Side Dishes | RecipeTin Eats https://www.recipetineats.com/category/side-dishes/ Fast Prep, Big Flavours Thu, 23 Nov 2023 04:47:22 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.3 https://www.recipetineats.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/cropped-favicon@2x.png?w=32 Side Dishes | RecipeTin Eats https://www.recipetineats.com/category/side-dishes/ 32 32 171556125 Holiday Stuffed Sweet Potato – with bacon, pecans & sage https://www.recipetineats.com/holiday-stuffed-sweet-potato-with-bacon-pecans-sage/ https://www.recipetineats.com/holiday-stuffed-sweet-potato-with-bacon-pecans-sage/#comments Wed, 22 Nov 2023 05:00:00 +0000 https://www.recipetineats.com/?p=125571 Freshly baked Holiday stuffed sweet potatoesStuffed sweet potato with holiday vibes! Baked sweet potatoes stuffed with crispy bacon, toasty pecans and swirls of browned butter, with melty cheese and a crunchy sage-panko topping. A swoon-worthy combination of flavours and texture. Stuffed Baked Sweet Potato Casserole This is a riff on my sweet potato casserole, baked in individual sweet potato boats... Get the Recipe

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Stuffed sweet potato with holiday vibes! Baked sweet potatoes stuffed with crispy bacon, toasty pecans and swirls of browned butter, with melty cheese and a crunchy sage-panko topping. A swoon-worthy combination of flavours and texture.

Freshly baked Holiday stuffed sweet potatoes

Stuffed Baked Sweet Potato Casserole

This is a riff on my sweet potato casserole, baked in individual sweet potato boats rather than one big casserole pan. The scooped out flesh of baked sweet potatoes are mashed with all sorts of holiday-flavour-goodness (specifically browned butter, pecans and bacon, an utterly divine combination with sweet potato), stuffed back into the potato boats, baked with melty cheese then finished with a shower of crunchy sage-bacon-flavoured-panko breadcrumbs.

PHEW that’s a long sentence!!!

No, it’s not a quick Monday-night side dish slapped together in a rush. This is a starchy side that commands attention, that’s indulgent and lush and made for special occasions. The flavour combination of sweet-salty-nutty-buttery and the crunchy topping with the creamy insides is just unbelievably good.

Bonus: Assemble ahead then bake on the day!

Inside of Holiday stuffed sweet potatoes

Ingredients

Sweet potatoes

I’m using 300g/10oz sweet potatoes which, once halved, makes a nice size portion as a side dish for one person, If your potatoes are larger or smaller, that’s fine. There’s enough topping / filling for around 1.2kg / 2.4lb sweet potato, whether it’s 6 smaller ones or 3 larger ones.

This recipe will also work with regular potatoes. But the flavour combination here has been specifically designed for sweet potatoes. Try my regular Twice Baked Stuffed Potatoes instead – though there’s nothing regular about how delicious that recipe is!!

Add-ins and crunchy sage-panko topping

Here’s what you need to mix into the filling and for the crunchy topping.

  • Unsalted butter – We’re using this to make browned butter today. More intensely buttery with warm nutty flavours. The better butter!

  • Bacon – Chopped then fried up until crispy and golden, we use the fat to pan fry the panko until golden. No wasting free flavour!

  • Colby cheese – This is my all-rounder go-to cheese with good melting qualities and flavour without going greasy. Feel free to substitute with other cheese of choice – cheddar, tasty, Monterey jack, gruyere, swiss cheese. If using mozzarella, I’d mix in 1/4 cup of parmesan cheese for a flavour / salt boost.

  • Spices – Garlic, onion powder and paprika.

  • Panko breadcrumbs – For the toppings! Larger and crunchier than ordinary breadcrumbs, find it in the Asian aisle of regular grocery stores (though cheaper at Asian stores!).

  • Fresh sage – This is my herb of choice for this holiday-inspired side dish. The earthy flavour is sheer perfection with the buttery sweet potato. If you’re cooking for a special occasion, I think it’s worth getting. But if you don’t have it, you can substitute with rosemary for another herb that will work well with the other flavours in this dish. Otherwise, just use parsley so you get similar green specks (don’t worry, there is plenty of other flavour going on in this dish!).


How to make Stuffed Sweet Potato Casserole

In a nutshell, the flesh of baked potatoes are mashed up with the tasty add ins, re-stuffed back into the potato then baked with cheese and a crunchy topping.

  1. Bake – Prick the skin with a fork to allow excess juice to leak out (this prevents skin burstage). Then bake the potatoes in a 200°C / 400°F (180°C fan forced) oven for 75 minutes or until soft. Check with a butter knife, not a sharp knife (too sharp so it glides through even if not properly cooked, made this mistake!).

  2. Scoop – Let it cool for 10 minutes just so you can handle it. Then cut in half and scoop the flesh out, using a tea towel to hold the potato if needed.

  1. Filling – Mash the flesh up with all the filling add-ins (see below for steps for each) – the browned butter, crispy bacon bits, chopped pecans, spices and cheese. Reserve half the bacon, pecans and cheese for topping.

  2. Stuff the potato with the filling then top with the remaining cheese,

  1. Bake for 25 minutes until the cheese is melty and there’s golden spots.

  2. Top with the reserved bacon, pecans and golden panko mixture (see below). Bake for a further 3 to 4 minutes just to warm the crunchy topping then serve!

Tray of Holiday stuffed sweet potatoes

Add-ins and panko topping

Prepare the panko topping and add-ins to mix into the filling while the potatoes are baking.

  1. Browned butter – Just melt then simmer the butter until you see golden bits and it smells nutty and intensely buttery. Ideally, use a silver saucepan or small pan so you can see the golden bits. Otherwise, use a spoon to scoop up the butter to check.

  2. Toast pecans – Using a non-stick pan, toast the pecans for 3 minutes in a dry pan until it you see golden spots. Then transfer to a cutting board and chop once cool,

  1. Crispy bacon – In the same pan, fry the bacon until crispy and golden. If using streaky bacon, you won’t need extra oil because the fat in the bacon will melt. Then remove the bacon using a slotted spoon so the fat in the pan gets left behind – we’re not wasting a drop of it!

  2. Crunchy panko – Add the panko, sage and salt. Then cook for a few minutes in the bacon fat until the panko is golden.

Toppings, done! Use as per directions in the section above.

Close up photo of Holiday stuffed sweet potatoes

Serving and making ahead

We (JB and I) created this recipe with upcoming holiday gatherings in mind. As in, a starchy side dish intended to make an impact on your guests for those extra special dinners.

Does it take more effort than a regular baked potato? It sure does. Does it take more effort than making one big pan of Sweet Potato Casserole? Yes, because we’re assembling multiple ones rather than dumping everything into one big pan.

Is it worth the effort? Yes, a million times over. As someone in my team said, you feel sad when you finish the last bite because you never want the eating experience to end.

But don’t worry. Steal the last one left for yourself. Hide it. No need to share! #HolidaySpirit 😈 – Nagi x


Watch how to make it

Freshly baked Holiday stuffed sweet potatoes
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Holiday Stuffed Sweet Potato

Recipe video above. Stuffed sweet potato made for holiday feasting! Twice baked sweet potatoes stuffed with crispy bacon, toasty pecans and swirls of browned butter with melty cheese, and a crunchy sage-panko topping. A swoon-worthy combination of flavours and texture, this is the individual servings version of my sweet potato casserole.
Excellent special occasion starchy-side dish with holiday flavour vibes. Get ahead by assembling then baking on the day!
Course Sides
Cuisine Western, Western – Holiday Sides
Keyword baked sweet potato, holiday sweet potato side, stuffed sweet potato, sweet potato recipe
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour 45 minutes
Servings 8 halves
Author Nagi

Ingredients

  • 4 x 300g / 10oz sweet potatoes , skin on, washed and dried
  • 1/2 tsp cooking / kosher salt
  • 4 tbsp unsalted butter
  • 5 tbsp pecan nuts (Note 2)
  • 200g / 7 oz streaky bacon , chopped (Note 5 to omit)
  • 1 1/2 cups colby cheese , shredded (Note 3)
  • 1/4 tsp black pepper
  • 1/4 tsp garlic powder
  • 1/4 tsp onion powder
  • 1/4 tsp paprika

Panko topping:

  • 1/4 tsp cooking / kosher salt
  • 1/2 cup panko breadcrumbs
  • 2 tbsp sage leaves , finely chopped (Note 4)

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 200°C / 400°F (180°C fan forced).
  • Bake – Prick the skin of the potatoes 15 times with a fork. Place on a foil lined baking tray and bake for 75 minutes or until soft all the way through (check with a butter knife).
  • Scoop – Once potatoes cooked, allow to cool for 10 minutes just to handle. Cut in half lengthwise then scoop out the flesh, leaving a 0.5cm (0.2") wall (use a tea towel if hot). Place flesh in a bowl.
  • Stuffing (*see below for prepping components*)- Mash the potatoes with a fork. Then add the browned butter, 1/2 tsp salt, pepper, garlic, onion powder and paprika. The add half of each the pecans, bacon and cheese (rest reserved for toppings). Stir until combined.
  • Stuff – Place halved sweet potato back on a paper lined baking tray and stuff them equally with filling. Sprinkle with leftover cheese and bake for 25 minutes until cheese is melted.
  • Crunchy topping – Top with reserved pecans, bacon and panko mixture. Bake for another 3 to 4 minutes
  • Rest for 5 minutes then serve!

Stuffing & topping components

  • Prepare these while the potatoes are baking.
  • Browned butter – Melt the butter in a small silver pan or saucepan over medium heat. Leave to simmer on medium heat for 3 to 5 minutes, stirring every now and then, until (when you push foam aside) you see little golden-brown bits and it smells nutty. Immediately pour into a small bowl (including the golden bits) and set aside.
  • Toast pecans – Heat a non-stick pan over medium high heat. Add pecans and toast for 2 to 3 minutes until they have golden spots. Transfer to cutting board, cool then finely chop.
  • Crispy bacon – Add bacon into the same pan over medium heat. When the fat starts to melt, turn the heat up to medium high and cook until golden (4 to 5 minutes). Scoop out bacon with a slotted spoon and place into a small bowl. Leave leftover fat in the pan.
  • Golden panko – Still on medium high, add the Panko topping ingredients. Stir until golden, around 2 minutes, then scrape into a bowl.

Notes

1. Sweet potato – If your potatoes are larger or smaller, that’s fine. There’s enough topping / filling for around 1.2kg / 2.4lb sweet potato.
2. Nuts – sub almonds, walnuts, macadamia or other of choice.
3. Cheese alternatives – sub cheddar, tasty, gruyere, Monterey jack, gruyere, swiss cheese. If using mozzarella, I’d mix in 1/4 cup of parmesan cheese for a flavour / salt boost.
4. Sage works so well with the flavours in this dish (fresh, not dried). Rosemary is my back up herb here. Fallback – just use parsley for the green specks in the topping!
5. To leave out bacon – it will still be great without because there’s so many other flavours going on here. If you really want to compensate, then add 1/4 cup parmesan into the filling and 2 tbsp into the Panko mixture. It will take the place of the flavour and salt punch you get from bacon! 
6. Assemble ahead – The potatoes can be cooked and stuffed, then baked the next day. Leftovers will keep for 4 days though there’s nothing like freshly baked!
Nutrition per serving.

More statement starchy sides


Life of Dozer

A duck must’ve pooped there.

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How I cook frozen peas – Garlic Buttered Peas https://www.recipetineats.com/how-i-cook-frozen-peas-recipe/ https://www.recipetineats.com/how-i-cook-frozen-peas-recipe/#comments Wed, 18 Oct 2023 05:00:00 +0000 https://www.recipetineats.com/?p=122435 Photo of Buttered Peas recipe - great way to cook frozen peasMake frozen peas fabulous with this recipe for garlic buttered peas! A quick side dish that goes with everything, the peas are sauté-steamed in garlic butter, rather than boiling separately. Easier, tastier, never mushy and so tasty you’ll become known for them. 🙂 I tend to shy away from sharing basic recipes like today’s Buttered... Get the Recipe

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Make frozen peas fabulous with this recipe for garlic buttered peas! A quick side dish that goes with everything, the peas are sauté-steamed in garlic butter, rather than boiling separately. Easier, tastier, never mushy and so tasty you’ll become known for them. 🙂

    Bowl of Buttered peas

I tend to shy away from sharing basic recipes like today’s Buttered Peas. Too easily distracted by more exciting-sounding dishes. Pierogis! Crispy chicken burgers! Chocolate cream pie!

Yet, the irony in all this, of course, is that I make these peas a gazillion times more often than I do Basque Cheesecake. A staple side dish, quick to make but totally restaurant-worthy. Though, posh restaurants might pod their own rather than buying frozen. I guess they don’t buy into the whole snap-frozen thing like I do? 🙂

Frozen peas for Buttered peas

Pot of Buttered peas

Ingredients

I am a bit of a frozen vegetable snob. You’ll never find store-bought frozen broccoli or onion in my freezer. But you will always find peas. Because they are good!

How to make buttered peas
  • Frozen peas – Cook from FROZEN, not thawed! Well, it’s fine if they are thawed but there is no need to.

    Baby vs regular – The recipe works for either. Baby peas (called petite peas in some countries) are slightly sweeter with a slightly softer skin. I am partial to these but won’t hesitate to use regular peas.

    Fresh – You could also put me to shame by making this recipe with freshly podded peas. 🙂

  • Butter – For lovely buttery flavour. Substitute with other oil of choice – extra virgin olive oil is my next pick, coconut oil for a tropical / Indian vibe.

  • Garlic – It just makes everything that much more delicious. Fresh please! Give the jarred stuff a miss – it’s sour and wet so you can’t sauté it properly and the flavour barely resembles the real deal.

  • Salt and pepper – Seasoning. Peas need it!


How I cook frozen peas

To cook from frozen, just add the tiniest splash of water which helps steam-sauté them faster. The water evaporates by the time the peas are cooked.

  1. Sauté garlic – Melt the butter then sauté the garlic until very light golden in medium heat, around 30 seconds.

  2. Tip the frozen peas in with salt and pepper. Add 1 tablespoon of water which creates a steamy environment to cook the peas a little faster. The water evaporates in a few minutes, leaving behind just tasty butter!

  1. Cook for 5 minutes, stirring every now and then, or until the peas are heated through. Frozen peas are cooked before freezing so they don’t need to be cooked!

  2. Serve – Done and ready to serve! Pour into a bowl or put straight onto dinner plates.

    Delicious to eat as is – I challenge you to stop at one spoonful – but suggestions for dressing up are below!

Close up of Buttered peas recipe

Dress them up

For every day, buttered peas are terrific just as they are. The garlic and butter go a long way to make peas a whole lot more interesting!

But, if you’d like to step it up a notch or just feel like doing something different, here are some suggestions:

  • Mint them – Toss through finely chopped fresh mint. Mint and peas is a classic! Add however much you want, to your taste.

  • Lemon – Stir through lemon zest for beautiful lemon flavour, or juice for tang.

  • Shower of parmesan – As with many things, a mound of freshly grated parmesan will turn this into a show-stopping side!

  • Clarified / browned butter instead of ordinary butter – for even more intense buttery flavour.

  • Spice it – Add some curry powder, cumin, coriander, or other spice of choice into the butter, for a touch of extra flavour.

  • Crunch it – Finish with a big handful of store-bought crispy Asian Fried Shallots or pangrattato (from this recipe), for great texture!

But that’s enough from me. What about you? I know you’ve got a stack of other creative (easy!) ways to dress up a bowl of peas. Share, share! – Nagi x


Watch how to make it

Photo of Buttered Peas recipe - great way to cook frozen peas
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How I cook frozen peas – Garlic Buttered Peas

Recipe video above. Make frozen peas fabulous with my recipe for buttered peas! A quick side that goes with everything. Don't boil the peas – cook from frozen in garlic butter. Easier, tastier, bright green, never mushy and never watery!
Course Side
Cuisine Western
Keyword buttered peas, chickpea recipe, pea side dish recipe
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 5 minutes
Total Time 10 minutes
Servings 6
Calories 129cal
Author Nagi

Ingredients

  • 50g / 3 tbsp unsalted butter (or other oil/fat)
  • 2 garlic cloves , finely minced
  • 500g / 1 lb frozen peas (Note 1)
  • 1/2 tsp cooking / kosher salt
  • 1/2 tsp black pepper
  • 1 tbsp water

Instructions

  • Sauté garlic – Melt butter in a large saucepan over medium heat. Add garlic and cook for 30 seconds until light golden.
  • Cook – Add frozen peas, salt, pepper and water. Turn heat up to medium high and cook for 5 minutes, stirring every now and then, until the water is evaporated, the peas are hot and coated in the tasty garlic butter.
  • Serve – Tumble into a bowl and serve!

Notes

1. Peas – Baby peas (also called petite peas) are slightly sweeter and slightly more tender skin than regular peas. But by no means do I have a negative thoughts about regular peas!
2. Dress up peas – Finely chopped mint stirred through at the end, a shower of parmesan (oh yes!), lemon zest and/or juice, a pinch of cumin or coriander powder stirred into the butter (or other spices of choice). Fresh herbs of choice, chopped and stirred through at the end. So many options!
3. Leftovers will keep for 4 days in the fridge, or freezer for 3 months.
Nutrition per serving assuming 6 servings.

Nutrition

Calories: 129cal | Carbohydrates: 12g | Protein: 5g | Fat: 7g | Saturated Fat: 4g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.4g | Monounsaturated Fat: 2g | Trans Fat: 0.3g | Cholesterol: 18mg | Sodium: 199mg | Potassium: 212mg | Fiber: 5g | Sugar: 5g | Vitamin A: 847IU | Vitamin C: 34mg | Calcium: 26mg | Iron: 1mg

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Life of Dozer

Snippet from today’s recipe video!

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Maple Roasted Pumpkin with Chili and Feta https://www.recipetineats.com/maple-roasted-pumpkin-with-chili-and-feta/ https://www.recipetineats.com/maple-roasted-pumpkin-with-chili-and-feta/#comments Tue, 03 Oct 2023 16:00:00 +0000 https://www.recipetineats.com/?p=8838 Close up of Maple Chilli Roasted PumpkinHow to make roasted pumpkin so much more fabulous with very little effort? A dash of maple syrup for extra caramelisation. Kick of fresh chilli. Plus a sprinkle of feta and shower of walnuts! Serve as a side, a meal, pile on toast or crostini. It’s delicious any which way! Maple roasted pumpkin with feta... Get the Recipe

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How to make roasted pumpkin so much more fabulous with very little effort? A dash of maple syrup for extra caramelisation. Kick of fresh chilli. Plus a sprinkle of feta and shower of walnuts! Serve as a side, a meal, pile on toast or crostini. It’s delicious any which way!

Close up of Maple Chilli Roasted Pumpkin

Maple roasted pumpkin with feta and chilli

Something magical happens to pumpkin when you roast it. It intensifies the sweetness and caramelises beautifully.

I’d happily eat it plain. But here, we step it up a notch with a few simple additions that work so well with pumpkin. A dash of maple syrup for extra caramelisation. Plus a hit of fresh chilli, soft nutty crunchy of walnuts and creamy pops of salty feta…..you know this is going to be good!

That’s dinner, right there. Or a mighty delicious side.

Bowl of Maple Chilli Roasted Pumpkin

Ingredient you need

Here’s what you need to make this.

The roasting stuff

Ingredients in Maple Chilli Roasted Pumpkin
  • Pumpkin – Any eating pumpkin. I typically use Kent or Jap which are common varieties here in Australia. Do not use pumpkin intended for Halloween carving, it’s not very pleasant to eat.

    Alternatives – Butternut pumpkin (called butternut squash in the States) or sweet potato!

  • Maple syrup – or honey.

  • Dried chilli flakes – also called red pepper flakes. I use the regular type you get from ordinary grocery stores but you could absolutely use Asian or other types of chilli flakes. Just be mindful of spiciness!

  • Red onion – substitute regular onion, eschalots (US: shallots) or the white part of green onions (I often have bunches in the fridge with the green parts unceremoniously hacked off for garnish purposes so am always looking for uses of the white part).

  • Walnuts – Or other nuts of choice. Almonds and pecans come to mind first. Pinenuts, pepitas and other small nuts/seeds would also work but I’d toss them in partway through cooking so they don’t burn into tiny little black (bitter) pellets.

Finishes

Ingredients in Maple Chilli Roasted Pumpkin
  • Chilli – This is optional because it’s more for visual than spiciness, because we get enough spiciness from the dried chilli flakes. Large chillis, like the cayenne pepper pictured, aren’t very spicy. Good life rule to remember: the larger the chilli, the less spicy it is!

  • Danish feta – This is the feta type that is a bit more creamy than Greek feta. Greek feta also works, though I do like the way Danish feta sort of smears as it semi-melts on contact with the hot pumpkin.

    If you are making to really impress, go premium by using goats cheese!

  • Parsley – For pretty green finish.


How to make Maple Roasted Pumpkin with Chilli and Feta

This is a recipe that’s more about the finishes. The pumpkin is roasted with onion and walnuts, all tossed with maple syrup. Then once cooked, sprinkle with feta, red chilli and parsley. Then get stuck in!

How to make Maple Chilli Roasted Pumpkin
  1. Cut the pumpkin in 2.5cm / 1″ cubes. To do this I cut into 2.5cm / 1″ slices first. Using a rocking motion as you slice down helps make this easy.

  2. Cut the skin off.

  3. Then cut into cubes.

  4. Pile onto a large paper lined tray with the onion slices and walnuts. Toss with olive oil, maple syrup, salt and chilli flakes then spread it out. The more space between the pumpkin, the better. If the pumpkin is too cluttered, it will stew and go mushy instead of caramelising.

How to make Maple Chilli Roasted Pumpkin
  1. Roast for 30 minutes, tossing once at the 20 minute mark, until the pumpkin is light golden and cooked through. You won’t get intense golden colour on the surface, not like plain roast pumpkin cubes (such as in this recipe), because the maple syrup will burn on the edges of the cubes before the surface goes completely golden.

    Also, the onion will get quite dark brown. If you notice at the tossing point that it’s getting a little too brown, just push/pile them all together or bury under pumpkin. This will protect them!

  2. Finishing – Give the pumpkin a gently toss to coat it in all the tasty tray juices. Then transfer to a serving platter – single layer is nice for even sprinkling coverage and neat presentation. Sprinkle with fresh chilli, feta and parsley, then serve!

Tray of freshly made Maple Chilli Roasted Pumpkin

Or – jumble and pile

I know I said a single layer presentation looks nice and neat. But actually, for maximum flavour-melding-more-rustic presentation (aka Nagi style), do most of the sprinkling on the tray, reserving some for garnish. Then transfer into a serving bowl. Flavour jumbling will occur during transfer and piling.

Finish with reserved feta etc to pretty it up.

Bowl of Maple Chilli Roasted Pumpkin

Whichever way you go, single layer neatness or jumbled piled up rustic-ness, it still rates the same on the deliciousness scale. Which is, in case you hadn’t guessed, very, very high.

Tell me if you serve this as a side or inhale it as a meal! – Nagi x

PS In case you didn’t know I have a whole category of pumpkin side dishes as part of the vegetable and salad side dishes corner of this website! Mostly relatively low effort, like this one, with a scattering of show-offs for special occasions.

PPS This is not the first time I’ve combined pumpkin. See also here and here.


Watch how to make it

Close up of Maple Chilli Roasted Pumpkin
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Maple Roasted Pumpkin with Chili and Feta

Recipe video above. A seriously delicious, low-effort way to serve roast pumpkin: with a dash of maple syrup for extra caramelisation, a kick of chilli, warm crunch of walnuts and salty pops of creamy feta.
Serves 3 as a main or 6 as a side. I made this with pumpkin but it is just as delicious made with squash or sweet potato!
Course Roasted, Vegetables
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Total Time 35 minutes
Servings 3 – 6
Calories 165cal
Author Nagi | RecipeTin Eats

Ingredients

  • 2 lb / 1 kg pumpkin , peeled, cut into 2.5cm / 1" cubes (whole, unpeeled weight – Note 1)
  • 1 red onion , peeled, halved, then cut into 1cm / 0.4" wedges
  • 1/2 cup walnuts , roughly chopped (Note 2)
  • 3 tbsp olive oil
  • 3 tbsp maple syrup or honey (sub brown sugar Note 3),
  • 3/4 tsp cooking salt / kosher salt
  • 1 – 1 1/2 tsp dried chili flakes , adjust to taste (Note 4)

Garnishes (Optional)

  • 3/4 cup Danish feta (or Greek feta, or upgrade to goats cheese)
  • 1 large red chilli (cayenne pepper), deseeded, finely minced
  • 1 tbsp parsley finely chopped

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 200°C/400°F (180°C fan-forced).
  • Toss – Place the pumpkin, onion and walnuts on a large, paper lined tray. Drizzle with olive oil and maple syrup, then toss to coat (hands really is best). Sprinkle with chilli and salt, toss again, then spread out on a tray. Don't crowd them else they will stew instead of roast!
  • Roast for 30 minutes, or until the pumpkin is lightly browned and cooked through, tossing once at the 20 minute mark.
  • Finishes – Remove from the oven. Gently toss again, then transfer to a serving platter in a single layer. Crumble over feta, sprinkle with parsley and chilli. Or do the sprinkling on the tray then pile into a bowl. Serve immediately!

Notes

1. Pumpkin – Any type for eating is suitable (not Halloween carving). Or butternut or sweet potato!
2. Nuts- Feel free to use other nuts. Large ones similar size to walnuts will take the same time. If using pine nuts, sunflower seeds or pepitas (or other small nuts), add them halfway through the roasting time.
3. Brown sugar sub – Mix with olive oil then toss to coat.
4. Chilli flakes – 1 1/2 tsp has a decent warm, unmissable hum but not super spicy. 1 tsp is more subtle. Feel free to skip it!
5. Leftovers will keep for 3 days.
Nutrition assuming 6 servings.

Nutrition

Serving: 214g | Calories: 165cal

Recipe update: This is an old recipe from 2015 that was in desperate need of spruced up photos, a recipe video tutorial and most importantly, recipe improvements! The same recipe, just tweaked to fix. 🙂

More delicious things to make with pumpkin


Life of Dozer

Don’t miss Dozer in today’s recipe video!! Did he get to taste test….??

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Miso Butter Corn https://www.recipetineats.com/miso-butter-corn/ https://www.recipetineats.com/miso-butter-corn/#comments Wed, 27 Sep 2023 06:00:00 +0000 https://www.recipetineats.com/?p=120716 Photo of Miso Butter CornMiso Butter Corn is a recipe that proves simple can be amazing! The magic of a dab of miso. 🙂 This sautéed corn is a side dish that goes with everything, from chicken rissoles to gyoza. Or make a meal out of it with a fried egg, avocado and tortillas for stuffing. Miso butter corn... Get the Recipe

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Miso Butter Corn is a recipe that proves simple can be amazing! The magic of a dab of miso. 🙂 This sautéed corn is a side dish that goes with everything, from chicken rissoles to gyoza. Or make a meal out of it with a fried egg, avocado and tortillas for stuffing.

Photo of Miso Butter Corn

Miso butter corn

The world has David Chang to thank for the miracle that is sautéed corn with miso and butter. He wasn’t the first to make it but he was certainly the one who made it famous! In fact, it was so wildly popular at his New York restaurant that he took it off the menu because he became known as the corn restaurant that happened to serve noodles! 

Miso, in case you are new to it, is a soy bean paste that is probably best known as the base for miso soup (here’s my mum’s recipe). A ton of savoury flavour packed into one innocent looking tub (jar/packet). However, because it’s such a powerful ingredient, it is used for so many other dishes, for both Japanese and Western dishes.

Today’s miso corn is a great example. A fusion Asian dish starring miso – err, yes, and corn!

Miso butter for Miso Butter Corn
Miso + butter = Miso butter = good stuff!

Ingredients in Miso Butter Sautéed Corn

Here’s what you need to make this. Not many ingredients!

Miso butter and other ingredients

Miso butter corn ingredients
  • Miso – There are all sorts of miso varieties, find one labelled “white miso” or “shiro miso” (“shiro” means “white” in Japanese). Red miso is also fine but use a little less – about 1 heaped tablespoon (miso flavour is a little more intense). (PS My mum has a great little summary on different types of miso in her Miso Soup recipe).

  • Bacon – Streaky is the best because we use the bacon fat to cook the corn. It’s what makes this dish so good!

  • Butter – Unsalted, this dish has enough salt from the bacon and miso. If you only have salted, dial back the miso slightly.

  • Garlic – Because I don’t cook corn without it if butter is also present.

  • Cooking sake – One of the 3 essential sauces in Japanese cooking, it’s a rice wine made for cooking that you can find in the Asian section of grocery stores these days. It’s used to deglaze the pan after cooking the corn (a cooking term which means to use a liquid to dissolve golden bits stuck on the base of the pan to mix into the sauce) and it adds a touch of extra savouriness into this dish. The alcohol cooks out because it evaporates.

    Substitute with mirin or Chinese cooking wine, or water (we just want some liquid to deglaze the pan).

  • Green onion – For freshness. Cut it a little chunkier than the typical “finely sliced” that is often called for in recipes. We want a decent hit because it’s the freshness here.

  • White pepper – I use white because it’s habit in Japanese recipes. (Just because this recipe has a touch of miso in it, my brain thinks I’m in the Japanese food cooking sphere). But black pepper is fine too.

Also – Corn!

Yes, we need corn! 😂 Using corn fresh cut off the cob is best because it’s dry so it sautés better for lovely golden spots. Also, flavour (sweeter, better) and texture (firmer, not soggy).

Frozen corn is the next best alternative – use it from frozen but expect to cook longer (thaw>dry>cook) with canned bringing up the rear (it’s the wettest so it doesn’t sauté as well).

Miso Butter Corn ingredients

Here’s how I cut the corn off the cob without the kernels flying all over the kitchen – large bowl, prop the corn up on a little dish, small knife.

How to cut corn off the cob

How to cook Miso Butter Corn

This recipe starts by sautéing bacon so the corn can be cooked in the bacon fat for extra tastiness! Then the miso butter is just stirred through at the end until it melts through.

How to make Miso Butter Corn
  1. Cut corn off the cob – As mentioned above, prop the corn up on a small ramekin or similar inside a large bowl. Stand upright and cut the kernels off using a small knife. The bowl will catch the kernels so they don’t fly all over your kitchen! A bundt pan also works.

  2. Miso butter – Mix the miso and softened butter until combined.

  3. Cook bacon in its own fat until golden. The fat in the bacon will melt as the pan heats up, so start with a cold pan. No extra oil needed – as long as you use streaky bacon!

  4. Bacon fat – Remove the bacon using a slotted spoon so you keep as much bacon fat in the pan as possible. Then add the corn.

How to make Miso Butter Corn
  1. Cook the corn for 4 to 5 minutes until there’s light golden spots, and the corn is sweet and cooked through. (Fresh corn is firmer than frozen and canned corn). To do this, just stir every minute rather than stirring constantly. This gives the corn a chance to get the golden spots.

    Add garlic towards the end of the cooking time, else it will burn!

  2. Deglaze – Add the cooking sake and stir until it evaporates. We only use 2 tablespoons so it will evaporate quickly, about 15 seconds or so. The purpose of this step (called deglazing) is to dissolve the golden bits on the base of the pan left from sautéing the corn into the mixture. Those golden bits are called fond and it’s free flavour!

  3. Miso butter – Turn off the stove then stir to melt the miso butter through the corn. We don’t want to sizzle the butter because the miso caramelises quite easily. We want glossy silk buttery sauce through our corn!

  4. Toss the bacon and green onion in, then serve!

Miso Butter Corn freshly cooked

Matters of serving

I love how versatile this dish is.

It’s a corn side dish packed with so much flavour that you will happily eat it by the spoonful. Who cares what the main dish is, just gimme all the Miso Butter Corn!

As mentioned earlier, despite the miso in it, this doesn’t taste Japanese or Asian. It’s universally tasty and the flavour profile is such that I wouldn’t hesitate to serve it alongside a pile of Crispy Herb Roasted Chicken with gravy or a Pork Tenderloin with Creamy Mustard Sauce. But then, it’s just at home with Asian mains like Chinese Char Sui BBQ Pork, a big plate of gyoza or Grilled Marinated Thai Chicken (Gai Yang).

But my favourite is to turn it into a meal by adding a fried egg, burst roast cherry tomatoes (10 minutes in the oven), avocado and tortillas for scooping/stuffing.

Miso Butter Corn for breakfast with eggs

Miso Butter Corn tacos for breakfasts with eggs

Breakfast, dinner, lunch, any day of the week.

Yes please!

But don’t worry about how I eat it. Tell me how you’d serve this and what you’d serve it with! – Nagi x


Watch how to make it

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Miso butter corn

Recipe video above. Simple yet ridiculously delicious corn side dish. Just a dollop of miso adds great savoury flavour! Adapted from the David Chang's famous Momofuku Roasted Summer Corn recipe! (Found his a little salty so I dialled back a bit).
It doesn't taste Japanese or Asian at all, you can barely taste the miso, so it's a great side for Asian and Western mains. But my favourite way to eat this is in bowls with a fried egg and avocado, or stuffed into corn tortillas. YES!
Course Side Dish
Cuisine asian fusioin
Keyword miso butter corn, sauteed corn
Servings 4
Calories 326cal
Author Nagi

Ingredients

Miso butter:

  • 30g / 2 tbsp unsalted butter , softened
  • 1 1/2 tbsp white miso (shiro miso) (Note 1)

Corn:

  • 200g / 7oz streaky bacon , chopped into 1cm / 1/2″ pieces
  • 3 cups corn kernels , preferably freshly cut off 3 – 4 corn cobs else frozen thawed (Note 2)
  • 2 garlic cloves , finely minced
  • 2 tbsp cooking sake , optional (sub mirin or dry sherry, Note 3)
  • 1/8 tsp white pepper (sub black pepper)
  • 1 cup green onion , cut into 0.5cm/0.2″ slices

Instructions

  • Miso butter – Mix butter and miso together in a small bowl until combined.
  • Golden bacon – Put bacon in an unheated large non stick pan, no oil. Turn the stove onto medium high heat – as it heats up, the fat will start to melt so the bacon cooks in its own fat. Cook for 3 to 4 minutes until golden, then use a slotted spoon to transfer onto a paper towel lined plate. Reserve bacon fat in the pan.
  • Cook corn – Top up with butter if you don’t have 1 tbsp fat left in pan. Still on medium high, add corn, then stir only every minute or so (this lets it get some nice golden spots), for about 5 minutes until corn is just cooked and is sweet. Add garlic, stir for another 30 seconds. Add sake, stir until evaporated (~15 seconds).
  • Melt miso butter – Turn off stove. Add miso butter, stir until melted. Add pepper, bacon and green onion, toss until coated with sauce. Serve!
  • Serve as a side dish. In a corn taco with a fried egg and avocado (OMG SO GOOD).

Notes

1. Miso – There are all sorts of miso varieties, find one labelled “white miso” or “shiro miso” (“shiro” means “white” in Japanese). Red miso is also fine but use a little less – about 1 heaped tablespoon (miso flavour is a little more intense).
2. Corn – Fresh cut is best because it’s dry so sautés better. Frozen thawed works too, expect to cook a little longer (needs time to thaw/dry/cook). Canned corn does work but because it’s so wet, it just doesn’t get little golden patches as well.
3. Cooking sake – One of the 3 essential sauces in Japanese cooking, you can find it in the Asian section of grocery stores these days. Adds touch of extra savouriness into this dish. Alcohol cooks out because it evaporates. Sub with mirin or Chinese cooking wine, or water (we just want some liquid to deglaze the pan).
4. Recipe credit – Adapted from David Chang’s famous Roasted Summer Corn with Miso Butter. I found his recipe a little salty so I reduced the miso and skipped the chicken stock. 
5. Leftovers will keep for 3 to 4 days. It will freeze ok too!
Nutrition per serving, assuming 4 servings as a side.

Nutrition

Calories: 326cal | Carbohydrates: 22g | Protein: 9g | Fat: 23g | Saturated Fat: 9g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 3g | Monounsaturated Fat: 9g | Trans Fat: 0.3g | Cholesterol: 41mg | Sodium: 743mg | Potassium: 329mg | Fiber: 4g | Sugar: 6g | Vitamin A: 512IU | Vitamin C: 7mg | Calcium: 32mg | Iron: 1mg

Life of Dozer

Summer has arrived early here in Sydney! (Also a good Dozer size-context photo. BIG!)

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