We're still in the clutches of winter, and the need for comfort food is high. I am starting to get the garden ready, doing an initial and careful cleanup from last season's growth, careful not to bother any sleeping bees, bugs, or other beneficial critters. After spending a couple of hours outside (there is always something to do!) I long to come inside where it's warm and cozy. There is something special about that tingle in your hands and cheeks, when the skin is adjusting to different temperatures!
One of the dishes that often appears on the table during this time is vegetable gratins, like today's dish. Sometimes they're made from scratch, but most often they are made with the potatoes, meat, and vegetables that were left over from the day before. Being wasteful with food is not in our DNA, and making new dishes out of, if you will, leftovers, is practically an unclaimed national sport!
Boiled, braised, or steamed vegetables are arranged in an oven dish, sometimes over slices of boiled potato, sometimes with browned ground beef or no meat at all, and covered with a coat of breadcrumbs and butter. If the food is already heated up, like today's, it only takes about a ten to fifteen minutes to get the gratin crispy and golden, just time enough to set the table. If everything is cold, it may take up to 30 minutes. In that case you may want to cover the gratin for the last ten minutes so that it doesn't burn.
Bloemkoolgratin
2 lbs (1 kg) cauliflower, rinsed and broken into florets
5 cups water
1 teaspoon salt
For the sauce
4 tablespoons (50 grams) butter
1/3 cup (50 grams) flour*
2 cups (500 ml) milk or cooking liquid
1 cup (113 grams) cheese**, shredded
Salt, white pepper, nutmeg
For the gratin
1/2 cup breadcrumbs or Panko.
4 tablespoons (55 grams) butter, divided
Bring the water to a boil, salt, and add the cauliflower. Boil at medium heat for about fifteen minutes, then check to see if the texture is to your liking: the longer you cook it, the softer it gets.
When it's the right texture, drain the cauliflower, but save the water, and measure out two cups (500 ml). (Don't discard the rest of the cooking water if you are planning on making soup with the leftovers). Put the empty cooking pot back on the stove, and in it, melt the butter (do not brown) for the sauce. With a wooden spoon, stir in the flour until the two have come together as a paste, and slowly add the two cups of milk or cooking liquid, while stirring. Keep stirring until the lumps are gone and the sauce has thickened and is hot. Fold in half of the cheese. Bring up to taste with salt and pepper and if desired, a pinch of nutmeg.
Add the cauliflower back into the pot with the sauce, stir once or twice so that the vegetable is covered with the sauce.
Heat the oven to 375F/190C. Butter a baking dish (8 x 11 inches/20 x 28 cm) with a little bit of the butter for the gratin, and pour in the hot cauliflower. Give the baking dish one or two shakes so that the contents distribute evenly over the dish. Mix the breadcrumbs with the rest of the cheese, and sprinkle it over the cauliflower. Cut the rest of the butter in small pats or strips and place them strategically on the breadcrumbs. Set the baking dish on the middle rack of the hot oven, and bake for ten to twelve minutes, or until the butter has melted and the breadcrumbs are golden. If you want, you can finish the dish under the broiler during the last minute or so - the melted butter will brown the breadcrumbs nicely - but do not walk away as it will burn quickly.
Serve with boiled potatoes and
gehaktballen, meatballs, or
braadworst, bratwurst. A side of
appelmoes, applesauce, is also tasty. This dish lends itself perfectly for a typical Dutch practice:
prakken. :-)
*If you would rather not use flour, use cornstarch to make a slurry and bind the sauce.
** Use a sharp cheese, like mature cheddar, Gouda or pepperjack cheese.