Cauliflower

194 recipes found

Roasted Cauliflower Salad With Halloumi and Lemon
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Roasted Cauliflower Salad With Halloumi and Lemon

Inspired by Mediterranean and Moroccan dishes, this tangy, earthy roasted cauliflower salad is a satisfying vegetarian meal. Spiced cauliflower, salty halloumi, peppery arugula, buttery avocado and a honey-lemon vinaigrette fill it with contrasting textures, temperatures and flavors. There’s lots of room for substitutions or additions: Swap in orange zest and juice for the preserved lemon, smashed green olives for the avocado or kale for the arugula. If looking to bulk it up, you could toss in some seared shrimp, roasted chicken, pearl couscous or whole grains.

30m4 servings
Slow-Cooker Cauliflower, Potato and White Bean Soup
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Slow-Cooker Cauliflower, Potato and White Bean Soup

This creamy vegetarian soup is built on humble winter staples, but the addition of sour cream and chives make it feel special. (Crumble a few sour-cream-and-onion chips on top to take the theme all of the way.) It takes just a few minutes to throw the ingredients into the slow cooker, and the rest of the recipe almost entirely hands-off, making it very doable on a weekday. Use an immersion blender, if you have one, to purée it to a silky smooth consistency, but a potato masher works well for a textured, chunky soup. To get vegetarian recipes like this one delivered to your inbox, sign up for The Veggie newsletter.

8h 25m6 servings 
Whole Roasted Cauliflower With Black-Garlic Crumble and Parsley-Anchovy Butter
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Whole Roasted Cauliflower With Black-Garlic Crumble and Parsley-Anchovy Butter

The chef Sean Brock came up with this first course after making Craig Claiborne’s Bagna Cauda. Instead of bathing the garlic and anchovy in the oil, Mr. Brock has you bathe a whole head of cauliflower in it. You use a ring mold to hold up the cauliflower in a sauté pan, then brown it by spooning over bubbling oil and butter — a process that’s fun and a little hairy — and finish it in the oven. In place of garlic, you use fermented black garlic (which is soft and woodsy in flavor) and milk powder to make a “crumble.” You slice the cauliflower into large slabs, like cross-sections of a tree, and top them with an anchovy butter and the crumble.

1h 30m4 servings
Vegetable Paella With Chorizo
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Vegetable Paella With Chorizo

This weeknight paella comes together in just three basic steps: Sweat the aromatics, bake until tender, then return to the stovetop to cook until the rice becomes crunchy. It becomes even more weeknight-friendly if you take advantage of store-bought pre-cut vegetables to cut down on prep time. For a more protein-rich dish, season a dozen medium shrimp with olive oil, salt and pepper and nestle them into the paella during the last 5 minutes of baking. If preparing the dish for vegetarians, skip the chorizo, swap in vegetable broth and add an extra pinch of paprika, if desired. The only non-negotiable step is finishing the paella over direct flame on the stovetop so the rice at the bottom of the pan forms a delectable crust, also known as soccarat.

45m4 servings
Creamy Cauliflower Soup With Rosemary Olive Oil
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Creamy Cauliflower Soup With Rosemary Olive Oil

This soup turns a short list of vegan ingredients into a sublimely silky soup. Infusing olive oil with fresh rosemary is a trick you’ll want to keep up your sleeve: The results are delicious brushed on roast chicken, drizzled over roasted winter vegetables or even just sopped up with a nice piece of bread. The croutons here are optional, but they transform an elegant and delicate first-course soup into a satisfying lunch.

40m6 servings
Lemony Carrot and Cauliflower Soup
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Lemony Carrot and Cauliflower Soup

The beauty of a soup like this — other than its bone-warming properties — is that you don’t need a recipe. You can pretty much simmer together any combination of vegetables with a little water or broth, purée it, top it with good olive oil and salt, and end up with something good to eat. The addition of miso paste and crushed coriander to the broth, and fresh lemon and cilantro at the end, zips things up without negating the comfort factor.

40m4 servings
Cauliflower Adobo
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Cauliflower Adobo

Chicken adobo, the national dish of the Philippines, is made by braising chicken in a salty, sour and sweet mixture of mostly soy sauce and vinegar. In this vegetarian version, cauliflower, rather than chicken, is caramelized on one side, then simmered in the pungent but not prickly sauce until toothsome yet tender. The simmer mellows the vinegar and soy sauce into a sauce interlaced with pepper, garlic and something herbal but not immediately traceable — that’s the bay leaves. Serve the cauliflower and sauce over rice or another grain with something green on the side.

45m4 servings
Cauliflower Popcorn
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Cauliflower Popcorn

Small florets of cauliflower look a lot like popcorn, and when coated with classic popcorn seasonings, they can be just as snackable. Roast pieces the size of popped kernels until deeply tender and frizzled, shower with panko bread crumbs seasoned with nutritional yeast, then return to the oven to toast. The panko mimics the airy crispness of popcorn, while nutritional yeast adds a cheesy, salty flavor. Adjust seasonings based on what you like: Add wet ingredients, like hot sauce or soy sauce, to the cauliflower before roasting, and dry ingredients, like Old Bay, furikake or Tajín, when you add the panko.

40m4 servings
Roasted Vegan Sausages With Cauliflower and Olives
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Roasted Vegan Sausages With Cauliflower and Olives

Tangy-sweet raisins and salty olives make a zesty topping for this simple sheet-pan meal starring vegan sausages. As everything cooks, the cauliflower caramelizes and turns very tender, while the sausages sizzle and brown. If you’d rather make this with meat sausages, go right ahead; pork, turkey or lamb work especially well.

45m3 to 4 servings
Pasta With Cauliflower, Bacon and Sage
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Pasta With Cauliflower, Bacon and Sage

A comforting dinner for a cold night, this hearty pasta has all the makings of a crowd-pleaser like fried sage leaves, crispy bacon and nutty roasted cauliflower. This recipe demonstrates the magic of starchy pasta water: Swirled with lemon juice and Parmesan, it creates a luxurious sauce without the addition of cream or butter. Add more pasta water than you think you need, so the pasta stays moist as it absorbs the sauce.

40m4 to 6 servings
Cauliflower and Tuna Salad
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Cauliflower and Tuna Salad

I have added tuna to a classic Italian antipasto of cauliflower and capers dressed with vinegar and olive oil. For the best results give the cauliflower lots of time to marinate.

45m6 servings
Vegetarian Chili With Butternut Squash and Moroccan Spices
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Vegetarian Chili With Butternut Squash and Moroccan Spices

This Moroccan-inspired take on vegetable chili is not so much spicy as it is spiced, using ingredients you’re likely to have stocked in your pantry. In place of the same old kidney beans, this recipe uses butternut squash, cauliflower and chickpeas, making it a lighter, fresher update on the classic dish. Like any good pot of chili, this is even better reheated the next day.

1h6 to 8 servings
Buffalo Cauliflower
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Buffalo Cauliflower

Cauliflower is a blank canvas that can take on flavors that pack a punch, like Buffalo sauce. It also has lots of craggy edges that the sauce can cling to for maximum flavor. For crisp-edged buffalo cauliflower without a fryer, turn on the broiler. Once the tender florets are roasted, broil them a few minutes so the silky, spicy sauce caramelizes and chars in spots. (A finish under the broiler can also elevate chicken wings coated in Buffalo sauce.) Stir together a quick Ranch-style yogurt sauce for dipping, and get on with the game (or lunch).

25m4 Servings
Greek Chicken Stew With Cauliflower and Olives
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Greek Chicken Stew With Cauliflower and Olives

Chicken, cauliflower, olives, tomatoes, feta — this is a stew of extraordinary flavor and complexity, down to its hints of cinnamon and garlic. The recipe uses skinless chicken legs or thighs; you could substitute ones with the skin if you like. (But don’t use chicken breasts, which will dry out.) You can use more or less chicken depending on your needs. And, important to note, you can freeze the finished dish, making it an excellent delivery to new parents or anyone in need of a home-cooked meal.

1h 15m4 to 6 servings
Cauliflower and Banana Peel Curry
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Cauliflower and Banana Peel Curry

Although one may assume banana peels are the star of the show, they’re minor players in this flavor-packed production, adapted from “Cook, Eat, Repeat” by Nigella Lawson (Vintage Digital, 2020). It all hinges on the performance of a concentrated paste made with shallots, ginger, garlic and a red chile of your choice. This mixture forms the base of an intensely aromatic sauce that would make anything taste good. Feel free to swap out the banana skins for their surprising doppelgänger, eggplant, and the cauliflower for broccoli, potato or parsnip. Prep makes up the bulk of the work in this recipe; the curry itself comes together in under 30 minutes.

1h2 to 4 servings
Charred Cauliflower Stew
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Charred Cauliflower Stew

This vegetarian stew uses two different techniques — grilling (or broiling) and pickling —  to coax the maximum amount of flavor from cauliflower. Charring the cauliflower before adding it to your stew delivers smoky depth; quick-pickling some grated cauliflower adds bright spikes of flavor that contrast nicely with everything else in the bowl.

1h 10m4 to 6 servings
Indian-Style Rice Salad
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Indian-Style Rice Salad

In most cases, rice salads can be dressed not only minutes but hours in advance, making them ideal for entertaining or for just cooking ahead. Cook the rice a bit in advance, and dress it before it gets too cold. (While leftover rice — even from Chinese takeout restaurants — is close to ideal for fried rice, it doesn’t work nearly as well as fresh-cooked rice for salads.)

1h4 to 8 servings
Gobi Taka Tin: Vegan Stir-Fried Cauliflower With Peppers and Tomatoes
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Gobi Taka Tin: Vegan Stir-Fried Cauliflower With Peppers and Tomatoes

40m4 servings
Pasta With Cauliflower, Spicy Tomato Sauce and Capers
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Pasta With Cauliflower, Spicy Tomato Sauce and Capers

This dish is made with perciatelli, hollow long noodles that also go by the name bucatini. Their texture is robust, supporting a robust sauce like this one. Because the noodles are hollow, they cook much more quickly than spaghetti, so keep your eye on them so they don’t get too soft. If you can't find perciatelli, spaghetti makes a fine substitute.

35m4 servings
Grilled Cauliflower Steaks
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Grilled Cauliflower Steaks

To enjoy the full-range of cauliflower in one dish, from raw and snappy to caramelized and tender, cut a head into slabs and grill only one side. Flat sides beget more charring than florets because they provide more direct contact with the grill. To ensure the cauliflower doesn’t dry out, grill just one side. The tops will remain juicy and sweet, while the undersides will become deeply browned and nutty. Before grilling, any small bits of cauliflower that would fall through the grates are added raw to a lively sauce of dill, lime juice, chile and peanuts. Feel free to swap in another sauce you like on cauliflower or grilled dishes, like buffalo, parsley-olive or a nutritional yeast dressing.

25m4 servings
Buffalo Cauliflower Dip
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Buffalo Cauliflower Dip

The most negotiable part of Buffalo wings, it turns out, are the wings. Buffalo crudités can be just as crisp, Buffalo chicken dip just as tangy, and Buffalo cauliflower dip just as spicy and alluring. The whole dip — from caramelizing cauliflower to stirring together the creamy hot sauce base and baking on the generous layer of cheese — is made in one pan. You can bring the pan right to the table with dippers of choice and watch it disappear. Just because classic dishes are made a certain way — and Buffalo wings have a cult following, no doubt! — don’t be afraid to riff on them once in awhile. That's how new classics are made.

30m4 to 6 servings
Cauliflower Piccata
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Cauliflower Piccata

Piccata sauce — that buttery, briny combination of lemon, butter and capers, silky in texture and tart in flavor — is not just for chicken or swordfish. It’s also a zesty anchor for roasted vegetables. Here, cauliflower is roasted at high heat, which concentrates the flavor, adds nuttiness and encourages caramelization, before being doused with the sauce. Chickpeas make this a fuller vegetarian meal, but leave them out if you’d rather. Piccata dishes are often served with long pasta, which tangle with the tangy sauce, but this one is also great alongside rice or tender-crisp vegetables like blistered green beans. While you are at it, try this sauce with sweet butternut squash, charred broccoli, earthy roasted carrots, golden wedges of cabbage or crispy slices of tofu. To get vegetarian recipes like this one delivered to your inbox, sign up for The Veggie newsletter.

30m4 servings
Cauliflower Gratin With Leeks and White Cheddar
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Cauliflower Gratin With Leeks and White Cheddar

A sort of cheater's gratin, this cauliflower cooked with leeks and cream doesn’t require blanching or a béchamel, making it a low maintenance, deeply comforting side dish. To skirt the blanching, the cauliflower and cream is covered in foil to give the vegetables a chance to get tender without drying out. The foil then comes off so the top can brown and the cream can reduce, creating a thick, velvety sauce. If your heart desires a crunchier texture, add a scattering of bread crumbs tossed in olive oil and seasoned with salt and pepper when the aluminum foil comes off.

1h4 to 6 servings
Roasted Cauliflower With Lemon Brown Butter
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Roasted Cauliflower With Lemon Brown Butter

Roasting vegetables is easy, but this technique elevates the everyday dinner staple. A pan of water in the oven with the cauliflower helps maintain its succulence, while an even temperature browns it and brings out its natural sugars. Brown butter and sage take it over the top.

1h10 to 12 servings