Can we talk for a minute about "Cauliflower Rice"
Replies
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going to try this,,,,,had the mash and it is good.....talk about passing judgement...dont post if it is negative0
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who knew cauliflower rice could be so controversial?0
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on another note..I made this curried cauliflower soup last night and it was amazing (having left overs for lunch today):
http://paleogrubs.com/curried-cauliflower-soup-recipe0 -
Why not just eat cauliflower if you like it, eat rice if you like it, and please don't ruin pizza crust
Why eat pizza when you could just eat cheese, flour, tomatoes, and eggs?
Get it now?0 -
Lol, all these cauliflower "substitutes" are NOTHING like the real thing. Just call the **** cauliflower "bits" or "chunks". It's DEFINITELY not rice.
And rice ain't evil. Ask the millions of Asians that eat it every day and don't have weight issues.
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And rice ain't evil. Ask the millions of Asians that eat it every day and don't have weight issues.
It is for me, because it is a trigger food for me, just like pasta and bread are. I personally find it much easier to control my portions when I'm eating something that doesn't taste QUITE as good as the real thing. That is my own issue that I deal with though.0 -
Bump or In or whatever because of all these yummy recipes! I love cauliflower!
On another note, I'm pretty blown away as to why people care so much about what people call their food. I promise your life will go on just fine if people call it cauliflower rice...the world will not cease to exist!0 -
Blows my mind how people seem to care so much what other people call their food. I can only assume these same people lose their composure when someone brings a fruit pizza to a party - unless it's made with marinara sauce and traditional pizza crust I suppose.
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I don't think there's anything normal about wanting to pretend something isn't what it is, but hey that's just me.
I like rice and call it rice.
I like cauliflower and call it cauliflower.
I haven't tried to create a dish from cauliflower in very small bits, but it sounds delicious. I definitely don't get why this would be called cauliflower rice, since there's no rice in it, so boring me would still call it cauliflower.
People do this all the time. I think it is very "normal" to eat foods that you like and to want to try them in new and interesting ways.
And "ricing" is a method of cutting food. You can "rice" a lot of things.0 -
Blows my mind how people seem to care so much what other people call their food.
Personally, I don't care at all what others call their food, and I imagine cauliflower might work well in a dish riced just as some people seem to like shredded carrots (I don't, who knows why not).
I'm more curious about the frequency with which cauliflower is promoted not for itself, but for it's ability to mimic other foods (foods that are then dismissed as not that great, so one wonders why they are being mimicked). It's totally normal to not like rice or think it's okay, no great shakes (like I said before, I prefer cauliflower), and similarly it's totally normal not to like meat or potatoes (even if I disagree), but then why create a fake version of these things? Why not just say that cauliflower (even mashed if you must) makes a better side dish than potatoes or some such? It's not a criticism, I just don't get it, so thought it would be interesting, and not some kind of insult, to discuss.
None of this relates specifically to the OP's post, which was more like "yum, I discovered this recipe I like!" vs. "rice can and should be replaced with cauliflower in all dishes," but this idea of cauliflower as a replacement is hardly uncommon, so I think it's interesting. With meat it kind of makes sense, as a lot of people don't eat meat despite liking it, for ethical reasons, so the same thing with rice and potatoes suggests that there's something wrong with rice and potatoes, so it leads to the questions.
There isn't anything wrong with rice and potatoes, but there are many people who either must, or choose to, eat a diet low in carbohydrates. For those people (myself included), it can be fun to find new ways to eat foods that we love by swapping out higher carb options for lower carb options.
The OP is not saying that rice is evil, or that no one should eat it. She was sharing a new idea that she tried and enjoyed. I don't get why it generated so many heated responses from people who are offended by calling riced cauliflower "cauliflower rice". Do they work for Uncle Ben's?0 -
Blows my mind how people seem to care so much what other people call their food. I can only assume these same people lose their composure when someone brings a fruit pizza to a party - unless it's made with marinara sauce and traditional pizza crust I suppose.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
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Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Well hey that works for you. But my calling thinly sliced/chopped cauliflower rice isn't the HUGE issue people make it out to be. I think my world will go just fine if I call it that. And you know what, so will yours! I promise! I mean people call sweet in low a sugar substitute, but it's not sugar. People call tofu a meat substitute, but it's not meat. It's not a big deal people.
Eat your cauliflower any way you want want it and call it what you like! Or don't it eat. I could care less...but please, keep the recipes coming! I love ideas of different ways to prepare foods I love!0 -
I don't think there's anything normal about wanting to pretend something isn't what it is, but hey that's just me.
I like rice and call it rice.
I like cauliflower and call it cauliflower.
I haven't tried to create a dish from cauliflower in very small bits, but it sounds delicious. I definitely don't get why this would be called cauliflower rice, since there's no rice in it, so boring me would still call it cauliflower.
People do this all the time. I think it is very "normal" to eat foods that you like and to want to try them in new and interesting ways.
And "ricing" is a method of cutting food. You can "rice" a lot of things.
+1 I guess to make some folks happy we need to call it: cauliflower I chopped into rice size?
Off topic: Super cute pup in your profile pic!0 -
I don't think there's anything normal about wanting to pretend something isn't what it is, but hey that's just me.
I like rice and call it rice.
I like cauliflower and call it cauliflower.
I haven't tried to create a dish from cauliflower in very small bits, but it sounds delicious. I definitely don't get why this would be called cauliflower rice, since there's no rice in it, so boring me would still call it cauliflower.
People do this all the time. I think it is very "normal" to eat foods that you like and to want to try them in new and interesting ways.
And "ricing" is a method of cutting food. You can "rice" a lot of things.
+1 I guess to make some folks happy we need to call it: cauliflower I chopped into rice size?
Off topic: Super cute pup in your profile pic!
Thank you! He is my yellow lab who refuses to come indoors once snow hits the ground!0 -
Blows my mind how people seem to care so much what other people call their food. I can only assume these same people lose their composure when someone brings a fruit pizza to a party - unless it's made with marinara sauce and traditional pizza crust I suppose.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
If they just called it rice and left out the word cauliflower, you'd have a point. But they didn't - they called it cauliflower rice and the name is obviously tied to its visual appearance and texture. If you want to talk Asians, if I order squirrel fish at a nice authentic Chinese restaurant, I suppose you'd protest that because they don't actually prepare it with rodents, but rather they name the dish for its visual appearance. And your suggestion that they call it bits or chunks is just silly - tons of foods are given names that aren't merely literal descriptions how they're prepared and personally I don't find "bits" or "chunks" to be particularly appetizing names. For instance, I'm happier to order a filet mignon rather than an 8oz chunk of tenderloin, but to each his own. If you ask me though, what other people call their food is a trivial issue.0 -
Blows my mind how people seem to care so much what other people call their food.
Personally, I don't care at all what others call their food, and I imagine cauliflower might work well in a dish riced just as some people seem to like shredded carrots (I don't, who knows why not).
I'm more curious about the frequency with which cauliflower is promoted not for itself, but for it's ability to mimic other foods (foods that are then dismissed as not that great, so one wonders why they are being mimicked). It's totally normal to not like rice or think it's okay, no great shakes (like I said before, I prefer cauliflower), and similarly it's totally normal not to like meat or potatoes (even if I disagree), but then why create a fake version of these things? Why not just say that cauliflower (even mashed if you must) makes a better side dish than potatoes or some such? It's not a criticism, I just don't get it, so thought it would be interesting, and not some kind of insult, to discuss.
None of this relates specifically to the OP's post, which was more like "yum, I discovered this recipe I like!" vs. "rice can and should be replaced with cauliflower in all dishes," but this idea of cauliflower as a replacement is hardly uncommon, so I think it's interesting. With meat it kind of makes sense, as a lot of people don't eat meat despite liking it, for ethical reasons, so the same thing with rice and potatoes suggests that there's something wrong with rice and potatoes, so it leads to the questions.0 -
Blows my mind how people seem to care so much what other people call their food. I can only assume these same people lose their composure when someone brings a fruit pizza to a party - unless it's made with marinara sauce and traditional pizza crust I suppose.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Well hey that works for you. But my calling thinly sliced/chopped cauliflower rice isn't the HUGE issue people make it out to be. I think my world will go just fine if I call it that. And you know what, so will yours! I promise! I mean people call sweet in low a sugar substitute, but it's not sugar. People call tofu a meat substitute, but it's not meat. It's not a big deal people.
Eat your cauliflower any way you want want it and call it what you like! Or don't it eat. I could care less...but please, keep the recipes coming! I love ideas of different ways to prepare foods I love!
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
Blows my mind how people seem to care so much what other people call their food. I can only assume these same people lose their composure when someone brings a fruit pizza to a party - unless it's made with marinara sauce and traditional pizza crust I suppose.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
If they just called it rice and left out the word cauliflower, you'd have a point. But they didn't - they called it cauliflower rice and the name is obviously tied to its visual appearance and texture. If you want to talk Asians, if I order squirrel fish at a nice authentic Chinese restaurant, I suppose you'd protest that because they don't actually prepare it with rodents, but rather they name the dish for its visual appearance. And your suggestion that they call it bits or chunks is just silly - tons of foods are given names that aren't merely literal descriptions how they're prepared and personally I don't find "bits" or "chunks" to be particularly appetizing names. For instance, I'm happier to order a filet mignon rather than an 8oz chunk of tenderloin, but to each his own. If you ask me though, what other people call their food is a trivial issue.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
Another good recipe:
http://blog.fatfreevegan.com/2013/04/lentil-and-cauliflower-rice-tacos.html
Don't hold it against them that they call it cauliflower "rice".0 -
Blows my mind how people seem to care so much what other people call their food. I can only assume these same people lose their composure when someone brings a fruit pizza to a party - unless it's made with marinara sauce and traditional pizza crust I suppose.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Well hey that works for you. But my calling thinly sliced/chopped cauliflower rice isn't the HUGE issue people make it out to be. I think my world will go just fine if I call it that. And you know what, so will yours! I promise! I mean people call sweet in low a sugar substitute, but it's not sugar. People call tofu a meat substitute, but it's not meat. It's not a big deal people.
Eat your cauliflower any way you want want it and call it what you like! Or don't it eat. I could care less...but please, keep the recipes coming! I love ideas of different ways to prepare foods I love!
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Well good. Finding humor is important in life...where ever you find it!
To all you cauliflower rice lovers: do you ever prep ahead and freeze? I typically prep as much as I can ahead of time and wonder how it would hold up if I was to freeze it.0 -
"ricing" is actually a cooking technique.0
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In for riling up!
Cauliflower Steaks:
DISCLAIMER: I did not name them. I do not eat them as a substitute for teh meats. But they are good!0 -
Pizza base
Something that makes a great pizza base is a portobello mushroom. Turn it upside down, scrape the black stuff out and make your own personal pizza with the ingredients, sauces, cheeses, etc. that you want. My favorite is to make a greek or Mediterranean style pizza with it.
brush olive oil on the flesh.
Layer 1: swipe some pesto in the cap for the sauce
Layer 2: some basil leaves
Layer 3: kalamata olives slived
Layer 4: a small amount of crumbled goat and/or feta cheese or a thin slice of fresh mozzarella
Layer 5: some whole roasted garlic cloves and a bit of prosciutto.
Baked in the oven at 350-375 until done. Broil toward the end to crisp it a bit.
Throw in a nice salad and you have a meal that is well under 500 calories (if you watch the amount of cheese you use, that is!)0 -
The OP is not saying that rice is evil, or that no one should eat it.
Agreed. Did you not see the part of my post that said something quite similar? Specifically: "None of this relates specifically to the OP's post, which was more like 'yum, I discovered this recipe I like!'"There isn't anything wrong with rice and potatoes, but there are many people who either must, or choose to, eat a diet low in carbohydrates. For those people (myself included), it can be fun to find new ways to eat foods that we love by swapping out higher carb options for lower carb options.
I think this makes sense and is obviously the reason--that for some reason people must or think they must avoid starchy carbs and also assume that lots of other people are going to want to do this. But of course this is also the reason why these kinds of posts get a bunch of people (not me, my particular question was different, just to be clear) wanting to say "what's wrong with rice"? Clearly the answer isn't just that everyone likes cauliflower more than rice (although they should, IMO, since it's tastier)*, as was initially suggested, but there's some kneejerk assumption by many that people on a website where lots of people are trying to lose weight will want to avoid the dread potato or rice or egg yolks, etc. As there's no real reason why people trying to lose weight must avoid these foods--and as they actually have positive qualities--it makes sense that you get a backlash to what seems to be conventional diet wisdom (kind of like the low fat stuff) in the form of a defense of the foods in question. I know I've seen a ton of posts lately that seem to assume that anyone sensible and health conscious should not come within 8 feet of a potato, so that's a particular one that I'm noticing. This is different than simply saying that in my particular diet I'm avoiding X or personally dislike Y.
Anyway, my question was slightly different--I'm just curious why the tendency would be to focus on cauliflower's alleged ability to taste like something else, vs. it's own qualities and how well they combine with the others in question. I think this weirds me out enough that I ask because IME when you are expecting one taste and get another there's usually a disappointment, and plus if I choose not to eat something it seems less helpful to try to recreate it. But obviously there's a huge market for fake meat, so I know others feel differently. I'm just interested in what makes this appealing? Is it a lingering sense that particular meals need rice or meat or whatever?
Again, this isn't criticism of how anyone chooses to eat and I find it odd that an effort to discuss it more generally is taken as such.
*Joking, obviously. Taste is subjective, so I'd never claim my preferences are better than those of others.0 -
I guess to make some folks happy we need to call it: cauliflower I chopped into rice size?
Cauliflower rice doesn't bother me, except that I personally don't think it would taste better that way, so wouldn't bother with the extra work (but tastes differ, of course). But, if you want to be more precise "riced cauliflower" would seem to fit the bill. After all, I used "diced tomatoes," but have never talked about "tomato dice." But agreed this is kind of silly.0 -
Bump0
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My sister is type 1 diabetic and NEEDS to swap out higher carb options (cuz the KILL her)
WHOO-HOO cauliflower rice!!! She made it, it's amazing...
I also love to swap out cauliflower for potatoes in my own cooking because it tastes great, high in fiber, lower in carbs and even my KIDS like it.
Thanks for the recipe ideas!!!0 -
The OP is not saying that rice is evil, or that no one should eat it.
Agreed. Did you not see the part of my post that said something quite similar? Specifically: "None of this relates specifically to the OP's post, which was more like 'yum, I discovered this recipe I like!'"There isn't anything wrong with rice and potatoes, but there are many people who either must, or choose to, eat a diet low in carbohydrates. For those people (myself included), it can be fun to find new ways to eat foods that we love by swapping out higher carb options for lower carb options.
I think this makes sense and is obviously the reason--that for some reason people must or think they must avoid starchy carbs and also assume that lots of other people are going to want to do this. But of course this is also the reason why these kinds of posts get a bunch of people (not me, my particular question was different, just to be clear) wanting to say "what's wrong with rice"? Clearly the answer isn't just that everyone likes cauliflower more than rice (although they should, IMO, since it's tastier)*, as was initially suggested, but there's some kneejerk assumption by many that people on a website where lots of people are trying to lose weight will want to avoid the dread potato or rice or egg yolks, etc. As there's no real reason why people trying to lose weight must avoid these foods--and as they actually have positive qualities--it makes sense that you get a backlash to what seems to be conventional diet wisdom (kind of like the low fat stuff) in the form of a defense of the foods in question. I know I've seen a ton of posts lately that seem to assume that anyone sensible and health conscious should not come within 8 feet of a potato, so that's a particular one that I'm noticing. This is different than simply saying that in my particular diet I'm avoiding X or personally dislike Y.
Anyway, my question was slightly different--I'm just curious why the tendency would be to focus on cauliflower's alleged ability to taste like something else, vs. it's own qualities and how well they combine with the others in question. I think this weirds me out enough that I ask because IME when you are expecting one taste and get another there's usually a disappointment, and plus if I choose not to eat something it seems less helpful to try to recreate it. But obviously there's a huge market for fake meat, so I know others feel differently. I'm just interested in what makes this appealing? Is it a lingering sense that particular meals need rice or meat or whatever?
Again, this isn't criticism of how anyone chooses to eat and I find it odd that an effort to discuss it more generally is taken as such.
*Joking, obviously. Taste is subjective, so I'd never claim my preferences are better than those of others.
Honestly, I'm not a fan of cauliflower at all, but I'm giving it another shot this week!
And yes, I did see that part of your post. I just haven't figured out how to bold the part that I'm trying to talk about. :blushing:0 -
Lol, all these cauliflower "substitutes" are NOTHING like the real thing. Just call the **** cauliflower "bits" or "chunks". It's DEFINITELY not rice.
And rice ain't evil. Ask the millions of Asians that eat it every day and don't have weight issues.
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Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
"ricing" is actually a cooking technique.
And some how riced cauliflower is fine, but cauliflower rice makes the food Gods angry.0 -
I don't think there's anything normal about wanting to pretend something isn't what it is, but hey that's just me.
I like rice and call it rice.
I like cauliflower and call it cauliflower.
I haven't tried to create a dish from cauliflower in very small bits, but it sounds delicious. I definitely don't get why this would be called cauliflower rice, since there's no rice in it, so boring me would still call it cauliflower.
mince0
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