Saturday, January 19, 2013

Garlic-Parmesan Crusted Romanesco Cauliflower



Romanesco Cauliflower is probably the most interesting looking vegetable I've ever seen. The vibrant color, pointy florets and bumps add so much charm. I received two heads in my CSA share a few weeks ago, and spend hours (I'm not even kidding) looking for recipes to do this vegetable justice. I wanted the shape and color to stay in tact, so chopping it to pieces wasn't an option. Then I remembered using a technique on artichokes that would work well. I roasted a few heads of garlic with olive oil, smashed them with some Parmesan and slathered it on to create this delicious crust.  I think a drizzle of balsamic or a tomato chutney for dipping would take this dish even further, but we loved it as it too.


Garlic-Parmesan Crusted Romanesco Cauliflower

3 heads of garlic
1 tbsp. olive oil
Kosher salt and fresh black pepper
2 heads of Romanesco Cauliflower
1/2 c. grated Parmesan cheese
1 tbsp. butter, softened

Preheat oven to 425*
Slice the top 1/4 off the heads of garlic, place them on a piece of aluminum foil, drizzle with olive oil, salt and pepper, pinch up sides of foil to create a sealed packet, place on a baking sheet and into the oven.
While garlic roasts, steam cauliflower.
Prep the cauliflower by stemming, removing leaves, and washing well. 
Place in a pot, add 1" of water and heat over high.
Bring water to a boil, steam cauliflower for 5 minutes, until tender, turn heat off and set aside (keep the lid on and let it continue to steam/stay warm).
Add butter and parmesan to a small mixing bowl.
Take cauliflower out of pot and place in a baking dish that will hold cauliflower snugly.
After an hour, remove garlic from the oven and cool for a few minutes, then squeeze roasted cloves out into mixing bowl with cheese, use a fork to mash and stir well. 
Slather cauliflower with garlic mixture.
Turn broiler on low, place cauliflower under and broil for 3-5 minutes, keep your eye on it the entire time, and remove if it's too brown.
Serve immediately.

1 comment:

Joanne said...

I made a Deborah Madison romanesco recipe just a few weeks ago and wasn't in love. I was going to write off the cauliflower as something I just didn't like but I think I should give it another shot with this! That parm crust sounds awesome!