What's your favorite less-ordinary vegetable, and how do you like to cook it?

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We know potatoes are good, and so are onions, corn, and tomatoes. But there are a billion other kinds of vegetables that aren't in every shopping cart. Share which ones you found out at some point are good enough to have at home!

Mine's a three-way tie:

Turnips and radishes, roasted. Both of them have a total change in their flavor when cubed to about half an inch, oiled (I use a spray bottle with avocado oil to get full coverage without adding too much oil) salted, seasoned (I like to hit them with herbes de provence and garlic, but any root vegetable is good with any seasoning), and roast in the convection oven at around 450, stirring them around the sheet pan after 30 minutes until they turn brown and crispy on the corners. Radishes are like "potatoes but less potatoey" (and both the red small ones and the daikon are excellent, but I like daikon because it's less of a hassle to cube) and turnips have their own flavor that's a little sharp like all the non-potato root vegetables (think carrots and parsnips, but less sweet.)

Amaranth leaves. If you're in Texas, you may have wild amaranth growing as a weed near you; they call it "pigweed" down here and it's invasive. Don't forage it by the levee in dfw, it's not safe because there's too much lead in the soil. But you can grow it yourself, just spread it when it gets reasonably warm, water it til it's established, and then mostly ignore it. It gets huge and the leaves are delicious when cooked like collard greens. I love them in soup; they add better body than spinach and are milder in flavor than mustard greens. If I stew them in a crockpot with stock, a ham bone and some turkey sausage, any chopped summer squash, and seasoning, then add some tortellini or gniocchi or chickpeas, quinoa, rice whatever, it's wonderful. Red, green and bronze is all very good, and the bugs don't usually get them too badly. I get the seeds for the wild stuff and grow from that, too, because I sure do love that variety even if I can't forage it.
 
We know potatoes are good, and so are onions, corn, and tomatoes. But there are a billion other kinds of vegetables that aren't in every shopping cart. Share which ones you found out at some point are good enough to have at home!

Mine's a three-way tie:

Turnips and radishes, roasted. Both of them have a total change in their flavor when cubed to about half an inch, oiled (I use a spray bottle with avocado oil to get full coverage without adding too much oil) salted, seasoned (I like to hit them with herbes de provence and garlic, but any root vegetable is good with any seasoning), and roast in the convection oven at around 450, stirring them around the sheet pan after 30 minutes until they turn brown and crispy on the corners. Radishes are like "potatoes but less potatoey" (and both the red small ones and the daikon are excellent, but I like daikon because it's less of a hassle to cube) and turnips have their own flavor that's a little sharp like all the non-potato root vegetables (think carrots and parsnips, but less sweet.)

Amaranth leaves. If you're in Texas, you may have wild amaranth growing as a weed near you; they call it "pigweed" down here and it's invasive. Don't forage it by the levee in dfw, it's not safe because there's too much lead in the soil. But you can grow it yourself, just spread it when it gets reasonably warm, water it til it's established, and then mostly ignore it. It gets huge and the leaves are delicious when cooked like collard greens. I love them in soup; they add better body than spinach and are milder in flavor than mustard greens. If I stew them in a crockpot with stock, a ham bone and some turkey sausage, any chopped summer squash, and seasoning, then add some tortellini or gniocchi or chickpeas, quinoa, rice whatever, it's wonderful. Red, green and bronze is all very good, and the bugs don't usually get them too badly. I get the seeds for the wild stuff and grow from that, too, because I sure do love that variety even if I can't forage it.
Daikon is really good in beef noodle soup too!! Or pickled in Bahn Mi

Brussel Sprouts are good cut in half cooked in a bit of olive oil w/ garlic, sprinkle w fresh Parmesan when done

Arugula we've been eating a lot of it lately, Even just on the side of whatever you're eating or mixed w other salad greens. I love that for lunch w apples cut small, romaine, a sprinkle of toasted chopped nuts (almonds or walnuts) & I make a miso dressing (to get in some good probiotics)
 
Chayote Squash - great made in so many ways. I like to make an "apple pie" with it - you have to use a good apple flavoring. When you slice it right - looks just like apple slices. It's mild and will take up other flavors too. It's good raw or cooked.
I LOVE chayote, it tastes better roasted than zucchini (that and yellow are my go-to), but I so rarely make it these days cause the sap does weird stuff to my hands. 🙁
 
Daikon is really good in beef noodle soup too!! Or pickled in Bahn Mi

Brussel Sprouts are good cut in half cooked in a bit of olive oil w/ garlic, sprinkle w fresh Parmesan when done

Arugula we've been eating a lot of it lately, Even just on the side of whatever you're eating or mixed w other salad greens. I love that for lunch w apples cut small, romaine, a sprinkle of toasted chopped nuts (almonds or walnuts) & I make a miso dressing (to get in some good probiotics)
Why did I post this thread so late at night when I'm done eating for the day? Now I badly want an arugula salad with apples, walnuts, a little goat cheese, romaine, and a sesame or lemon-avocado dressing.
 
We know potatoes are good, and so are onions, corn, and tomatoes. But there are a billion other kinds of vegetables that aren't in every shopping cart. Share which ones you found out at some point are good enough to have at home!

Mine's a three-way tie:

Turnips and radishes, roasted. Both of them have a total change in their flavor when cubed to about half an inch, oiled (I use a spray bottle with avocado oil to get full coverage without adding too much oil) salted, seasoned (I like to hit them with herbes de provence and garlic, but any root vegetable is good with any seasoning), and roast in the convection oven at around 450, stirring them around the sheet pan after 30 minutes until they turn brown and crispy on the corners. Radishes are like "potatoes but less potatoey" (and both the red small ones and the daikon are excellent, but I like daikon because it's less of a hassle to cube) and turnips have their own flavor that's a little sharp like all the non-potato root vegetables (think carrots and parsnips, but less sweet.)

Amaranth leaves. If you're in Texas, you may have wild amaranth growing as a weed near you; they call it "pigweed" down here and it's invasive. Don't forage it by the levee in dfw, it's not safe because there's too much lead in the soil. But you can grow it yourself, just spread it when it gets reasonably warm, water it til it's established, and then mostly ignore it. It gets huge and the leaves are delicious when cooked like collard greens. I love them in soup; they add better body than spinach and are milder in flavor than mustard greens. If I stew them in a crockpot with stock, a ham bone and some turkey sausage, any chopped summer squash, and seasoning, then add some tortellini or gniocchi or chickpeas, quinoa, rice whatever, it's wonderful. Red, green and bronze is all very good, and the bugs don't usually get them too badly. I get the seeds for the wild stuff and grow from that, too, because I sure do love that variety even if I can't forage it.
Mine is breadfruit (panapen).
I’m from Puerto Rico so it’s around, but a lot of people still haven’t really cooked with it much other than smash and fried. I trained as a chef years ago and I’ve always liked ingredients that are kind of a blank canvas. Breadfruit is one of those things that can go in a lot of directions depending on what you do with it.
My favorite way is honestly super simple: roasted panapen. Split it, olive oil, garlic, salt, roast it until the outside gets a little crusty and the inside turns creamy. It ends up somewhere between roasted potatoes and fresh bread.
Another one I like is slicing it thin and frying it like chips.
 
Mine is breadfruit (panapen).
I’m from Puerto Rico so it’s around, but a lot of people still haven’t really cooked with it much other than smash and fried. I trained as a chef years ago and I’ve always liked ingredients that are kind of a blank canvas. Breadfruit is one of those things that can go in a lot of directions depending on what you do with it.
My favorite way is honestly super simple: roasted panapen. Split it, olive oil, garlic, salt, roast it until the outside gets a little crusty and the inside turns creamy. It ends up somewhere between roasted potatoes and fresh bread.
Another one I like is slicing it thin and frying it like chips.
This thread was a mistake. I went from not knowing breadfruit existed ten minutes ago to being mad that I can't get it on Instacart and now I can't live without tasting it.
 
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Is cauliflower less common? i can eat it endlessly

I asked the lying machine what the ten most consumed vegetables in the US were, and it gave me this:

The 10 most consumed vegetables in the United States (USDA per-capita consumption estimates) are:

Potatoes
Tomatoes
Onions
Sweet corn
Lettuce
Bell peppers
Broccoli
Carrots
Cucumbers
Green beans

Source: USDA Economic Research Service “food availability per capita” vegetable consumption data.

How determined: ranked by estimated pounds consumed per person per year from USDA ERS food availability statistics.

So I guess cauliflower counts! But what's your favorite way to cook it?
 
You can cook it? i most eat it raw with ranch dressing. I do make the cauliflower rice, but steamed is great with butter melted on it.
 
You can cook it? i most eat it raw with ranch dressing. I do make the cauliflower rice, but steamed is great with butter melted on it.
I've had it at Ethiopian restaurants where it tastes of the spices they cooked it in, which was incredible. I've also had it roasted and dipped in buffalo sauce, which makes my mouth water to think of.
 
I asked the lying machine what the ten most consumed vegetables in the US were, and it gave me this:

The 10 most consumed vegetables in the United States (USDA per-capita consumption estimates) are:

Potatoes
Tomatoes
Onions
Sweet corn
Lettuce
Bell peppers
Broccoli
Carrots
Cucumbers
Green beans
Aren’t tomatoes a fruit? 1773044764998.png

Three less common veggies I really like
  • broccoli rabe
  • Japanese eggplant
  • frisée

Oh yeah, I also love carrot greens, but have that very rarely and only in tempura
 
Mine is breadfruit (panapen).
I’m from Puerto Rico so it’s around, but a lot of people still haven’t really cooked with it much other than smash and fried. I trained as a chef years ago and I’ve always liked ingredients that are kind of a blank canvas. Breadfruit is one of those things that can go in a lot of directions depending on what you do with it.
My favorite way is honestly super simple: roasted panapen. Split it, olive oil, garlic, salt, roast it until the outside gets a little crusty and the inside turns creamy. It ends up somewhere between roasted potatoes and fresh bread.
Another one I like is slicing it thin and frying it like chips.
My partner is from PR and his Mom makes roasted panapen. Delicious! She also puts pumpkin (which I think is not quite mainland US pumpkin) in with her habichuela. Nice and pasty. *Perfection

Spaghetti squash is a favorite and pairs well with nearly everything. Split it in half. Scrape out the seeds. Drizzle with olive oil and a little salt and pepper. Roast in the oven. Done when it is soft. Scrape out with a fork. O Lord, so good.

Amaranth leaves... Who knew? Sounds yummy.

(Edited bc I forgot about the amaranth leaves!)
 
Spaghetti squash is a favorite and pairs well with nearly everything. Split it in half. Scrape out the seeds. Drizzle with olive oil and a little salt and pepper. Roast in the oven. Done when it is soft. Scrape out with a fork. O Lord, so good.

OMG! I love spaghetti squash too and cook the same exact way. I also cook butternut squash using a similar method. Cut in half, but season with butter, cinnamon, nutmeg, and brown sugar. It’s such an easy way to prepare squash.
 
Mine is breadfruit (panapen).
I’m from Puerto Rico so it’s around, but a lot of people still haven’t really cooked with it much other than smash and fried. I trained as a chef years ago and I’ve always liked ingredients that are kind of a blank canvas. Breadfruit is one of those things that can go in a lot of directions depending on what you do with it.
My favorite way is honestly super simple: roasted panapen. Split it, olive oil, garlic, salt, roast it until the outside gets a little crusty and the inside turns creamy. It ends up somewhere between roasted potatoes and fresh bread.
Another one I like is slicing it thin and frying it like chips.
In Jamaica they also fry it or roast it 🙂
 
Amaranth leaves. If you're in Texas, you may have wild amaranth growing as a weed near you; they call it "pigweed" down here and it's invasive.
I had no idea this stuff was worth eating! Very interesting.

It’s not super interesting, but I’ll say I like rutabaga. We use it as a potato substitute in a lot of recipes when we want to reduce the number of carbs we’re consuming. They’re less bitter than turnips and they last a LONG time on the counter before you cook them, so they’re handing to have around.
 
I asked the lying machine what the ten most consumed vegetables in the US were, and it gave me this:

The 10 most consumed vegetables in the United States (USDA per-capita consumption estimates) are:

Potatoes
Tomatoes
Onions
Sweet corn
Lettuce
Bell peppers
Broccoli
Carrots
Cucumbers
Green beans

Source: USDA Economic Research Service “food availability per capita” vegetable consumption data.

How determined: ranked by estimated pounds consumed per person per year from USDA ERS food availability statistics.

So I guess cauliflower counts! But what's your favorite way to cook it?
My kids didn't like cauliflower when they were young until I made it Mediterranean style. It's very simple. Break up the head and halve the large florets, pan cook in olive oil until slightly browned and add 3 chopped cloves of garlic and 1 Tbsp of toasted whole cumin seed, stir, then season with salt and finish cooking. They were converts after that recipe. I add the garlic during the last 10 minutes to prevent it from turning bitter.

 
I’m from the southeast U.S. We eat a lot of greens (collards, turnips) and black eyed peas. Also okra is yummy. We also like bok choy.
Yeah, I am from the South (was east, now west), and I love my greens. Even Walmart sells collards in the West. But in rural Florida, you could buy greens on the side of the road. I am planning on putting some in an omelet next time.
 
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Avocados have become a favorite. For a healthy lunch I'll cut up an avocado, add it to chickpeas or rinsed black beans, add in some raw red onion and cut-up cherry tomatoes. Garnish with some lime juice or some Italian dressing. It's super healthy and tastes great. I know avocado is a fruit, but wth.
 
You can cook it? i most eat it raw with ranch dressing. I do make the cauliflower rice, but steamed is great with butter melted on it.
I steam it, or rice it and cook with butter, bay leave and Turmeric in the saute pan. We love everything listed. I'll do fresh beet, sweet potato, brussels sprouts and onion garlic, olive oil S&P and roast it. I normally put two chops or thighs on the pan too. Damn, I want that now.
 
Yeah, I am from the South (was east, now west), and I love my greens. Even Walmart sells collards in the West. But in rural Florida, you could buy greens on the side of the road. I am planning on putting some in an omelet next time.
My wife is from Florida, well I basically am too. She makes killer collards with ham hocks.
 

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