Albuquerque Journal

Add a little indulgence to healthy veggies

- BY ELLIE KRIEGER THE WASHINGTON POST

As side dishes go, it’s hard to go wrong simply sautéing seasonal vegetables in a skillet with olive oil, an allium such as garlic, onion or shallot, and a sprinkle of salt and pepper.

I was about to do just that with some cauliflowe­r, asparagus and peas in my refrigerat­or that needed to be cooked, but the thought of it just wasn’t moving me. I wanted something more unctuous: a side that was richer, more exciting and more deeply flavorful to elevate the basic roast chicken I was planning to serve alongside it.

The answer came in the form of a creamy Parmesan sauce, made right in the skillet with the vegetables, which ultimately envelops them in rich, cheesy goodness. And it does so in a more healthful way with thickened low-fat milk instead of cream, and a relatively modest amount of flavor-packed Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese.

Using riced cauliflowe­r (which you can obtain by grating the florets on the large-holed side of a box grater — or by purchasing it already riced) allows the vegetable to meld with the white sauce and provide an almost risotto-like texture to the dish. Sweet peas and chopped asparagus add flecks of spring green, and a sprinkling of cheese treated to a minute or two under the broiler browns the top of the bubbling mixture. It all makes for a nice presentati­on.

I served mine right in the skillet on the table (with a towel wrapped around the hot handle). It was exactly the kind of luxe dish I had hoped for as a partner for the chicken. It is so substantia­l, it would also work well in larger portions as a vegetarian main course.

 ?? DEB LINDSEY/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Creamy Parmesan Spring Vegetable Skillet could serve as a vegetarian main course.
DEB LINDSEY/THE WASHINGTON POST Creamy Parmesan Spring Vegetable Skillet could serve as a vegetarian main course.

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