Roasted Root Vegetables

 In

Roasted Root Vegetables

Yields1 Serving
 1 bunch of carrots
  1 bunch of beets
  1 bunch of parsnips and or 1 celeriac
  1/4 c. Bourbon
  2 t. Sea Salt
  2 T. Olive Oil
  Black Pepper
  9×13 baking pan
1

Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Wash and prepare vegetables by trimming the ends and cutting them lengthwise into finger sized pieces. Keeping the beets separate, place them into large bowls.

2

Drizzle olive oil over the cut pieces, using about 2 Tablespoons. In the bowl with the parsnips and carrots, add the 1/4 cup of bourbon and heavily salt them, using at least 2 teaspoons. Stir them well evenly coating them as best as possible. Bourbon, in this case, is used to aid the caramelization process. If you don’t have any handy, you can substitute 2 teaspoons of sugar, honey, or maple syrup.

3

Place the beets into the baking pan first, distributing them evenly. Allowing the beets to cook a little before stirring them in with the other vegetables will preserve the colors of the parsnips and carrots, resulting in a much prettier dish. Carefully distribute the remaining vegetables on top, and pepper them to taste.

4

After the first 15 minutes, stir the vegetables around, coating them evenly with the juices collecting on the bottom. Do this every 10-15 minutes until the vegetables look withered and are extremely soft on the inside. (About 1 hour) They should remain slightly chewy and salty on the outside.

Ingredients

 1 bunch of carrots
  1 bunch of beets
  1 bunch of parsnips and or 1 celeriac
  1/4 c. Bourbon
  2 t. Sea Salt
  2 T. Olive Oil
  Black Pepper
  9×13 baking pan

Directions

1

Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Wash and prepare vegetables by trimming the ends and cutting them lengthwise into finger sized pieces. Keeping the beets separate, place them into large bowls.

2

Drizzle olive oil over the cut pieces, using about 2 Tablespoons. In the bowl with the parsnips and carrots, add the 1/4 cup of bourbon and heavily salt them, using at least 2 teaspoons. Stir them well evenly coating them as best as possible. Bourbon, in this case, is used to aid the caramelization process. If you don’t have any handy, you can substitute 2 teaspoons of sugar, honey, or maple syrup.

3

Place the beets into the baking pan first, distributing them evenly. Allowing the beets to cook a little before stirring them in with the other vegetables will preserve the colors of the parsnips and carrots, resulting in a much prettier dish. Carefully distribute the remaining vegetables on top, and pepper them to taste.

4

After the first 15 minutes, stir the vegetables around, coating them evenly with the juices collecting on the bottom. Do this every 10-15 minutes until the vegetables look withered and are extremely soft on the inside. (About 1 hour) They should remain slightly chewy and salty on the outside.

Notes

Roasted Root Vegetables