Vegetarian St. Patrick’s Day Sides – Colcannon and Parsnips
If you’re coming here from Chambanamoms (welcome!), where I am an occasional contributor, you’ve already seen my take on a vegetarian main dish for St. Patrick’s Day. If not, go read about that Guinness tofu stew, and learn about my opinion on “authentic” St. Patty’s Day food.
As I touch on there, the food that grocery stores shove down our throats is pre-packaged corned (cured) beef brisket with limp cabbage. It doesn’t have to be a bad dish, but I haven’t seen it prepared well yet. Besides that, I’ve been trying (as Chambanamoms editor, Amy, has) to incorporate more meatless meals into our diet. It can often be cheaper, much healthier, and if you’ve read books about how food is produced in this country (like Michael Pollan’s excellent In Defense of Food) you know that it may be a much more responsible dining option.
I had most of the ingredients for this meal already at home, but if my math is right, I can pick up everything for this meal at the coop, getting all organic produce (and supporting a local business), and still have a complete dinner for four for less than the cost of a bad piece of corned brisket at the grocery store. And I’d still have to buy more stuff for the sides.
Even if the weather here is warming up, nothing says comforting like a stew. It’s too bad that most stews cook so long that everything can end up tasting the same. This meal came together while thinking about making something that was quick and easy, yet packed with lots of flavor (something many vegetarian meals lack).
You can read about how we introduced a lot of flavor into the stew, with umami flavor bombs like soy sauce. Root vegetables are easier though, since you can just throw them in the oven. Parsnips are one of my new favorite vegetables, and one that most people overlook. They look like carrots, but are usually a pale yellowish color on the outside. You can peel them and treat them just like carrots, but they are a little starchier, which lends well to roasting.
Roasted Parsnips
side/garnish for 4
- 8 parsnips, carrot-sized, a little less than 1 pound
- olive oil, to coat
- salt and pepper, to taste
- 2 T flour
- Pre-heat your oven to 400 degrees F.
- Peel the parsnips and cut on the bias into 1/4 to 1/2-inch slices.
- In a bowl, toss parsnips with olive oil, salt, and pepper, until they are all coated.
- Add flour, and toss to give each slice a good dusting of flour.
- Spread out on a (foil-lined for easier cleanup) sheet pan, and roast for about 30 minutes, or until they soften and the edges start to brown.
We all know that potatoes and cabbage are very traditional Irish staple ingredients. There is an old dish that is typically served around Halloween, according to Wikipedia, called colcannon. It really boils down to mashed potatoes with cabbage (or kale). Most recipes I’ve seen have you boil the cabbage. This is a travesty. Boiling cabbage tends to make it soggy and limp, devoid of flavor. Worse yet, most recipes suggest overcooking it, which makes it stink and taste bad from the sulfur compounds it contains.
Here we use just a little water with a little oil, steam until it’s soft, then saute it to add some flavor. I like to leave my cabbage with just a little crunch, but if you like it softer, go ahead and cook it longer. One great kitchen gadget in use here is a potato ricer, which looks a bit like a giant garlic press. After you cook your potatoes, cut them in half, put them skin-up in the ricer and press down. The peel is left behind like magic.
Colcannon
serves 4
- 2-3 pounds of potatoes, scrubbed
- 1/4 – 1/2 head of cabbage, thinly shredded
- 2 T oil
- 6 T butter
- 1 c milk
- salt, pepper, to taste
- Boil/steam the potatoes until cooked through, about 20-30 minutes depending on the size of your potatoes. Drain and allow to cool slightly
- Add the cabbage, the oil, and 1/2 cup of water to the pot, cover and steam over medium-high heat until cabbage begins to darken and soften, about 5-10 minutes.
- Remove the lid, allow the water to evaporate, then sautee the cabbage with the existing oil until it is as soft and browned as you like, about 5-10 minutes.
- Lower the heat to low and add the milk and butter.
- Pass the potatoes through a ricer or food mill, or mash by hand (which would require you to peel them first).
- Add potatoes into the pot with the cabbage and stir to combine.
- Taste and adjust texture with more milk and/or butter, and season with salt and pepper.
Potatoes are the perfect foil for stews, as they absorb a little of the liquid and add more heft to the plate. Plus, well, I just love mashed potatoes!
I hope you find yourself trying some new meatless meals this year. You may save some money, you may get a little bit healthier, and you’ll be eating with a little less impact on the environment.
Tags: cabbage, chambanamoms, holiday, Irish, parsnips, potatoes, St. Patrick's Day, vegetarian



March 19th, 2010 at 9:44 AM
Ok, I’m making both of these!
April 5th, 2010 at 8:20 PM
love colcannon. agree about overcooked greens. i parboil or sautee all manner of greens for our colcannon: kale, turnip greens, mustard greens, collards. they all work really well. strangely have not yet tried any kind of cabbage yet. i also add a pound of boiled parsnips to my colcannon, but maybe ill try them roasted like you have here. oh, and neat trick about leaving the skins on. i also use a ricer but stupidly always peeled before. ill have to try this!