I have a weakness for puréed vegetables, which I think are usually called baby food. But as I remain confident in the tastiness of these things, I also think that getting someone else to eat them is more a feat of marketing than of anything else. To that end, I won’t recommend opening your next dinner party by mentioning that you have a weakness for puréed vegetables, which is what I did once. Everyone looked at me funny, and no one ate them. But this aside, puréeing vegetables is a good way to use up their less sightly or buoyant bits, and who likes waste anyway?
Accordingly, then, the not-too-tough stems or unused florets of broccoli or cauliflower can become a gratin de choufleur (or whatever) when puréed and showered with a bit of grated cheese or breadcrumbs before being placed in a very hot oven to brown and crunchify their upper parts. I guess everyone (or at least our First Family) calls a spinach purée ‘creamed spinach,’ even if there isn’t any cream. Sweet potato pie is one of the greatest pureés there is. (No, it isn’t a dessert.) Carrots and winter squashes make lovely purées, too. Just call them something else.
I can’t recommend serving vegetable mush as a main dish, but it is a nice and very cheap way to snuggle vegetables into what might otherwise be a plant-light meal. I’ve served this one under fish to great effect, and I’m sure it would be lovely with roast chicken as well. Above, I’d served it under a provençal-style duck (crusted in fennel, rosemary, thyme, lavender, and cooked like so) and next to some roasted radishes, because everyone is doing that these days (by which I mean, my friend Lexi and The New York Times, my two favorite sources for what’s cool in the food world). The purée itself was made from the leftover bits of some zucchini I talked to you about several days ago. I make plenty of dud dinners, but I think this pairing might be worth remembering. The duck was rich as it always is and aromatic from the herbs + spices, the zucchini offset that with its lightness, and seemed to highlight the lavender involved quite well. The radishes were there to provide an earthy counterpoint, since roasted they’re a bit more like turnips than the raw radishes + butter we may know better. I derive what may be excessive pleasure from planning menus and reading those of others, so I’m going to try leaving mine below for a couple of posts. I hope they’re helpful, or at least a little entertaining. We’ll see, I suppose.
… And, completely unrelated to menu planning or whirled veg: Do you cook or bake with lavender? If so, what do you do with it? I’d love to know!
Zucchini purée
Adapted from a Patricia Wells recipe, I think.
Zucchini or its parts (about .5 lbs/250 g/4 whole ones) | 1 small garlic clove | olive oil | salt | ½ lemon
Chop the zucchini roughly. If you can make all pieces approximately the same size, that would be great. Smash and peel the garlic clove.
Heat a sauté pan over medium heat. Have a lid ready. Add about 1 T of olive oil to the pan. When it is hot, toss in the zucchini + garlic clove. Sprinkle with salt. Clap on the lid so that the zucchini will sear a little on the bottom and steam everywhere else. After 2-3 minutes, take off the lid and stir from time to time. After it is soft, perhaps 7 more minutes, pluck out the garlic clove and scrape everything else into a food processor. Add a squeeze of the lemon and process until smooth. Taste and adjust salt + lemon as necessary.
Serves 4
For dinner: dates + almonds | duck provençal, zucchini purée, roasted radish | salad + cheese | fresh strawberries
{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }
Oh, you are too sweet. I think food might be the only realm in which I could ever, possibly, for a minute be thought of as cool. (which is fine with me)
also, YES to lavender. Love it. I’ve made shortbread with minced lavender, honey-lavender ice cream, agave muffins with lavender… Not nearly as much savory cooking as I probably should, though, given how big my windowbox plant is getting. Hm.
also, do you read Patricia Wells’s blog? she just posted about restoring Julia Childs’s old stove, which Julia had given her as a gift!
Love your ideas for the lavender! Thank you! I don’t have an ice cream maker, but shortbread with lavender sounds divine, as do those muffins!
Oh my goodness, I do not read Patricia Wells’s blog, but I have so many of her cookbooks (hence why I can’t quite find where her recipe for a zucchini puree is) and in one of them she mentions that stove! I think I need another blog in my RSS feed…