Roasted Cauliflower aka “Summer Cruise”

Here’s a great side dish with bling: roasted cauliflower and rice, finished with lemon juice, capers and a light amount of cheese. If you love lamb chops, that’s your protein. If you prefer pork chops, that’s your meal.

I’ve named this dish ‘Summer Cruise’ for two reasons. I will serve it in a ceramic boat—plus, it will feature bright flavorings that my active imagination believes would pair well with salty, sea breezes, as if you are on a small cruise ship or sailboat among friends, somewhere in the Caribbean or perhaps French Polynesia, where the famous, Post-Impressionist painter, Paul Gauguin, spent a significant part of his life. If you are reading this Mr. Vernon Minor, my Humanities Art 101 teacher in Boulder, I hope this brings a smile. I have not forgotton! In truth, part of my memory of Ganguin is because a very influential book I read, also during my youth, is largely set in Tahiti (also in French Polynesia), The Moon and Sixpence, by Somerset Maugham. I absolutely loved Maugham’s written command of English. His subject matter only enhanced the book’s appeal to me, a fanciful young traveler and adventure seeker, as Maugham traveled to Tahiti in 1917 for research, noting the blend of English, American and French influences.

For cooking:

Break up or cut a whole head of cauliflower. In a mixing bowl, place the cauliflower then sprinkle with olive oil, salt, pepper, tumerick, sliced red onion, and toss around that place into a baking dish.

Bake at 425 for 35 minutes until golden brown. Remove.

Add the rice, bake in oven another 10 minutes or so until some of the rice starts to crisp up. Before adding the rice, I removed the burnt red onion but left the pieces that were not too charred.

Once the veggie and rice is out of the oven, spoon in a small amount of RINSED capers, and squeeze half a lemon all over the dish.

Then top the dish with finely shredded parmesan and roughly shredded mozarella. Not too much, as this isn’t a cheese dish (but everything goes better with some melted cheese).

Please in ‘boats’ that were greased on the bottom, first, with peanut oil (for ease of cleaning).

To reheat before serving, I just use the microwave.

For wine, we drank a 2022 Full Boar Red from Eberle, which is Paso Robles based. For more on the winery founder, see the April 2024 post in www.blisteredonions.com.

This Full Boar Red is a new staple in my cellar. Sooooooooooooo drinkable, yet full bodied, and so affordable! At under $35, it’s a bargain. Here’s how Eberle describes it.

Full Boar Red is a Grenache blend that harmonizes the luscious flavors of black cherry cola and blackberry with the velvety embrace of cocoa powder. Let the alluring undertones of sweet leafy tobacco and exotic hint of cardamom transport you to a place of sensory bliss. This wine promises a symphony of flavors that dance across the palate, weaving a tapestry of complexity and indulgence.

Wine Specs: Varietal 42% Grenache, 25% Barbera,18% Petite Sirah, 15% Zinfandel

Pan Seared Pork Chops

There are many merits to pork chops: taste, ease of prep, affordability, and very short cooking time. In fact, it may take longer than all those steps combined, just to clean the stainless skillet. But like divorces can be expensive, it’s worth it!

After making the roasted cauliflower dish and telling my sister about it, and suggesting pork chops or lamb chops to go with the vegetable and rice dish, my sibling asked me how I do pork chops. Here goes.

I buy thin, bone-in chops from my butcher. I suppose a thicker chop would work, but they can finish on the dry side, given the added cook time to finish the meat.

24 hours in advance, I marinate the chops in:

  • Olive oil
  • Garlic powder
  • Salt and Pepper
  • Droplets of French’s Mustard
  • Tarragon flakes

The mustard and tarragon work together like a well-rehearsed church choir – a beautiful unison of flavors and vocal sounds!

For process, I put the olive oil down first, then the garlic, black pepper, and a limited amount of mustard, and lastly the tarragon.

Importantly, I salt each side of the chops before I lay them into the marinade, then turn them over and smear them around the bottom of the plastic wrap. You can use a Pyrex dish or some other vessel, but I use large sheets of plastic wrap because I can just discard the wrap once I start cooking, versus cleaning another dish.

Once the chops look evenly smeared (a technical cooking term!), I cover them with another sheet of plastic, seal the edges, then refrigerate until the next day.

Remove from fridge about two hours prior to cooking, so get them room temp.

For cooking!

Place a large, preferably stainless skillet, on the stove and turn heat up to high. You can use cast iron skillet or even a Teflon skillet, though you may not get the same golden-brown coloring to the fried chops.

Once the skillet is good and hot, drizzle in a little canola or peanut oil (it burns less at high heat, than olive oil), and drop the chops in once at time, searing each side for only 90 seconds. Once you flip to the second side, and after 90 seconds, turn stovetop off and let the chops rest while you plate the sides or toss the salad.

Serve the chops, then drizzle a little of the remaining juices and oil onto each chop.

I had a friend over and we drank a bottle of Cabernet Franc with the meal. It was perfect!

Perfect Meal

It may be a stretch to call any meal “the perfect meal,” but that was my thought when I pushed this platter to the side, empty.

It was so straight-forward, with texture and full, complimentary flavors, but not in an overwhelming way – the way some really great food is.

It was such an American meal! Steak and potatoes down-the-middle. Perfectly grilled New York Strip, creamy, rosemary and garlic red potatoes roasted just so, lightly dressed Caesar salad (homemade dressing) and New Orleans (hot and tangy) Brussell Sprouts. The contrast of the blackened sprouts (with Mongolian Chile oil and sunflower oil) and finished with butter and generous splashes of red wine vinegar sets off the steak bites and freshness of the salad.

Each of the servings were on the small side, which was plenty to eat and satisfying.

This meal goes with any of the full-bodied reds from Bordeaux or a big, juicy Syrah. We enjoyed a 2018 Merlot from Lambert Bridge.