • Perils of 1 pomegranate
  • 1/4 pound brussels sprouts
  • 1/4 cup pepitas
  • 4 ounces soft goat cheese
  • 2 cups cubed butternut squash
  • 1 tablespoon avocado oil
  • Salt & Pepper
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • Balsamic vinaigrette

Directions:

  1. Preheat oven to 400°F. Toss the cubed butternut squash in the avocado oil and spread out on a cookie sheet in a single layer. Bake for 30 to 35 minutes, until squash is tender through and crispy on the edges. Remove from oven, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and set aside to cool.
  2. Remove stems from the kale and chop into bite-sized pieces. Place in the bottom of your salad bowl, and drizzle with olive oil and sprinkle with salt. Using your hands, rug the oil into the kale to begin to soften the leaves.
  3. Add the arugula to the bowl and toss with the kale. Top mix of greens with crumbles of goat cheese, pomegranate perils, pepitas, and cooked butternut squash.
  4. Slice brussels sprouts into think slices, as if to shred them. Add to the salad.
  5. When ready to eat, drizzle salad with your favorite balsamic vinaigrette and toss.

Comment