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Roasted Vegetables White Bean Salad Recipe Recipe

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This recipe for Roasted Vegetables White Bean Salad Recipe is from Kathy's Family and Friends Cookbook, one of the cookbooks created at FamilyCookbookProject.com. We'll help you start your own personal cookbook! It's easy and fun. Click here to start your own cookbook!


Category:
Category:

Ingredients:  
Ingredients:  
• Salad

• 1 bunch young carrots (rainbow if possible), peeled
• 1 small head cauliflower
• 1 small head romanesco
• 1½ pounds Brussels sprouts, trimmed, outer leaves removed, and halved (quartered if very large)
• 2 cups cooked white beans, such as gigante, butter, cannellini, or navy beans, liquid reserved
• 4 ounces French feta cheese (preferably Valbreso), broken into large crumbles
•
• Extra virgin olive oil
• Kosher or Sea Salt
• 1 cup loosely packed cilantro leaves and tender stems (about 1 bunch)
• 1 cup loosely packed dill fronds, stems removed (about 1 large bunch)
• 1/2 cup loosely packed mint leaves (about 1 small bunch)
• Red Wine Vinaigrette (recipe below)

• Red Wine Vinaigrette
• 1 tablespoon finely diced shallot
• 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
• 6 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
• Salt
• Freshly ground black pepper

Directions:
Directions:
For the vegetables and salad:
1. Place oven racks in lower middle and upper middle positions. Preheat oven to 425°F.
2. Halve Brussels sprouts through the stems, then place in a large bowl. Toss with enough oil to coat, about 3 tablespoons. Season with salt and place in a single layer on a baking sheet.
3. Place the carrots in the same large bowl and toss, adding more oil as needed to coat. Season with salt and place in a single layer on a second baking sheet.
4. Lightly trim the root end of the cauliflower and romanesco, then cut into 3/4-inch-thick slices through the root. Drizzle about 2 tablespoons oil onto another baking sheet and lay slices in a single layer, keeping cauliflower on one side of the pan and romanesco on the other side. Avoid overcrowding the vegetables—they should not touch. (If needed use another pan for overflow.)
5. Place vegetables into oven and cook until tender and caramelized, about 26 to 30 minutes. Check on the vegetables after about 12 minutes. Rotate the pans and switch their positions to ensure even browning.
6. When the roasted vegetables are brown on the outside and completely tender when pierced with a knife, remove them from the oven. Set aside to cool for a few minutes.
7. Reserving the cooking liquid, drain beans and place into large bowl. Dress with 3 tablespoons vinaigrette and season with salt and 1 teaspoon za'atar. Add a little bean liquid to make it juicy. Taste and adjust dressing and seasoning as needed.
8. To assemble salad, layer cauliflower, romanesco, carrots, and Brussels sprouts on a large platter. Drizzle with vinaigrette, sprinkle with za'atar, then spoon beans over vegetables. Sprinkle with large crumbles of feta. In a medium bowl, lightly dress cilantro, dill, and mint with 1 tablespoon vinaigrette and salt. Place atop salad and serve immediately.

For the Red Wine Vinaigrette:
In a small bowl or jar, let the shallot sit in the vinegar for 15 minutes, then add the olive oil, a generous pinch of salt, and a small pinch of pepper. Stir or shake to combine, then taste with one of the vegetables and adjust salt and acid as needed. Cover and refrigerate leftovers for up to 3 days.
A little note about cooking beans:
Cooking beans, whether dried or freshly shelled, is as simple as can be. In fact, the basic recipe for Simmered Beans can be summed up in one short sentence: Cover with water and simmer until tender.
While fresh shelling beans can cook in about 30 minutes, it can take several hours for dried beans to transform into their most tender selves. To reduce the cooking time, soak them overnight.
I'm a tireless champion of soaking beans in advance. And since one measure of any properly cooked starch is whether or not it's absorbed enough water to become tender, think of soaking as a head start. It's the easiest kind of cooking you'll ever have to do.
When soaking beans, keep in mind that 1 cup of dried beans will triple in size when cooked, yielding about 6 servings. Add a palmful of salt, and a generous pinch of baking soda, which will tip the pH of the pot toward alkalinity and help coax even more tenderness from the beans. Soak beans in the same vessel in which you plan to cook them, to save yourself a dish, and either refrigerate or keep in a cool spot on the counter overnight (or over 2 nights, for chickpeas or big, creamy beans such as gigantes).

Number Of Servings:
Number Of Servings:
8
Personal Notes:
Personal Notes:
this recipe is from Samin Nosrat that wrote the cookbook, 'Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat". She gives the best ideas to bring out the flavor in everything.

 

 

 

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