Simple, Roasted Onions From 1808
-
A good recipe can make the same ingredient tastes better than a not so good recipe.
A good quality ingredient can make the same recipe tastes better than a not so good quality ingredient.In this case I am trying out a different recipe, so using the batch of onions as I would for my other dishes is the right method to judge the merit of this recipe.
Sure, one can always go into the weeds of figuring out the "best match ups" between different gradations of ingredient qualities for different recipes, but if I have to go fetch different onions for different recipes, that negates the "convenience" factor for this particular 'simple roasted onion' recipe.
-
@Mik said in Simple, Roasted Onions From 1808:
I would use a sweet onion like a Vidalia.
That, or a good Texas Sweet.
-
It was good. Surprisingly good.
I just had a yellow onion that I used. I baked it at 350 for about 45 minutes. Should have gone a bit longer, because the inside part was still a bit "onion-ey" if you know what I mean. However, the outer layers had that wonderful "been-cooking-in-the-slow-cooker" flavor. Adding salt made it a bit more flavorful too.
Stupid easy, and a very nice low-calorie lunch.
An onion, who'da thunk it?
-
Take Mik's advice.
-
I've made this about half a dozen times and it stands up. Just as wonderful as before.
Stupid, STUPID, easy.
In the comments on the youtube video:
"Some Hipster restaurant will certainly put this on their menu and charge folks $15 an onion."
I’m glad you brought this up again... As a matter of fact, we were making a late dinner that included “roasted beetroot”, so I grabbed a huge yellow onion from the bag and just tossed it in the onion. Delicious!
-
I’m trying it on the grill tonight.
-
Speaking of grilling...Don't forget, it's peach season. Grilled peaches and vanilla ice cream are hard to beat.
And, in the spirit of this thread, easy.