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Default Roasted Cauliflower


This past Sunday evening I was invited to my neighbor's house for
dinner and roasted cauliflower was on the menu. YUM-YUM.

I don't know why but I never think to buy that vegetable. Broccoli,
yes, squash, yes, new potatoes, yes, tomatoes, of course. But for
some unfathomable reason it's like I have had blinders on when
passing by the cauliflower. It will definitely be in my shopping
cart this week.

We also had kale salad that included tomatoes, bacon, goat cheese,
and a very light oil and vinegar dressing. It was lip smacking as
well.
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On 3/21/2018 4:37 PM, Gregory Morrow socked up as Steve 'Weenie Wonder'
Wertz wrote:
> I was at a summer feed once
>

Did they have you on a spit, hogboi?

https://imgur.com/a/BbBLI LOL!

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> wrote in message
...
>
> This past Sunday evening I was invited to my neighbor's house for
> dinner and roasted cauliflower was on the menu. YUM-YUM.
>
> I don't know why but I never think to buy that vegetable. Broccoli,
> yes, squash, yes, new potatoes, yes, tomatoes, of course. But for
> some unfathomable reason it's like I have had blinders on when
> passing by the cauliflower. It will definitely be in my shopping
> cart this week.
>
> We also had kale salad that included tomatoes, bacon, goat cheese,
> and a very light oil and vinegar dressing. It was lip smacking as
> well.



I like any kind of roasted cauliflower, but like the cauliflower slices the
best, cut thick.

Cheri

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On Tuesday, March 20, 2018 at 9:29:53 PM UTC-5, Cheri wrote:
>
> I like any kind of roasted cauliflower, but like the cauliflower slices the
> best, cut thick.
>
> Cheri
>
>

These were large pieces, not slices, but I'm going to try my darnest
to keep mine is as large slices as possible. There were lots of
brown, tasty spots all over the pieces. She said she used a light
olive oil, salt, and bit of garlic powder. I don't have any o.o.
so I'll just use safflower oil and might melt a smidge of butter
into the oil before tossing.


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> wrote in message
...
> On Tuesday, March 20, 2018 at 9:29:53 PM UTC-5, Cheri wrote:
>>
>> I like any kind of roasted cauliflower, but like the cauliflower slices
>> the
>> best, cut thick.
>>
>> Cheri
>>
>>

> These were large pieces, not slices, but I'm going to try my darnest
> to keep mine is as large slices as possible. There were lots of
> brown, tasty spots all over the pieces. She said she used a light
> olive oil, salt, and bit of garlic powder. I don't have any o.o.
> so I'll just use safflower oil and might melt a smidge of butter
> into the oil before tossing.


I think that would taste great. I saw a cook on tv (can't remember who) who
called them cauliflower steaks, at any rate roasted cauliflower is
wonderful.

Cheri

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On Wednesday, March 21, 2018 at 8:43:54 AM UTC-5, Dave Smith wrote:
>
> Try coating it with yogurt mixed with curry powder before baking it.
> That also works well for grilling it.
>
>

Sorry, I don't have any yogurt here but I do have curry powder.
When I buy yogurt, which is rare, I always buy those fruit and
flavored cups.

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On Wednesday, March 21, 2018 at 5:21:46 AM UTC-10, wrote:
> On Wednesday, March 21, 2018 at 8:43:54 AM UTC-5, Dave Smith wrote:
> >
> > Try coating it with yogurt mixed with curry powder before baking it.
> > That also works well for grilling it.
> >
> >

> Sorry, I don't have any yogurt here but I do have curry powder.
> When I buy yogurt, which is rare, I always buy those fruit and
> flavored cups.


It would work fine with mayonnaise.
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On Tuesday, March 20, 2018 at 4:54:50 PM UTC-4, wrote:
> This past Sunday evening I was invited to my neighbor's house for
> dinner and roasted cauliflower was on the menu. YUM-YUM.
>
> I don't know why but I never think to buy that vegetable. Broccoli,
> yes, squash, yes, new potatoes, yes, tomatoes, of course. But for
> some unfathomable reason it's like I have had blinders on when
> passing by the cauliflower. It will definitely be in my shopping
> cart this week.
>
> We also had kale salad that included tomatoes, bacon, goat cheese,
> and a very light oil and vinegar dressing. It was lip smacking as
> well.


I like pickled califlower.


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In article >, Dave Smith
> wrote:

> I used to throw out old jars of mixed pickles with the cauliflower and
> onion still uneaten. Not any more. Those bits are as good or better than
> the pickles.


Crosse & Blackwell chow chow mustard, onion, cauliflower and cucumber
pickles were the bomb. The cauliflower was the best part. But they're
gone where I shop and have been for years. And yeah, I googled for a
store near me. They don't even make them anymore, I don't think.
I love pickled cauliflower. The closest I can get to the dream
described above is Mezzetta, but it's not the same. Still good though.

leo
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On 2018-03-21 9:01 PM, Leonard Blaisdell wrote:
> In article >, Dave Smith
> > wrote:
>
>> I used to throw out old jars of mixed pickles with the cauliflower and
>> onion still uneaten. Not any more. Those bits are as good or better than
>> the pickles.

>
> Crosse & Blackwell chow chow mustard, onion, cauliflower and cucumber
> pickles were the bomb. The cauliflower was the best part. But they're
> gone where I shop and have been for years. And yeah, I googled for a
> store near me. They don't even make them anymore, I don't think.
> I love pickled cauliflower. The closest I can get to the dream
> described above is Mezzetta, but it's not the same. Still good though.
>
> leo
>

Try making your own:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/t...ccalilli_48187
http://allrecipes.co.uk/recipe/17146...picalilli.aspx

Graham
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In article >, Dave Smith
> wrote:

> I used to throw out old jars of mixed pickles with the cauliflower and
> onion still uneaten. Not any more. Those bits are as good or better than
> the pickles.


Crosse & Blackwell chow chow mustard, onion, cauliflower and cucumber
pickles were the bomb. The cauliflower was the best part. But they're
gone where I shop and have been for years. And yeah, I googled for a
store near me. They don't even make them anymore, I don't think.
I love pickled cauliflower. The closest I can get to the dream
described above is Mezzetta, but it's not the same. Still good though.

leo


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[[ This message was both posted and mailed: see
the "To," "Cc," and "Newsgroups" headers for details. ]]


A post so nice, you got it twice!

leo
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On 2018-03-21 11:00 PM, Leonard Blaisdell wrote:
> In article >, Dave Smith
> > wrote:
>
>> I used to throw out old jars of mixed pickles with the cauliflower and
>> onion still uneaten. Not any more. Those bits are as good or better than
>> the pickles.

>
> Crosse & Blackwell chow chow mustard, onion, cauliflower and cucumber
> pickles were the bomb. The cauliflower was the best part. But they're
> gone where I shop and have been for years. And yeah, I googled for a
> store near me. They don't even make them anymore, I don't think.
> I love pickled cauliflower. The closest I can get to the dream
> described above is Mezzetta, but it's not the same. Still good though.


Doesn't Lady Ross relish also have cauliflower in it?
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On Tue, 20 Mar 2018 21:47:42 -0500, Sqwertz >
wrote:

>I've just started roasting cauliflower and it's the Bo... well, lets
>just say it's really good. It's the only way I'll cook cauliflower
>anymore. But it's expensive ($3.50-$4/head, not very big) when not on
>sale and I don't when the "season" is. My main grocer doesn't even
>have it most of the time.


Really!??

It runs about $2-$3 here (southern Ontario) for a decent size head.

Since I discovered roasted cauliflower, that's pretty much the only
way I cook it. I do it with EVOO, S&P, garlic powder, and a bit of
parmesan cheese.

Doris
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On Tuesday, March 20, 2018 at 11:10:00 PM UTC-5, Doris Night wrote:
>
> On Tue, 20 Mar 2018 21:47:42 -0500, Sqwertz >
> wrote:
>
> >I've just started roasting cauliflower and it's the Bo... well, lets
> >just say it's really good. It's the only way I'll cook cauliflower
> >anymore. But it's expensive ($3.50-$4/head, not very big) when not on
> >sale and I don't when the "season" is. My main grocer doesn't even
> >have it most of the time.

>
> Really!??
>
> It runs about $2-$3 here (southern Ontario) for a decent size head.
>
> Since I discovered roasted cauliflower, that's pretty much the only
> way I cook it. I do it with EVOO, S&P, garlic powder, and a bit of
> parmesan cheese.
>
> Doris
>
>

I guess I'll found what it costs Friday when I hit Kroger. I might
stop in tomorrow at Aldi and see how much it goes for there.

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> wrote in message
...
> On Tuesday, March 20, 2018 at 11:10:00 PM UTC-5, Doris Night wrote:
>>
>> On Tue, 20 Mar 2018 21:47:42 -0500, Sqwertz >
>> wrote:
>>
>> >I've just started roasting cauliflower and it's the Bo... well, lets
>> >just say it's really good. It's the only way I'll cook cauliflower
>> >anymore. But it's expensive ($3.50-$4/head, not very big) when not on
>> >sale and I don't when the "season" is. My main grocer doesn't even
>> >have it most of the time.

>>
>> Really!??
>>
>> It runs about $2-$3 here (southern Ontario) for a decent size head.
>>
>> Since I discovered roasted cauliflower, that's pretty much the only
>> way I cook it. I do it with EVOO, S&P, garlic powder, and a bit of
>> parmesan cheese.
>>
>> Doris
>>
>>

> I guess I'll found what it costs Friday when I hit Kroger. I might
> stop in tomorrow at Aldi and see how much it goes for there.



Luckily I can find nice large heads at the .99 cent store often, but it's
usally around 3 dollars at the supermarket, except Smart and Final where
they charge 1.99 a pound for it, ridiculous price.

Cheri



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On Wednesday, March 21, 2018 at 12:35:33 AM UTC-5, Cheri wrote:
>
> Luckily I can find nice large heads at the .99 cent store often, but it's
> usally around 3 dollars at the supermarket, except Smart and Final where
> they charge 1.99 a pound for it, ridiculous price.
>
> Cheri
>
>

I bought two very large heads of cauliflower at Aldi's today for $1.99
each.

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Cheri wrote:
>
> Luckily I can find nice large heads at the .99 cent store often, but it's
> usally around 3 dollars at the supermarket, except Smart and Final where
> they charge 1.99 a pound for it, ridiculous price.


Same deal here yesterday, Cheri. I made a point to look since
price has been discussed. My store has cauliflower for $3.99 per
head. All were about the same size so I weighed one and it was
slightly less than 2lbs. So... $1.99 a pound here too.

I'll try it sometime roasted but not buying a veg that I've never
liked for 1.99/lb. As I mentioned, I've only had it raw in cold
salads before and...YUK! That was always the first veg I'd eat in
the salad just to get it over with. Salad dressing on it was the
only redeeming factor.
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"Gary" > wrote in message ...
> Cheri wrote:
>>
>> Luckily I can find nice large heads at the .99 cent store often, but it's
>> usally around 3 dollars at the supermarket, except Smart and Final where
>> they charge 1.99 a pound for it, ridiculous price.

>
> Same deal here yesterday, Cheri. I made a point to look since
> price has been discussed. My store has cauliflower for $3.99 per
> head. All were about the same size so I weighed one and it was
> slightly less than 2lbs. So... $1.99 a pound here too.
>
> I'll try it sometime roasted but not buying a veg that I've never
> liked for 1.99/lb. As I mentioned, I've only had it raw in cold
> salads before and...YUK! That was always the first veg I'd eat in
> the salad just to get it over with. Salad dressing on it was the
> only redeeming factor.



Yes, no reason to buy something at that price when you're not sure you would
even like it.You can always try the roasting when the cauliflower is on
sale.

Cheri

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On Thu, 22 Mar 2018 09:12:49 -0500, Gary > wrote:

>Cheri wrote:
>>
>> Luckily I can find nice large heads at the .99 cent store often, but it's
>> usally around 3 dollars at the supermarket, except Smart and Final where
>> they charge 1.99 a pound for it, ridiculous price.

>
>Same deal here yesterday, Cheri. I made a point to look since
>price has been discussed. My store has cauliflower for $3.99 per
>head. All were about the same size so I weighed one and it was
>slightly less than 2lbs. So... $1.99 a pound here too.
>
>I'll try it sometime roasted but not buying a veg that I've never
>liked for 1.99/lb. As I mentioned, I've only had it raw in cold
>salads before and...YUK! That was always the first veg I'd eat in
>the salad just to get it over with. Salad dressing on it was the
>only redeeming factor.


Cauliflower is pricey because it's a labor intensive crop, the leaves
need to be tied to cover the head.
https://www.wikihow.com/Grow-Cauliflower
Cauliflower is a cool weather crop... best to buy at a farm stand in
fall, the full head with all the leaves. The leaves are very good in
soups.
Try these:
http://www.cooks.com/rec/search/0,1-...flower,FF.html
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