Baked Potatoes with Roasted Broccoli, Gouda Cream Sauce & Panko

This is about as St. Patrick-y as I get.  It’s not covered in Guinness and there is no green food coloring in sight, but there are potatoes and roasted broccoli to keeps things festive.  Can that be enough?  Pinterest is shaking it’s head in disapproval, but I’ll set my potatoes up against your shamrock cupcakes any day. 

Baked Potatoes with Roasted Broccoli, Gouda Cream Sauce & Panko {Pedantic Foodie}

For as long as I can remember, I have HATED baked potato bars.  Zero appeal.  Poorly baked (or worse - microwaved), russets with soggy skins, masked in dizzying amounts of sour cream, unmelted, pre-shredded cheese, chives, and…precooked bacon. 

My fingers had trouble typing that.  Precooked bacon is the stuff of my nightmares. 

Baked Potatoes with Roasted Broccoli, Gouda Cream Sauce & Panko {Pedantic Foodie}

As the years have past, I have come to appreciate a baked potato now and then.  A sweet yukon gold with crispy skin that has been doused with olive oil and a sprinkling (read: handful) of crunchy, kosher salt.  A generous spoonful of butter and some freshly cracked pepper and I am satisfied.  It’s comforting, albeit, a bit colorless. 

Baked Potatoes with Roasted Broccoli, Gouda Cream Sauce & Panko {Pedantic Foodie}

Recently, I was inspired to give the “loaded” baked potato a second chance.  Without the awful, waxy cheese and horrifying bacon. 

Baked Potatoes with Roasted Broccoli, Gouda Cream Sauce & Panko {Pedantic Foodie}

I will roast anything.  Asparagus, fennel, grapes - all are transformed with a bit of olive oil and some quality time in the oven.  So, roasting my broccoli seemed an obvious choice.  

Especially since I absolutely, positively detest raw broccoli.  Nope, not going there. 

Baked Potatoes with Roasted Broccoli, Gouda Cream Sauce & Panko {Pedantic Foodie}

I roasted my broccoli with olive oil and kosher salt, AND for fear of becoming predictable, a little bit of red pepper flakes.  

While the broccoli was doing it’s thing, I made a cheese sauce.  

Goodness, I really am predictable, aren't I?  Ugh.

Baked Potatoes with Roasted Broccoli, Gouda Cream Sauce & Panko {Pedantic Foodie}

Potatoes baked and buttered, stuffed with our slightly crispy broccoli, covered in creamy, melted gouda, and topped with toasted panko for crunch.  

Baked Potatoes with Roasted Broccoli, Gouda Cream Sauce & Panko {Pedantic Foodie}

Step aside sour cream, we have gouda. 

Sincerely, 

Pedantic Foodie


Baked Potatoes with Roasted Broccoli, Gouda Cream Sauce & Panko 

makes 6

for the potatoes 

- 6 medium Yukon Gold potatoes 

- 3 tablespoons olive oil

- 2 teaspoons kosher salt

Preheat oven to 425 degrees.  

Use the tip of a sharp knife to punch several dozen holes in each potato and place in a large baking pan.  Drizzle with olive oil and kosher salt, and toss to coat.

Bake potatoes for 40-50 minutes, or until fork tender.  Allow to cool slightly while you prepare the other elements. 

for the broccoli

- 1 head of broccoli, stems removed 

- 2 tablespoons olive oil

- 1 teaspoon salt

- pinch red pepper flakes

Place broccoli on a baking sheet lined with parchment and drizzle with olive oil.  Sprinkle with salt and red pepper flakes. Bake at 425 for 10-15 minutes, or until the edges are golden and slightly crispy. 

While the broccoli is roasting, prepare the cream sauce.

for the gouda cream sauce

- 2 tablespoons unsalted butter

- 3 tablespoons all-purpose flour

- 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt

- 2 cups whole milk, at room temperature

- freshly ground black pepper

- pinch freshly grated nutmeg 

- 2 cups gouda, grated

Melt butter in a small saucepan over medium heat.  Whisk in flour and salt and cook for 1-2 minutes.

Whisk in milk, slowly, and cook until thickened; 3-5 minutes.  Remove from heat and stir in black pepper, nutmeg, and gouda. 

panko and assembly

- 8 tablespoons unsalted butter, divided 

- 1/2 cup panko bread crumbs

Place a small frying pan over medium high heat and melt two tablespoons butter.  Add panko and cook, stirring often, until golden brown and crisp.  Remove from heat. 

Use a sharp knife to cut slit through the center of each potato and tuck one tablespoon of butter into the center of each.  

Place a small amount of broccoli into each potato and cover with the cheese sauce.  Sprinkle with panko and serve immediately.  Enjoy! 

Muskmelon Salad with Aged Gouda

I have a lot of index cards lying around with scribbled ideas for recipes, grocery lists, and random J. M. Barrie quotes.  Most of what ends up on this blog begins on one such index card. 

Muskmelon Salad with Aged Gouda {Pedantic Foodie}

This salad evolved from a very confused, very scribbled-over, index card.  I was utterly uninspired by my refrigerator and my market list changed seven times before I finally wrote down the first few ingredients that came to mind and declared that those seemingly random elements would become a salad, and that that salad would be delicious.  (I hoped...)

Muskmelon Salad with Aged Gouda {Pedantic Foodie}

Random tastes delicious!  This salad is everything I want from summer.  Bright lime pairs wonderfully well with sweet muskmelon.  Basil adds an irresistible after note and the salty aged gouda completes the salad.

Muskmelon Salad with Aged Gouda {Pedantic Foodie}

This sounds weird, I know it does.  Maybe pairing cheese with melon sounds like one of those things you do when you’re pregnant.  Disclaimer: I’m not pregnant. 

You just need to try this to know how good it is. 

Muskmelon Salad with Aged Gouda {Pedantic Foodie}

I am a huge fan of toss-it-all-up-in-one-bowl, refrigerate, and serve kind of recipes.  This is one of those gems.   

Muskmelon Salad with Aged Gouda {Pedantic Foodie}

This is a great make-ahead picnic food, or you can sit on the couch and eat the whole bowl yourself.  No judgment.  

 

Sincerely,

    Pedantic Foodie 

Muskmelon Salad with Aged Gouda 

serves 6 

  • 5 cups muskmelon, cut into 1-inch cubes 
  • 2 1/2 tablespoons fresh lime juice
  • 1 tablespoon honey 
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons chiffonade basil
  • 1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1/2 cup aged gouda, crumbled 

In a large bowl whisk to combine lime juice, honey, and kosher salt.  Add basil and muskmelon; toss to coat.  Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes.  

Sprinkle crumbled gouda over the salad just before serving.  Enjoy!  

 

Roasted Tomato and Gouda Panini

Every time I visit a Farmer’s Market the tomato vendors are the first to catch my eye.  Heirloom breeds form a nutritional rainbow.  Cherry and grape varieties are bite size fruits bursting with the flavor of the season.

tomatoes

I have always loved tomatoes - as a child I ate them like apples, to the disgust of my fruit snack- consuming peers. 

panini

The miniature varieties are some of my favorites - especially for roasting.  When a tomato is roasted, all of the hidden sugars come to the surface, while the acidity drifts away. 

I made a sandwich.  I made a sandwich in which roasted grape tomatoes take place aside grilled chicken, fresh basil and gouda.  The wonderment gets pressed between two slices of sourdough, making the perfect summer panini. 

panini

I love panini sandwiches.  But, I do not own a panini press, for several reasons.  First, they are usually too big to store conveniently, and as much as I like pressed sandwiches, I do not make them regularly enough to make the purchase worthwhile.  

But, who’s to say we need a fancy press to make a perfectly authentic panini?  With the help of an extra skillet and a heavy brick you are on your way to sandwich town.

panini

This is a melty-gouda-roasted-tomato kind of mess, and it’s a wonderful one.  

Sincerely, 

Pedantic Foodie

Roasted Tomato Panini 

serves 4

  • 8 slices sourdough bread
  • 1 pint cherry or grape tomatoes 
  • 1/2 lb gouda (cut into 1/4 inch thick slices)
  • 12 fresh basil leaves 
  • 2 boneless skinless chicken breasts, grilled and sliced 
  • 2 tablespoons mayonnaise
  • 3 tablespoons olive oil
  • salt and freshly ground pepper 
  • butter

Preheat oven to 500 degrees.  Toss the tomatoes in olive oil and season with salt and pepper.  Spread the tomatoes evenly on a sheet pan and roast for 25-30 minutes.  

Bring skillet up to medium-high heat.  

Butter outer-sides of bread.  Spread 1/2 tablespoon mayonniase on one side and arrange tomatoes, basil and chicken.  Top with gouda and cover with the second slice of bread.

Move the sandwich to the heated skillet. ​Butter the underside of the second skillet and place on top of the sandwich. Place the brick in the center of the skillet.  Cook for 3-5 minutes on each side until golden brown.  

Enjoy!