Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Roasted Vegetables


Ingredients :

vegetables


  • olive oil or butter
  • salt and pepper


roots


  • potatoes, sweet potatoes, beets, turnips, onions,

parsnips, carrots, sunchokes, kohlrabi, fennel

non-roots


  • bell peppers, winter squash, broccoli, Brussels

sprouts, cauliflower, asparagus, eggplant

extras


  • whole garlic cloves (unpeeled), lemon slices or

lemon zest, anything you would pair with roast
chicken, tough herbs like sage, oregano, thyme,
bay leaves, any dry spice combination



Instructions :


  1. Set the oven to 400 °F.
  2. Clean and chop your vegetables. Generally, I prefer to leave the skin on for the following reasons: skin tastes nice and gets crispy; there’s a lot of nutrition in the skin; peeling is slow! Just be sure to wash the vegetables thoroughly.
  3. It’s up to you how you want to chop your vegetables.
  4. Many are nice roasted whole, like new potatoes or little sunchokes or turnips—they will be crispy and salty on the outside and bursting with fluffy, starchy goodness inside. The general rule is that the smaller you chop things, the faster they cook, so try to keep everything about the same size so nothing cooks faster than anything else.
  5. Dump your vegetables into a roasting pan. Drizzle everything with olive oil or melted butter—about 2 tablespoons per medium-sized roasting pan. Season generously with salt and pepper and add any other extras from the list at right. Use your hands to coat the vegetables thoroughly with the oil and spices. Pop the pan in the oven for 1 hour or longer, but check on the vegetables after 45 minutes. Test them by poking them with a knife. If it meets no resistance, they’re finished; if not, let them cook longer. Don’t worry: it’s not much of a problem if you overcook them. Unlike vegetables overcooked through boiling or steaming, overcooked roasted vegetables may dry out a bit, but still retain their shape and flavor.
  6. After you pull the vegetables out of the oven, push them around with a spatula to free them from the pan. Remove any garlic cloves and smash them into a fine paste (removing the skins at this point), then put the garlic back in the pan and mix together.
  7. Squeeze the juice out of any lemons and discard the woody bits of any cooked herbs. Add a little more butter, a bit of favorite sauce, a little soft cheese or mayonnaise, and serve.