How to Cut Cauliflower & Five Ways to Eat It

No more steamed cauliflower for you baby! (although I do love steamed cauliflower as part of a salad tossed with an amazing dressing -- if there's great dressing, I can eat loads of cauliflower then!). 

There's so many unique, easy and interesting ways to eat cauliflower now that you don't have to settle for steamed cauliflower.  The up-tick in cauliflower recipes, is in part, due to the unjustified gluten-free craze (Capannolo, et al. 2015).  

Despite the misinformation the gluten-free craze has caused, at least there's more creative ways to eat cauliflower because of it.    

Before I introduce five unique, easy (and plant-based) ways to make cauliflower, Chef Erik of Trisha's Healthy Table (my husband - I'm a lucky woman!) is here to show you an easy way to cut cauliflower.

Before Erik taught me how to cut cauliflower, I was clueless.  I never had uniform cuts and I'd always cut through the "leaves" of the cauliflower tree instead of cutting them, like this...

Once you know an easy way to cut cauliflower, it's time to put your skills to good use with fun and easy cauliflower recipes, like these...

 

Five Unique, Easy (and Plant-Based) Ways to Eat Cauliflower

 

1.  Cauliflower Rice

Cauliflower rice is SO easy to make.  Simply grate cauliflower with a cheese grater or pulse in a food processor until you get 'rice like' pieces and then microwave with your favorite spices.  We serve cauliflower rice with our Black Bean and Sweet Potato Enchiladas at Trisha's Healthy Table.  If you're going to eat cauliflower rice instead of a whole-grain rice, be sure to include Foundational Filling Foods (like sweet potatoes and black beans) with your cauliflower rice, in order to stay full. 

Here's a cauliflower rice recipe from Minimalist Baker you can use.

 

2.  Cauliflower Wings

I made these this weekend for the first time and they were awesome!  I used chickpea flour as part of the breading mixture (I tried whole wheat too but that didn't turn out as well) and Trader Joe's General Tso's sauce as the wing sauce.  

We dipped the final product in cashew-based ranch (mix ranch dressing spices into cashew sour cream) and ate them with a veggie vegan pizza we made using Trader Joe's pre-made, whole wheat pizza dough.  It was an awesome dinner and the wings tasted great the next day too.

Check out this cauliflower wing recipe to make them yourself.

 

3.  Cauliflower Alfredo Sauce

We're serving 100% whole-grain pasta with cauliflower Alfredo and broccoli at Trisha's Healthy Table this week.  A lot of mock Alfredo sauces use cashews and are calorie dense and high in fat.  

Cauliflower Alfredo sauce however, is a low-fat and less calorie-dense version that's especially great for anyone trying to eat more veggies, eat vegan, or trying any who is looking to achieve accelerated weight-loss with a plant-based diet.

Try this Cauli-Powder "Alfredo" from Oh She Glows.com  We LOVE her recipes!  (Psst - I'd omit the 1/2 TB of oil from the recipe.  Save yourself an 60 extra calories).

 

4.  Cheesy Cauliflower Sauce

I LOVE pouring this sauce on my oil-free potato and oil-free sweet potato fries.  With ketchup of course!  I can eat a huge plate of these, watch some University of South Carolina women's basketball and munch out on what tastes like greasy bar food, but is even better!

Use this Cheesy Cauliflower Sauce from fatfreevegan.com  We love this blog too!

 

5.  Cauliflower Pizza Crust

I haven't made this yet, so if you do, please comment below and let me know how it goes!  Again, I'd be sure to add Foundational Filling Foods to this pizza to make it a complete, and filling meal.

This cauliflower pizza crust recipe is oil-free and vegan and has a 5 star rating (hence why I picked it for you!).


If you're interested in learning how to healthy and more plant-based (including fun ways of cooking!), be sure to sign-up for email updates about my next "Plant-Based Nutrition and Cooking eCourse for Weight-Loss and Improved Health."  It'll be here just in time for summer!  If you want to be one of the first know about it (there's perks to that!) be sure to sign-up here.


Take Control Now

Which of these cauliflower recipes will be the first you try?  Have another cauliflower recipe to share?  Please post it by clicking 'comment' below.

5 freezer friendly plant-based meals

Freezing plant-based or healthy vegan dinners can make eating healthier easier.  When eating plant-based is easier, and done continually, it's more likely you'll feel less jiggle in your belly.

I love being able to pull out a home-made frozen meal on the nights I need lunch for the next day, but don't want to prep it.

I pop my frozen vegan dinner in the fridge and then by 12pm the next day, it's ready to be warmed in the microwave.

Whether for lunch, dinner or natural disaster, having healthy and delicious, home-made plant-based meals stocked in the freezer can make eating healthier much easier.

Here's 5 plant-based dinners that taste just as good as they did fresh once thawed using Trisha's Healthy Table dinners as an example (Trisha's Healthy Table (THT) sells prepared, plant-based dinners to-go in Columbia, SC to make eating healthy easier.   The chance to get a Spring-Summer, 2017 THT membership with discounted dinners ends on Friday, March 31st).

 

5 Freezer Friendly Plant-Based Meals

Using Trisha's Healthy Table dinners as examples

1.  Vegetable Lasagna

Trisha's Healthy Table makes lasagna using 100% whole wheat noodles, with roasted veggies, a "beef" marinara and a tofu-based ricotta cheese.  It's one of our member's favorites.  

Vegetable lasagna is perfect for freezing whether it's a four person serving or single size.  

All of Trisha's Healthy Table containers are freezer and microwave safe making it easier to freeze, thaw and eat.  You could use a glass tupperware container at home to do that too.

 

2.  Soups

I enjoy freezing and then reheating THT's cauliflower soup and lentil soup.  Add cashew sour cream and some nice hearty bread to cauliflower soup, and I have a yummy and refreshing meal.  The lentil soup is so filling, delicious and nutrient dense -- it's an awesome and easy meal to reheat as well.

 

3.  Meatballs and Sauce

Many plant-based meatballs freeze excellently.  Freeze home-made marinara sauce in a separate container.  Once both are reheated, you can add them to pasta or to hotdog buns to make "meatball subs."

 

4.  Chili and cornbread

Chili freezes really well and maybe to your surprise, cornbread does too!  To freeze cornbread, tightly wrap it in foil (don't forget to date it) and then place in a sealed ziplock bag or tupperware container.  They store well for 3 months.  To eat, heat in the oven at 350 degrees until warmed through.

 

5.  Enchiladas

At THT we love layering enchiladas like lasagna and calling it... enchilasagna!  I've frozen this dinner multiple times and it comes out perfect.  Whether you're eating THT's enchilasagna or one you've made yourself, this is one of my freezer favorites.

If you're in Columbia, SC and are interested in having Trisha's Healthy Table cook you dang delicious plant-based dinners, Friday at 11 pm EST is the last day to become a Trisha's Healthy Table member and get discounted dinners for Spring and Summer 2017. 

Now it's time to hear from you.  Answer today's Take Control Now Question...

Take Control Now Question

What are your top three favorite meals to freeze and why?

Answer by clicking 'comment' below.

How to caramelize onion without oil

Sautéing and caramelizing onion is an essential skill to have if you're trying to lose weight and improve your health without counting calories or eating less.  You can easily save 100-400 calories by omitting oil when you cook and using water or veg stock instead.  

Just one tablespoon of oil has 120 calories and 12g of fat.  That's a "whole-lotta" calories and fat in the smallest quantity of food on earth!  Oil is scientifically the most calorie dense food on the planet.  

However, it takes more than just adding water to a pan to get awesome flavor sautéing without oil.  I've seen people pour a 1/2 cup of water into a cold pan and then add their onion just as they turn the stove on.  Ahh!  

That's going to taste more like a water-logged, steamed onion.  Not, sweet and golden brown onion that's full of flavor.

Learn how to sauté using vegetable stock instead of oil to create immense flavor on today's blog video below.  

There's also a correct temperature you want your pan to reach before you add any liquid or food to it.  I'll show you how to know when you've reached that correct temperature in today's video too.

Once you watched the video, scroll down and answer today's Take Control Now Question by clicking 'comment.'

 

Take Control Now Question

Have you sautéed without oil before?  What do you like and dislike about it?

How to Peel and Cut a Mango

Do you never buy mangoes because you don't know how to peel them?  Or, do you buy them and then they go bad because you don't know an easy way to eat them?

Mangoes are very sweet so they're great to always have in the kitchen when you're craving treats.  Unless, you don't know how to peel them.

Today, I show you how to easily peel and cut a mango is this two minute and thirty second video. 

It's easy!  Here's the peeler we use in the video too.  It's Chef Erik's, from Trisha's Healthy Table, favorite peeler ($10 for 3 of them). Now I'd love to hear from you....

Take Control Now Question

Do you have a different way to peel mangoes that works even better?  We'd love to hear!  Or, what holds you back from buying or eating mangoes?

Click 'comment' below to answer.

Why you need a decent chef's knife and two recommended knives for the home cook

Without a decent chef's knife in your kitchen, you're almost doomed if you want to eat healthy (unless you're microwaving all of your potatoes and veggies and eating boxed soups which is 100% okay.  And yes, you can achieve great health doing this as long as it's the right foods).  Having a decent chef's knife is the most essential ingredient you can have in the kitchen.

Here's why...

You need a chef's knife to cut well, everything!  -- your favorite veggies for salads and stir-fries, fresh fruit for daily desserts or oatmeals, tofu for marinating, veggies for pizza toppings, sweet potatoes for fries and the list goes on and on and on and on!

If you need some knife motivation or inspiration, here's Trisha's Healthy Table Meals Executive Chef, Erik Hoffman, showing you how to properly dice an onion. 

Here's Chef Erik Hoffman cutting carrots (purple on the outside, orange on the inside and way more fun) for our veggie miso bowl...

Why do you want a decent chef's knife compared to a crappy chef's knife?

You want good chef's knife because they're sharp.  Having a sharp knife is essential so you can dice and slice almost effortlessly.  When your knife is sharp enough, you can cut veggies without almost chopping your fingers off (unlike dull, cheap or flimsy knives) or having to put all of your might into each slice of the knife (again, from a dull, cheap or flimsy knife).  You can more easily make uniform cuts, which will help your food cook evenly and look more pleasing to the eye. 

Chef's knives are also long.  This is important because you have enough knife to cut through winter squashes, cantaloupes, watermelons etc.  Imagine trying to cut through a watermelon with a knife the length of your pointer finger.  It wouldn't work and it would be a big pain in the butt.

So go on and get yourself a decent chef's knife.  It'll make a world of difference in your kitchen and how you prepare healthy, plant-based meals.  

If you need some guidance choosing a good knife that doesn't break the bank, here are two recommendations from Chef Erik (and no, we do NOT receive any kickbacks or perks from sharing these knives with you.  We just want you succeed in the kitchen).

Two chef recommended in-home chef's knives

1.  Suisin Inox Western-Style Gyutou 8.2"

Erik recommends this knife because it's a blend of the best of Japanese and Western style knives at a very reasonable price for the quality.  

The Japanese style of the knife comes through with the shape and thinness of the blade.  It's also made by a reputable Japanese maker.  The Western contributions of the knife are it's stainless steel blade.  This means your knife will stay nicer longer without having to take as much care of it (aka great if you're not a professional chef or knife hobbyist).  

The price?  It's $112.50.  You may think this is pricey, but goof chef's knives can cost thousands of dollars.  Trust me, you don't want a $40 knife.  That being said, this is a steal of a knife, especially for the quality.

2.  Misono UX10 Gyutou 8.2" 

This knife is also a combo blend of Western and Japanese knife styles for the same reasons.  It's just a little bit sharper (makes cutting easier), a little bit nicer and a little more expensive.  It's $185 on Amazon.

If you want even more help using a chef's knife, consider a 14 week course with me in Columbia, SC.  Seven classes of plant-based evidence and lifestyle skills and 5 weeks of hands-on cooking, including how to use a chef's knife, over 14 weeks.  Cutting homework included.  Click here to learn more.

Now it's time to hear from you.  Answer today's Take Control Now Question by clicking 'comment' below and share your thoughts and questions around knives...

Take Control Now Question

How do you struggle using a knife in the kitchen?  What can Chef Erik and I teach you about knives to make cutting plants easier for you? 

Answer today's Take Control Now Question by clicking 'comment' below.