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You are here: Home / Recipes / Special Diets / Dairy Free / Cauliflower Cous Cous

Cauliflower Cous Cous

28/01/2016 by Gina Leave a Comment

Cauliflower is one of my all time favourite veggies … not only because it tastes great, but it can be used in so many ways.

Cauliflower cous cous in not new … it has been around for some time. But recently I offered this dish, instead of the traditional cous cous, at a dinner where one of the guests was gluten free, and I couldn’t help note how everyone went back for seconds … in fact no-one realised it was cauliflower and I liked that … particularly as some of those people didn’t like veggies (he he … it’s our little secret!).

I have based this recipe on my savoury whole wheat cous cous recipe ( see here ), but because cauliflower does not come out of a packet where you can use a standard “cup”, add stock or water, and then finish off the dish, I have had to work out the quantities I use when making this dish so that I can share it with you.

In general a whole cauliflower, when broken into cous cous, will give you approximately a kilo of weight (about 8 cups).   That is for a medium sized cauliflower … so if you bought a BIG one then of course you will get more volume. So I have based this recipe on using 8 cups of raw cauliflower cous cous, so that when the dish is finished, there is enough to feed 6-8 people as a side dish. Having said that however, I love this dish so if I am serving it to the family, then this would be part of our main meal to which I would add the protein directly into the cous cous, and then serve it with a salad … in that case it would give you 4 generous serves depending on how much protein you are adding.

This dish can be prepared the day before you need it, and holds well in the fridge for a good couple of days – great for lunches, filling wraps, or even a mid afternoon snack.

It is important to lightly bake the cauliflower cous cous so that it takes that “raw” edge of it … I do love raw cauliflower cous cous, but it is not for everyone, so by lightly baking it you will no longer have that distinctive “aroma” coming from the dish, and it is a much more pleasant way to eat it without feeling you have too much “crunch” in your dish.  It also makes it harder to tell the difference between the wholewheat cous cous and this version.

You can definitely play with the flavours in here (add more herbs, try different dried fruit, add Moroccan flavours, etc.) but the ones listed work really well as a base recipe.

If you squeeze all the lemons you will have a lot of juice left over, so keep it in the fridge and use in the next few days on baked veggies (drizzled over when straight out of the oven … divine!), in salads, stirred through grains when cooked, in desserts, etc. … I always have fresh lemon juice in the fridge and it is never wasted.

Cauliflower washed and cut into florets
500g in the TM bowl …
… and chopped for 5 seconds / reverse / speed 5
Placed into baking tray and baked …
… and once cool all the other ingredients are added and you are ready to serve

 

Cauliflower Cous Cous
 
Save Print
Prep time
15 mins
Cook time
30 mins
Total time
45 mins
 
... and once cool all the other ingredients are added and you are ready to serve
Author: Gina @ The Passionate Pantry
Serves: 6 to 8 as side dish
Ingredients
  • 1 whole cauliflower, washed and broken into florets (a medium cauliflower should give you approximately 1 kilo of florets)

  • 1 medium red onion, very finely chopped
  • ½ cup mint leaves, finely chopped
  • ½ cup Italian parsley, finely chopped
  • ½ cup coriander leaves, finely chopped
  • ½ cup dried currants, or more if desired (consider also using sliced dried apricots)
  • zest of 3 medium lemons (if small use 4 lemons)
  • 4 tbls lemon juice, maybe a touch more depending on your taste
  • 3 tbls olive oil
  • sea salt flakes and freshly milled pepper to taste
Instructions
  1. Heat oven to 160 degrees fan forced and position rack into middle of oven
  2. Place 500g cauliflower florets in TM bowl and chop 5 seconds / reverse / speed 5, dispense cous cous into a large baking dish (ceramic baking dish doesn't need lining, but I would line a metal one) … if there are any big chunks put them back into the bowl
  3. Add rest of the cauliflower (500g) into TM bowl and chop 5 seconds / reverse / speed 5, add the cous cous to the baking dish … if there are any big chunks put them back into the TM bowl and chop 1 second / reverse / speed 5
  4. Bake for 20 minutes, stir mix around, and bake for another 10 minutes
  5. Allow to get cold in the baking dish before continuing
  6. Add the rest of the ingredients to the baking dish and stir through
  7. Taste and adjust seasoning to your preference
  8. Store in fridge until ready to serve
  9. Can be kept in the fridge for up to 3 days without spoiling
Notes
In general a whole cauliflower, when broken into cous cous, will give you approximately a kilo of weight (about 8 cups). That is for a medium sized cauliflower … so if you bought a BIG one then of course you will get more volume. So I have based this recipe on using 8 cups of raw cauliflower cous cous, so that when the dish is finished, there is enough to feed 6-8 people as a side dish.

Having said that however, I love this dish so if I am serving it to the family, then this would be part of our main meal to which I would add the protein directly into the cous cous, and then serve it with a salad … in that case it would give you 4 generous serves depending on how much protein you are adding.

This dish can be prepared the day before you need it, and holds well in the fridge for a good couple of days - great for lunches, filling wraps, or even a mid afternoon snack.

It is important to lightly bake the cauliflower cous cous so that it takes that “raw” edge of it … I do love raw cauliflower cous cous, but it is not for everyone, so by lightly baking it you will no longer have that distinctive “aroma” coming from the dish, and it is a much more pleasant way to eat it without feeling you have too much “crunch” in your dish.

You can definitely play with the flavours in here (add more herbs, try different dried fruit, add Moroccan spices, etc.) but the ones listed work really well as a base recipe.
3.5.3251

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Filed Under: Dairy Free, Dinner, Gluten Free, Lunch, Main Ingredients, Meals and Courses, Nut Free, Paleo, Recipes, Salads, Special Diets, Vegan, Vegetables, Vegetarian

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About Gina

For as long as I can remember I have loved being around food, not just eating it but cooking with it too!

From the young age of eleven I had always dreamed of working somehow within the food industry, but as it turned out that wasn’t my calling ... Read More…

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Food lover and whole foods advocate

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