CAULIFLOWER RECIPES That Will Change Your Mind About Cauliflower
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- Опубліковано 18 чер 2024
- #cauliflower #cauliflowerrecipe #italianfood
Eva has changed my mind about a few vegetables I used to think I didn't like, but today she is faced with her greatest challenge yet: convincing me that CAULIFLOWER can be delicious. She'll have five dishes, from antipasto to dessert, to change my mind.
Spoiler alert: she succeeds. Turns out, Italians have a secret ingredient that takes cauliflower dishes to the next level of yummy, even for someone who hates the vegetable...
If you enjoy this video, please give it a thumbs-up and subscribe to the channel! It helps a lot!
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CAULIFLOWER BRUSCHETTA RECIPE - www.pastagrammar.com/post/cro...
CAULIFLOWER PASTA RECIPE - www.pastagrammar.com/post/sic...
CAULIFLOWER PIE RECIPE - www.pastagrammar.com/post/cud...
CAULIFLOWER "ALLA CAVOUR" CASSEROLE RECIPE - www.pastagrammar.com/post/cav...
CAULIFLOWER FRITTER RECIPE - www.pastagrammar.com/post/fri...
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00:00 - Cauliflower Recipes for People Who Don't Like Cauliflower
00:40 - Cauliflower Appetizer Recipe
03:13 - Crostini di Pitigliano - Cauliflower Bruschetta
05:25 - Cauliflower First Course Recipe
08:03 - Pasta con i Broccoli Arriminati - Cauliflower Pasta
09:41 - Cauliflower Second Course Recipe
13:42 - Cudduruni con Cavolfiore - Cauliflower Pie
15:20 - Cauliflower Side Dish Recipe
17:04 - Cavolfiore alla Cavour - Cauliflower Casserole
19:03 - Cauliflower Dessert Recipe
20:28 - Frittelle Dolci di Cavolfiore - Sweet Cauliflower Fritters
22:08 - Pasta Grammarian in Action!
Ciao! What's YOUR favorite way to cook cauliflower?
Cavolo strascicato is my favourite side dish is a traditional Tuscan recipe (cauliflower sautéed in a pan with olive oil garlic, anchovies, chilli pepper, olives, capers, oregano and a small hint of tomato -better if fresh cherry tomatoes - )
Roast it with olive oil, salt and pepper, simmer it in curry sauce, or mash it with olive oil pecorino, garlic and rosemary.
Oh and pickled.
I like to roast it in the over till it is golden brown. Then I can use it for keto mac n' cheese, cauliflower soup, or just eat it off the pan until I don't have enough left ro use in the dis I'm making... you know... just like eggplant.
Look into making pizza crust with cauliflower, it's actually a great tasting way to lower your carb intake.
I love how Eva always attempts to use expressions but ends up getting them slightly wrong: works wonderful, all in a once... 😂😂😂
😂
"All in a once" is now official English.
In italian we say "tutto IN una volta" that must be why she said it like that 😂
@@ps5801 "all in one time"
@@ps5801 haha yeah sometimes translating from italian to english is a bit tricky
As a European I don’t really get how people don’t like zucchini, eggplant and cauliflower. I mean what do u eat instead of these basic veggies?😂
I’m a huge fan of this channel and enjoyed every single video. Brava Eva 🎉
So many Americans are used to eating complete garbage that they have no clue as to the taste of good food.
American here. Green beans ,yellow squash okra, brussel sprouts, cabbage, English peas. I know these are not technically veggies but I eat a lot of beans, pinto, navy, black beans, kidney, Lima and butter beans. Also not really veggies but I like white and sweet potatoes and corn. Of course I love broccoli and cauliflower. And I also love zucchini. I don't really like egg plant but I can eat it. oh and I forgot spinach and all types of lettuce. And lots of types of peppers, lentils onions and carrots. I do hate celery. I like most veggies. I hope you eat more than just zucchini, eggplant, and cauliflower.
Want to know what fruits I like??? 😅
I‘m German and have lived in the UK and Ireland, and all three countries have a tradition of not knowing how to cook veggies well (except with lots of cheese and/or bacon). I didn’t like most of those veggies until merciful friends from Southern Europe, Asia and the Middle East taught me how to cook. Food culture, quality of ingredients and cooking skill in the US is even worse on average.
@@eaglenoimoto have you heard that or have you lived in the US?? Don't believe everything you hear. We have tons of fresh organic fruits and veggies.
What do we eat instead? Uh... tomatoes, cucumbers, turnips, lettuce, carrots, onions, etc... plenty of other veggies out there
How much time and dedication she must have spend in her early age to master and memorize all these incredible different recipes!
She is a wizard in the kitchen!
Eva's innocence is one of my most favorite things about your channel!
Love your videos but I can’t find the recipe. I can see the ingredients but don’t always recognise them and some of the pastas I have never heard of. Where can I find the recipe in a traditional recipe format. I am glad to see you are still going strong. Keep up the good work.
Cauliflower soup - onion, garlic, carrot, celery, tomato paste, oregano, cauliflower, water (or broth) - pasta optional, grated cheese mandatory! :)
My own variation of this soup also has as a base a puree of red lentils, and I make the puree with a little aleppo and sumac. Delicious!
I've never heard of that. It sounds like it's probably pretty good.
My Sicilian grandmother would use cauliflower in her fritto misto. Boiled the head for about 4 minutes, drain cut up the into flourettes, dip in egg water mixture, the a breadcrumb, flour, and spice mixture..the fry until crispy...yum!
Harper: Let's see if Eva can prove me wrong about cauliflower.
Everyone: Harper's wrong because we're watching a Pasta Grammar video. 😂
Cauliflower is WONDERFUL when roasted, grilled, or smoked! The dry cooking methods brings out their sweetness. Buon apetito!
I am with you Harper. I hate cauliflower. It distressed me even more when restaurants offer "cauliflower steak" for upwards of $20. But because Eva is so talented I will force myself to try one of these recipes as cauliflower is quite good for health. Thanks so much guys for always teaching us new and delicious things to make.
Cauliflower is such a great blank slate. I love it cooked in an Indian curry sauce.
Boiled cauliflower with olive oil, salt and lemon juice, and you are in paradise
I enjoy it by its self. You Americans that eat solely on meat are use to seasoning your food that your tongue palettes is use to heavy flavours from it. Americans lack skills to cook because all they know is to put meat on a pan and turn on the heat and add seasoning.
@@javaskull88 Oh! Coliflower instead of potatoes in a curry? That sounds really good
Phwew! I'm not alone! 🤗 Cauliflower is like the sick anemic cousin of broccoli. 😂
Came for the Cauliflower, stayed for the baroque bangers.
I love Cauliflower. I make a cauliflower cheese soup that is wonderful.
1 head cauliflower boiled and mashed
4 cups milk
1 roasted red bell pepper, finely chopped
1/3 cup of cooked bacon pieces
1/2 teaspoon celery seed
1 1/2 cups cheeses of your choice
salt and pepper to taste.
You can just assemble it all in a crock pot, and turn it on very low until it's ready.
Who knew I was making the cauliflower dessert all this time. Fun fact when I was pregnant for my oldest daughter I basically ate loaded anchovy pizza for most of my pregnancy and my family called her the anchovy baby 😃. Thanks for the new recipes. Blessings to you both. 😊🇺🇲
Breaded and deep fried cauliflower is something we have every thanksgiving I’m not sure how the tradition started but that’s what we do in my family.
I grew up with it (German). I loved it even as a kid.
It is the best! Right? I am from former Yugoslavia, and we kids would go nuts for breaded zucchini and cauliflower when grandma made it. None was ever left for adults' lunch.
That was a staple of my childhood too. My great grandmother who is from Sicilia made that all the time.
Have you tried breaded and fried cauliflower with bechamel or mornay sauce? It’s delicious!!
@@TheCatWitch63 bake it with bechamel and Grier or Fontina on top.
I make a Velouté de choux fleurs which is very simple to make and delicious. The recipe uses pureed cauliflower with goat cheese, a bit of water,salt and pepper. It is heavenly.
Sounds great!
Is it anything like puréed celeriac, texture-wise? I know, puréed anything sounds like mush, but there are grades of mush. Haha.
@@ericpmoss it has the consistency of potato soup but you can add more liquid if you care to.
I love cauliflower! Especially breaded and baked cauliflower florets.
What I love about this channel is how Eva and Harper describe the taste of the food. Many times their description is what motivates me into making the dish. I also love the fact that most of the dishes only use 4-5 ingredients.
That's Italian/mediterranean cuisine: about 4-5 ingredients. Maybe is the luck of having good ingredients from the land. Actually there are many different varieties in Italy, depending on the area it can also be purple among other colors. Cauliflower has been around since Roman times. The Italian type is the ancestral form from which the others were derived.
Yes, it is the amazing part of few cousins in the World, Italy and Japan comes to mind. Excellence through simplicity is the hardest skill: to remove the unnecessary until the substantial emerges makes the dish so much more vital and recognizable. It is easy to make anything taste good by adding enough spices, but to find the perfect combination of three ingredients - so that you are able to distinguish all of them but still appreciate the synergies - is really an art form!
@@bobon123 Well, I am Italian and nothing has been removed. This is how the recipes came about, because the Mediterranean is both richness and simplicity. These recipes belong to tradition, from poor people who lived in a land blessed with an abundance of good products, where so many poor people worked for centuries with the aim of getting the best with little, with the contribution of European, Mediterranean and Middle Eastern cultures.
Unfortunately, spices are necessary to preserve and improve food, in all those countries where it is more difficult to get something from the land.
I feel so lucky that I am ashamed that not everyone in the world can receive so much. And also angry that there is so much waste in the US, without there even being quality.
@@giovannimoriggi5833 I'm Italian too, but I strongly disagree with this idea of immutable recipes. It is indeed a very common belief in Italy, but it is just factually wrong. It is *of course* wrong when looking at historical times: Italian cuisine before new world food (tomatoes of course, but even polenta is done with maize... and then there are potatoes, ball peppers,..), was _quite_ different, and if you go to Medieval or Roman times the recipes we have are vastly different and *much* richer in ingredients (vinegar and garum for example were present in basically any Imperial Roman recipe, together with several spices).
However, the same is true for recent time, my life time for example. Let's take carbonara, and that's look at the recipes we have from the 60s to today. Most Italians, more so Romans (I am from Rome myself), would tell you that the _only_ traditional recipe of Carbonara, never changed since Adam and Eve, is the four ingredients sauce Yolk (sometime with a bit of egg white), Pecorino, Guanciale, Black pepper. However there are no one that wrote down this recipe before the internet (1994). From the 60s to 1990 there are plenty of written recipes of carbonara, both published and in private cookbooks. None has those 4 ingredients. 90% have cream. Many have garlic. Gualtiero Marchesi (the most relevant Italian chef of all times) in 1989 (very recently!) wrote about the "traditional" Carbonara, and it has _peas,_ garlic, cream.
Italian cuisine is not an attempt of preserving ancient tradition: it is a continuous attempt to remove the unessential to extract the essence of the dish. The four ingredient carbonara sauce is not better because it is ancient, it is better because it _evolved_ to be the best possible carbonara sauce. Garlic or cream are not _bad_ in carbonara, they are just unnecessary - they dilute the taste without producing new synergies with the other ingredients. The process was a process of trying new ingredients, but mostly to remove the unnecessary.
@@bobon123 I’m sorry, who said that Italian recipes are immutable?…
I love this channel, and it's changed the way I cook pasta, etc. It's also culturally valuable, as it gives a flavour of what life is like in Italy. Love from cold, rainy England.
Cauliflower is so delicious and versatile!! I’m so glad Harper now has an appreciation for this delicious vegetable!
On a separate note, with Easter coming, it would be wonderful to offer some of your recipes for Easter breads and pies. I’d love to see how yours compares to what my family makes!
Italy has a wonderful variety of fish dishes that are perfect for Lent, in case any of you abstain from meat during this period. There are also many delicious vegetable dishes, in case you don’t like fish too much or want to expand your veggie recipes.
My dad was a small-town grocer, and produce was his specialty. Growing up, we had the very best fruits and veggies, and I love cauliflower. Whether it's raw, roasted with a little olive oil and balsamic vinegar, in a pasta, or my all-time fave - stir-fried in a wok with beef, broccoli, onion, bean sprouts, and black-bean sauce. Fabulous.
I'm obsessed with this channel.
I'm a cauliflower fan but I only steam, boil , or roast it , this is a completely amazing different level, mind blowing in fact , I would definitely cook and eat every dish without hesitation, my favorite dish was the cauliflower and pasta, another thing to remember about these recipes is that it's part of the Mediterranean diet, healthy and longevity plus fantastic tastes , you knocked it out of park again Eva, rome new york
You should try breaded and deep fried cauliflower with bechamel or mornay sauce. It’s delicious! If you don’t like deep fried food, bathe your roasted cauliflower with either of these sauces. You’ll love it.
@@TheCatWitch63 I've noticed a lot of things become tastier when you batter and deep fry them and dip it in cheese. On a more serious note, if you have a potato ricer, boil cauliflower and mash it, add butter, cream, roasted garlic, salt and pepper and you have a fantastic healthier mashed potato substitute.
Fry it in a batter, amazing with the right dip.
23:00 ❤ 23:00
Bro, the first dish she just boiled it and drizzled some anchovie infused oil on it. Calm down, lol.
Actually, my Calabrian grandmother made two kinds of zeppole for the holidays..sweet ones with honey ( shaped like a donut) and savory ones with a piece of cauliflower and an anchovy! (bigger and long). The kitchen smelled weird but they were interesting! Her cooking wasn’t as refined as Eva’s but it was what she knew.
I like to grate cauliflower and dry it in a pan and make something like the Sardinian coccoi Eva made recently. I add an egg or two. You could use it as a pizza base . if you’re counting carbs. Use almond and or lupin flour.
These were great recipes!
You guys are quickly becoming my favorite channel. This episode especially made me happy. My wife and I will be trying some of these recipes! Thanks so much and God bless you both.
I've never seen an old Italian nonni this young before. 🤩 So glad she's in an environment where she's learned the language and not *just* told to stay in the kitchen, so we can learn what else about their goals and personalities at least *some* have probably been hiding all this time. ❤🤩
I've never met anyone who was told to stay in the kitchen.
I loved the music choices in this video! 🎼🎵 Well done, as always, Harper and Eva. ❤
I live cauliflower and just love steaming it and eating it with a squeeze of lemon juice, salt n pepper. I love watching Eva create amazing recipes. Grazie Eva ☺️
Eva’s talent is undeniable! 5 amazing dishes 😍
I love cauliflower, but I’m sure that I’ll love it even more when Eva prepares it✨
I LOVE these recipes! My grandmother used to just dip cauliflower in an egg bath, dredge it through flour and fry it in oil. So good! It's great to hear Grammarians comment on Eva's English and her sentence construction. My friends and family in Italy are often intrigued and amused by the way I build sentences in Italian. We all defer to what's familiar in the translation and it can be very endearing and entertaining. 😅❤
Mille grazie per sempre Harper ed Eva! Vi voglio bene! ❤🇮🇹🙏🇺🇸☮
Harper had gotten that same look from eggplant & zucchini until Eva cooked it in a delicious way & he fell head over heels in love with the dishes.
Eva works her magic delightfully 😁
We all need a personal Eva. At least I do, if anyone wanted to get me to eat cauliflower. Did I mention i hate spiders also?
Thank you so much Harper for treating us to Eva's beautiful cauliflower dishes!!!
You guys never disappoint!! Another fantastic show 😘
Eva just knocks my socks off! Have you a video that shares her history of food? I know she went to university to become a teacher, but from where did she acquire such deep and expansive culinary expertise?! I am always blown away! Much aloha~
Guys!!!!! I totally loved this episode - complimenti!! I really think cauliflower is so underrated in many places. I can’t wait to try these amazing recipes! By chance I had the idea to shallow fry some frozen cauliflower (and kept turning it until it started to brown all over) then added a little water and let the steam do the rest of the cooking. I had it as a side and I’ve cooked it like this many time since as it’s so delicious. It brings out the delicate flavour and it’s easy to do when you don’t have a lot of time. Thanks again for this wonderful episode❤💝❤️
I pre alerted my mum yesterday: "Mamma, were going to learn new ways to cook our cauliflower tomorrow!" and now I'm happily forwarding this to her 😋! Just...one suggestion: I cook almost all of my vegetables by steaming them, but especially cauliflowers (all kinds of them) because I find that by boiling them they absorb too much water and the white ones particularly lose their already milder flavour. I was surprised you boiled them, but maybe it was an issue of time saving.
Why would you instantly think a thousand year old recipe that you have never tried would automatically be improved by doing it your way? Recipe comments are so strange.
@@WinstonSmithGPT why would you think I wanted to improve anything? I was merely suggesting that steamed cauliflower might retain more flavour. I'm Italian, I really don't think I can improve any traditional recipe, except I know where there are passages that can be carried out in different ways either to accomodate personal tastes or practices. Mine was in no way a critique of what she did. I was just perplexed and I honestly think the recipes required 'cooked' cauliflowers. Not boiled or steamed. That's up to you. A different matter would be if I said they could be also cooked by pan sauteing them or grilling them, etc. which give an altogether different result.
Steamed vegetables are very good for many reason but if you want do the pasta like Eva has done you absolutely need the cawlliflowers water to boil the pasta.
@@nicoladadda4120 that's a good point. But she (again, clever use of time!) cooked the cauliflower that way for all the recipes. Maybe exactly because of what you said.
@@user-dq7xd9ol9u I answered you but can't visualize my answer now. And it was that I don't know enough about steaming being a recent addition or not in our traditional way of preparing vegetables. But steaming and boiling don't differ so much in the result as to be a pivotal element in a recipe, I would guess.
I’ve been needing cauliflower ideas ❤
Thank you so much
Thank you! I can't wait to try out a couple of these recipes!
I absolutely love to watch Eva cook!! She is so gentle and loving with her food she cooks!! I love her!!! Hey Harper, has Eva ever made a dish you didn’t like??
Yes! Stocco and baccalà
@@PastaGrammarDoes that mean that we're not to get the recipe for cod-baccalá EVER, JUST Because Harper didn't like it ?!! That's soooo unfair 😢!
I loved cauliflower simply roasted with olive oil and sprinkled with sea salt and black pepper. I'm trying all of these recipes now!
Fun fact: you can roast cauliflower until it is brown and nutty. Up to the point where the browning occurs, there is a fresh grassy note. You can combine them for a more complex flavor profile.
Eva and Harper, I am ASTOUNDED by how much your production value has improved since you began the channel. You have topped everything this episode by using a snowstorm to decorate the trees in your yard as cauliflower. I am amazed and frightened by the sheer power it must have taken to arrange that.
In response to your request, when I make cauliflower at home, I like to steam it, then drench it in a cheesy bechamel. When I eat out, I adore Gobi Manchurian from the Indian and Nepali restaurants in my area.
Absolutely fantastic!
If you are a veggie, you can try swapping anchovies with capers and / or with olives to have a similar savoury balance. The taste is, of course, different, but the general rule that makes those dishes amazing is respected as well. I highly recommend it especially if finely cutted.
This is also a good sub for those of us allergic to fish and seafood. No need to be rushed to the emergency room to have delicious food.
Capers are nothing like anchovies.
Anchovies are the way.
Look into making pizza crust with cauliflower, it's actually a great tasting way to lower your carb intake.
An amazing episode!!! I gotta try 'em all very soon! 😛
Eva, I love all your recipes. Thanks for sharing them.
Harper loves breadcrumbs and raisins in pasta. It's almost time for the San Giuseppe pasta which has both!
Similar to cudduruni, in the city of Catania, during the Christmas time, we make the "scacciata",, among the many variations, there is the one with cauliflower, tuma (local cheese), sausage and black olives , then of course everyone does it as they want.
That sounds really delicious!
Wow! That was great. Thank you :)
Yum x 5. I must try all of these recipes.
Even as a child, cavolfiore (cauliflower) was a favorite, and remains so. I wonder if, after that day of eating cauliflower, Harper treated Eva to a "Dutch Oven" that night?
Mamma faceva un piatto di cavolfiore con besciamella e formaggio mmmmmmmm.
I am so impressed with you two and Eva's recipes are simple and look amazing!! Thank you!❤
Wow these all look sooo good!!!😋
Hi Harper and Eva, I LOVE cauliflower! Thank you for these recipes - they all look so delicious!
Cauliflower soup is great during the winter.
I've grown to appreciate these videos MORE with the care you put into them. Thank you -Silvia NY
My pap used to make spicy pickled veggies and he’d put cauliflower in it. They were so good, I need to find his recipe for it and make some.
Oh yeah! There is a brand of giardiniera that has a lot of cauliflower, and I can go through a big jar in a day.
I have a jar in my fridge! So good, especially with any rich dish that needs a kick of acid & heat.
Cauliflower is good in Indian food. Aloo gobhi, cauliflower pakoras, ect. A southern style cauliflower salad with onions, mayo, bacon, parmesan is much better than it sounds. Good in vegetable soups as well.
YUM! Luv cauliflower...just learned new ways to cooke it. Thank you Ava❤
Very motivating! I love cauliflower, so this is perfect for me. Thank you both!
Deep fried my favorite
As a vegetarian, I don't eat anchovies, but I am surprised that you made it through an entire meal without any meat. I could try some substitutions for the anchovies and make everyone of these dishes. The first & second plate recipes (pasta & pie) really intrigue me.
I am vegan and always looking for an anchovy substitute, too. Oil and salt packed olives? Mushroom tapenade? Shallot jam?
I was thinking capers would have the saltiness needed but maybe the brine that is used to make vegan salmon
@@burnellvassarmd4670 : I was thinking olive tapenade. I have also seen capers (as the following commenter mentioned) suggested, but the most interesting suggestion to me that I think might work for some of these recipes is either white miso paste or umeboshi paste.
@@LivingOttawaLocal : Interesting on the second suggestion. That is one I have not seen before, but I haven't tried vegan salmon either. See my reply to Burnell Vassar MD for more ideas.
@@eclecticexplorer7828 it’s made out of carrots and other seasonings there are some recipes online if you don’t have access to the commercial ones.
Wow! These all look delicious!
It all looks wonderful. I will be making them soon.
This was so much fun to watch! I am going to try every single on of these dishes! Thank You so much.
Wonderful as usual. I LOVE the music choices, too.
I particularly loved the soundscape of this video 🙏🏻
You two are so special! 💖
Recently discovered your videos. I'm really enjoying them because I have an Italian background. Learning more about Italian food. Thank you both.
I love to eat simple boiled cauliflower with le lemon. It's very refreshing and I always feel good when I eat it.
Yummy, I have to try a few of these recipe. Thank you very much👍🙏❤️
I love to watch Eva cook! I wish I enjoyed it as much as she does🙄 She makes it all look so appetizing. You do an excellent job capturing it on video, Harper 📽️
I really enjoyed this episode!
Loved this video and the great music!
Can't wait to try the cauliflower and buccatini pasta recipe! Thank you
Cauliflower cheese - which is cauliflower in a cheese sauce. Yummmmm👏👏👏👏 A favourite here in the UK
Just did the brusqueta, very good. Thank you
Great recipes and beautiful, atmospheric music make this one of my favorite episodes!
Love what you cook always 💞
I enjoy watching you cook. It comes so naturally to you.😊
Yum to all recipes! I make cauliflower and pasta quite often, but these recipes are amazing
Lovely video - great recipes, v enjoyable music and fun banter. Thank you!!!
You guys make me smile. Cauliflower does as well. Keep up the great work!
Thank you for the new recipes using cauliflower. Watching Eva slice cheese, parsley,anchovies and the olives by hand. Brings back memories watching my aunt and Nonna as a bambino do the same thing while they cooked. Cheers
I looooove cauliflower … cant wait to watch this !
You are truly blessed loves to cook for you, cauliflower pie looks delicious ❤️❤️
I love you two, thank you for the fabulous recipes, we are in your journey to amazing tasteful experiences 💞
such an amazing array of dishes from the humble cauliflower
Thank you Eva! I now have some interesting dishes for Fridays in Lent!
Superb! Eva teaches the recipes that are so authentic, simple yet delicious, and can’t be found in the menu of the Italian restaurants that I have ever been in the US.
Love them all ❤
YUM! I love cauliflower and so does my husband! I'm sharing this video with him because a couple of these dishes look like something he and I would love! Thanks for sharing!
What a fun and informative channel. And such a delightful couple. and of course incredible food. thank you
For certain, I am going to try every cauliflower recipe because they look really appetizing. The eggplant recipes are something also that I'm going to try as we are not eggplant lovers but you make them look so good. Thank you Eva
Thanks for sharing 💯 ❣️
Eva, I love your cooking. Harper, I love your honest enjoyment of the dishes. Together you two are lovely.
I love Eva for introducing so many cauliflower recipes. You truly opened my eyes and I can’t wait to make some of these dishes.
So we're all falling in love with Eva through all these fabulous scicillian recipes and delicacies and her wisdom and awareness of chemistry. She is brilliant.
I love cauliflower and these all look wonderful.
Your site never disappoints!
I am an avid gardener but have not had any success with cauliflower. Your recipes inspire me to become a master cauliflower grower. Love your channel Ciao❤
Those all look magnificent, especially the pie.
Super good show. I will be trying the recipes