How I celebrated St Patrick’s Day this year, part 2. This is the vegetarian part.
The traditional Irish song… hear the famous Mary Black version here at Youtube
“Did you ever eat Colcannon, made from lovely pickled cream?
With the greens and scallions mingled like a picture in a dream.
Did you ever make a hole on top to hold the melting flake
Of the creamy, flavoured butter that your mother used to make?”
The chorus:
“Yes you did, so you did, so did he and so did I.
And the more I think about it sure the nearer I’m to cry.
Oh, wasn’t it the happy days when troubles we had not,
And our mothers made Colcannon in the little skillet pot.”
Cauliflower Colcannon
Usually this is made with potato and cabbage, but I decided to switch it out to cauliflower instead of potato because well, I love cauliflower, and I thought it was a better alternative with nutrients. We’ve used mashed cauliflower before instead of potato so it seemed natural it could be used in colcannon also, which is really just a variation of mashed potato with cabbage. This serves 4-6.
Ingredients:
- 4 cups of cauliflower florets – this was the florets from about a 2 1/3 pound cabbage
- 1 cup of 2 percent milk
- 4 tablespoons butter divided (3 tablespoons for the cabbage and 1 later for the combination into colcannon), plus more for serving. Ideally use Irish butter for serving!
- 1/2 of a small green cabbage (about half a 1 pound cabbage)
- 2 roasted garlic cloves, minced
- Salt to taste
- Pepper to taste
Directions:
- Bring cauliflower florets and milk to a simmer in large saucepan. Reduce heat to low. Cover pan and let the cauliflower soften, which might take 15 – 20 minutes depending on the size of your florets.
- Meanwhile, with your half a cabbage, with the cut-side down, slice it as thinly as possible into shreds, and probably cut it into thirds after that so they are not so long (think like cole slaw for inside a sandwich). Melt the two tablespoons of butter in a large pan over medium-high heat. Add the cabbage, salt, and pepper and saute for 10 to 15 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the cabbage is tender and begins to brown. Season with the salt and pepper, to taste.
- When the cauliflower milk mixture is soft enough that you can mush it, transfer contents of the pan a big bowl and then use a potato masher to mash it. After mushing the cauliflower, pour in the sauteed cabbage and butter from the skillet, add the minced roasted garlic, the last tablespoon of butter (this is optional depending on how much butter was left with the sauteed cabbage) and salt and pepper to taste, and mix until all is incorporated.
- To serve the colcannon in the traditional Irish way, after you put your serving of cauliflower colcannon on the plate like a small mountain, push the back of a ladle down in the middle of each portion to make a crater in the middle. Think Crater Lake, and Mt St Helens. Now add a 1 little pat of butter into each of those craters, which should melt. Now each person eating the colcannon can scoop a little butter into each spoonful of colcannon.
I have seen variations of this recipe that swaps out the sauteed lettuce for kale, or for leeks, or may sprinkle a bit of cheese in, or horseradish. Instead of Irishing it up into a Colcannon, leave out the greens to make simple mashed cauliflower instead of your mashed potato for any meal – you don’t need it to be a holiday or St Patrick’s to enjoy this side dish. Anything you can do with mashed potatoes you can do here!
Have you had mashed cauliflower before? Or had or made colcannon?
This is awesome! I am actually potato-intolerant but I love potato dishes. Will have to give this a try, thank you!
There are so many dishes that you can substitute another vegetable for potato- cauliflower is one, but so are many others!
This looks good…I may try it sometime, but not for St. Patrick’s Day–I’d love to, but my set in his ways husband demands I make the same thing every single year. Oh well!
What a good idea to sub cauliflower! I’m generally not a huge fan of the vegetable, but I’d give this a go.
Except for some slight texture (depending on how finely you mash the cauliflower), it is very hard to discern a difference between mashed potato and mashed cauliflower, seriously!
Wow, I never thought about to switch potato for cauliflower. Looks yummy!!!!
oh this looks yum! i love using cauliflower in lieu of potatoes or grains
ladies in navy