Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Hump-Day Quickie: Apparently garlic makes any vegetable good!

We at A Book of Cookrye saw a zucchini recipe floating around Facebook and had a surprising revelation: we've never eaten a zucchini! This theoretically will make us not regret changing that.

Baked Garlic-Parmesan Zucchini Sticks
3 zucchinis
Garlic powder
Pepper
Thyme
Salt
1 handful shredded Parmesan

Heat oven to 350°. Grease a cookie sheet or 9x13 pan.
Quarter the zucchini lengthwise, lay them skins-down on the pan, and spray them with cooking spray. Shake the salt and seasonings over them, then sprinkle on the cheese.
Bake 15 minutes, then broil until the desired shade of brown.
adapted from source

If garlic, pepper, and Parmesan can make cauliflower delicious, why not dump them on zucchinis as well? The recipe also called for thyme which we purchased some time ago after a series of thyme plants we set on our windowsill died. We wondered what the spice tasted like and was it worth the series of dead plants. Adding it to everything else made it smell a lot like the seasoning they dump on bread in Italian restaurants.
This is why you might prefer powdered garlic to fresh.

If nothing else, they will have crunchy cheese bits on top. Although saying "if nothing else there's cheese on top" makes me think of a Dear Abby letter from someone whose coworker always picked all the cheese and breadcrumbs off the tops of casseroles at parties, leaving bare vegetables for everyone. (Abby suggested disinviting him or, if that was infeasible, serving him little individually-baked portions of everything with great ceremony to shame him out of his behavior.)
I guess Parmesan is like sprinkles for non-desserts.

While they cooked, they smelled like a combination of burning rubber and garlic. We at A Book of Cookrye began to think we might have been right in generously letting everyone else have the zucchinis.
It looks surprisingly not bad.
Upon letting the zucchinis cool a bit, it turned out this recipe is actually pretty good! Garlic and Parmesan seem to be like MSG for vegetables. However, we will note that while the original post makes it look like you have fairly rigid zucchini rods that you can eat like churros, the reality is disappointingly limp.

But these are tasty despite being so floppy, and you get browned cheese bits in the pan when you're done.

2 comments:

  1. I intially read "burning rubber and garlic" as "burning rubber and guilt." Which I sort of love.

    ReplyDelete