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Two from One: Roasted Cauliflower with Whipped Goat Cheese and Roasted Cauliflower Soup

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On a recent “Chopped”, the Food Network TV show that pits four chefs against a basket full of incongruous ingredients, a very sad fact was served up to the audience.  Americans throw away 40 percent of the food they buy!  The dollar amount is staggering:  According to Reuters, $165 billion worth or 90 billion pounds of food goes un-eaten. Apparently in this land of plenty, where millions of people are on government food programs and where a staggering 14 percent of children go to bed hungry, there are equal numbers who throw food away with abandon.  And I can’t say that in our house we’re completely guilt-free.  A recent refrigerator clean-out included a few half chopped onions, some very wilted carrots and lots of unidentified liquids and solids making penicillin in plastic food containers.  I am not about to offer excuses.  I grew up having “Waste Not, Want Not” etched into memory.  But the plain fact is that a lot of the recipes I work with are for more than just two people.  Andrew will very often ask “So how many people are coming to dinner?”.  Most of the time I can cut things back to a reasonable portion for two.  But there are ingredients that just don’t divvy up.  Take, for example, a head of Cauliflower.   It’s one of the last of the year’s fresh vegetables. Arrayed at the farm stand with its white center peeking out from its green housing, I find it irresistible.  This year, I was determined to cook one but not force us into involuntary vegetarianism.  The solution: make two dishes out of one head.  It turned out that one night’s meatless meal was another day’s creamed soup for lunch. 

       

Roasted Cauliflower with Whipped Goat Cheese
and a green salad

I’d spied a recipe for Roasted Cauliflower with Whipped Goat Cheese in Bon Appetit.  It was from a restaurant called Domenica in New Orleans.  A couple of days later, my friend Kristi, who lives in Dallas, posted a picture of the dish, extolling its taste.  So I made it and made it the centerpiece of a meatless Monday supper, serving it with a simple green salad.  I loved the earthiness the roasting brought out in the cauliflower and the goat cheese was a revelation.  Since Andrew has never been a fan of the stuff, I’d spied a package labelled Honey Goat Cheese at Trader Joe’s. The honey seemed to cut the tannic quality of the cheese.  And while goat cheese comes to the fore, there’s feta, cream cheese and cream to smooth the whole thing out.

          After dinner, I still had a half a roasted cauliflower left.  And I was determined not to toss it. Instead, I found a recipe for Roasted Cauliflower Soup.  I had to tinker with it a bit because it required, of course, a whole cauliflower.  It’s a very rich soup.  I added far more liquid than the recipe called for but it remained resolutely thick.  But since Winter decided to pay an early visit to New York, it’s a welcoming bowl at lunch, especially since I laced it with Garlic-Infused Olive Oil and that most welcome of all leftovers, crumbled bacon.
 
Here are the recipes:
 


3 thoughts on “Two from One: Roasted Cauliflower with Whipped Goat Cheese and Roasted Cauliflower Soup”

  • Hi Monte!

    Guilty! No matter how I try, I just can't avoid having more than I should tossed away during refrigerator clean-up day. I too grew up with those words plastered in my memory. I'm working on it though.

    These are two fine looking recipes. As a huge fan of Goat Cheese and Trader Joe's, I'm luvin' the Roasted Cauliflower. I'm really intrigued by the liquid used for boiling the Cauliflower. Did you save any of the liquid for the soup?

    We got a sudden snap of cold weather here in PA too so, of course, soup is always a welcome warm up and the addition of Garlic infused oil and bacon could really be considered medicinal couldn't it, lol…

    Thank you so much for sharing, Monte…

    P.S. The next time you go to Trader Joe's, seek out some of their Dukkah Spice. I just discovered it, actually baked a bread and posted about it, and let me tell you, I LOVE it! I can just imagine a sprinkling of it on any one of these cauliflower dishes.

  • Now there's an idea Louise! I should have tried using the broth myself. If you do, let us know what you think. I will look into the Dukkah Spice. I am a big fan of their Lemon Pepper and Garlic Salt grinders. See if you can find the Honey Goat Cheese, it was a revelation to me. All best and Happy Thanksgiving.

  • I don't see me making this before Thanksgiving but I've saved them both, Monte. When I do though, I will be trying the Cauliflower "stock" in the soup. I'm a fan of the Lemon Pepper and Garlic salt grinders too. The dukkah, which is actually an Egyptian spice mix that you can make at home, is in the same area. I will definitely be looking for the Honey Goat Cheese. I was leery about buying it for fear that it may be too sweet.

    Thanks for sharing, Monte…just in case I don't "see" you before Thanksgiving, get stuffed, lol…and Happy Thanksgiving to you and Andrew!

    P.S. Huge fan of Chopped. The only "foodie" show I watch:)

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