Particularly great served alongside Middle Eastern dishes, such as Chicken or Lamb Shawarma!
Roasted Broccolini
This broccolini recipe comes to your courtesy of Yotam Ottolenghi – except I found I needed to adjust the salt way down and adjust the sauce quantities to make it drizzle-able (is that a word??). As I’ve said before – in fact, very recently, when I shared how I roast carrots to make them golden – roasting is the best way to add flavour to vegetables. And broccolini is no exception! Tossed with a bit of oil, salt, pepper and garlic if you so choose, roasted until just tender, you will happily eat it plain. But when you add a creamy nutty tahini sauce, it takes it from tasty to OMG how is such a simple dish so good, and WHY can’t I stop eating it?? (True story, that was my reaction – over a vegetable!)
I love how quick broccolini is to prepare – much faster and less messy than cutting the florets off normal broccoli!
What you need to make this
Here’s what you need to make this broccolini recipe:
roasting: broccolini, garlic, olive oil tahini sauce: tahini, honey, lemon, garlic
Broccolini – technically a hybrid of broccoli and Chinese broccoli Gai Lan but easier to just think of it as baby broccoli which is actually the other name broccolini. Longer stem, slightly sweeter and more tender. Anything you make with broccoli, you can make with broccolini – here are all my broccoli recipes; Tahini – made from sesame, it’s creamy and rich with a nutty flavour. Most commonly used in hummus, vegans are a big fan of it because it makes things (especially sauces) creamy without using ingredients like cream that non vegans use. Use HULLED tahini, not unhulled which is more bitter (made from unhulled sesame seeds); Honey for sweetening, just a little bit. Feel free to switch with maple syrup or any other sweetener of choice; and Almonds is what I use to garnish this, but you can switch it out for pine nuts, pistachios, or any seeds like sunflower seeds, pepitas etc. Just a great way to add interest to this dish.
This is a dish that’s terrific served warm OR at room temperature.
How to make Roasted Broccolini with Tahini Sauce
Very quick and easy:
Above is a photo of what the broccolini looks like straight out of the oven. Notice how:
the stems are still nice and green (they are cooked through and tender but most definitely not soggy and sad); the ends are golden and crisp but still hold their form (ie not wilted and overcooked); and the broccolini isn’t flat and soggy, it still has a nice form to it. You want it to sag a bit when you pick it up – if it doesn’t, it means it is still raw – but not flop in a dismal mess (which means it’s overcooked).
How to serve Roasted Broccolini
The Tahini sauce is optional – you can most certainly just roast broccolini and serve it plain as a side dish. But WITH the sauce, it’s elevated to another level. It can be a company-worthy side dish OR a main. As a side dish – serve it with all things Middle Eastern / Arabic / Turkish / Persian. Here are some ideas for mains: As a main as part of a multi-course spread – serve it as part of a multi-course meal of various salads with some warm crusty bread or flatbreads. Here’s a combination of dishes that I served at a lunch a few months ago: I deliberately chose a variety of different types of salads, and made a conscious decision to make it meat free. I also very deliberately chose dishes that could all be prepared in advance – a high priority, always! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
Life of Dozer
The ONE puddle in the whole giant field. Grrrrr!!! (That’s me, not him)