Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (2024)

Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe

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Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (1)

  • Pamela
  • November 12, 2013
  • 21 Comments

Categories: Gluten-free/gluten-free adaptable, Holiday, Recipes, Vegetables, Vegetarian

Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (2)

This is the first year that my Thanksgiving menu has not been finalized so close to Thanksgiving. I am not freaking out yet, but I might need an intervention. I come up with new recipes every year for the Thanksgiving classes I teach and then I want to include them in my personal Thanksgiving dinner. The problem is, the last few years I have just added to the menu without taking anything off and I think I am now at maximum menu capacity. Also, there’s no balance to a meal with four Brussels sprout dishes, now is there? I keep asking my husband, “can we just take stuffing off the menu?” And he looks at me like I’m crazy. Then he asks me, “why don’t you take the sweet potato casserole off the menu?” Then I look at him like he’s really crazy. I think I’m just going to take my Thanksgiving CEO job a little more seriously and make the tough choices. Some dishes just aren’t going to make the cut this year (unless I get a few more ovens and a few more hours in the day) and I am prepared to deal with the backlash from my people.

Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (3)

Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (4)

If you are still looking for a winner side dish or two to add to your Thanksgiving menu, then look no further than these delicious vegetables. I think what every Thanksgiving table needs is a little more color, i.e. vegetables and a little more texture, i.e. something other than soft, mushy food. I love this recipe because it’s more interesting than just roasting vegetables with olive oil or coconut oil. A little sweetness from the maple syrup, some acidity from the white wine and a touch of tang from the mustard — how good does that sound? No marshmallows, no canned cream of something, no swimming pool of heavy cream. Just beautiful vegetables tasting like they should. You can choose whatever vegetables in whatever quantities you like and they are all super nutritious so you won’t go wrong there. But….I’ll tell you what you shouldn’t omit. Love, love, love the parsnips, and the red onion and the Brussels sprouts. If you’re trying to keep it simple, do those three (or sub halved shallots for the onion) and pick either butternut squash or carrots or sweet potatoes to join the party.

Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (5)

Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (6)

A little advice though — one year I made 6 sheet pans of these in one oven — two pans side-by-side, three racks — and they didn’t caramelize as beautifully as I would have liked. Too much vegetable closeness. And they take a little time in the oven, so you need to plan for your turkey to rest for about 40 minutes and then allow 10-15 minutes for carving and that timing should be about right. But if you are reheating stuffing, sweet potato casserole and other stuff, you’ll need to roast these veggies before the turkey goes in and then just do a quick reheat before serving. That will work just fine. And if there’s no way you have room to add these to this year’s Thanksgiving menu, there’s always Christmas dinner, which is less than four weeks after Thanksgiving. Ok, now I’m freaking out!

Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (7)

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Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (8)

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Maple-Mustard Roasted Vegetables

Author:Pamela

Serves:6

Ingredients

  • ¼ cup unrefined, cold-pressed, extra-virgin olive oil or unrefined coconut oil
  • 2 Tablespoons 100% pure maple syrup
  • 1 teaspoon whole grain mustard
  • 2 Tablespoons dry white wine
  • 2 teaspoons fresh thyme leaves, chopped
  • ½ pound butternut squash, peeled and chopped into ½-inch pieces
  • 2 carrots, chopped into ½-inch pieces
  • 1 red onion, peeled and cut into sixths or eighths (keep root attached)
  • 2 parsnips, peeled and chopped into ½-inch pieces
  • 1 medium sweet potato (e.g. Garnet or Jewel), peeled and chopped into ½-inch pieces
  • 10 medium Brussels sprouts, halved
  • Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper. (I've noticed that darker sheet pans, even lined with parchment paper, caramelize vegetables better/more quickly than light-colored pans.)
  2. In a large bowl, whisk together the oil, syrup, mustard, wine and thyme. Make sure the maples syrup is well incorporated. Add all the vegetables and toss to coat.
  3. Spread evenly between the two pans in one layer and sprinkle well with salt and pepper (about ¾ teaspoon salt or more.)
  4. Roast vegetables until tender and slightly caramelized, about 50 minutes, tossing after 30 minutes. You may need to rotate the pans if they are not side-by-side in the oven or if your oven has hot spots.

Notes

These are just examples of vegetables that work nicely together and with these flavors. Feel free to concentrate on fewer vegetables, and use more of them.

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Dinner Planner – Week of February 12, 2024

Comments

  1. Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (17)

    Donita

    This veggie dish was a huge hit at our Thanksgiving dinner. I will definitely serve it again!

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    • Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (18)

      PamelaModerator

      Great! It’s so versatile, you can really make it fall and winter for any occasion. 🙂

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  2. Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (19)

    Ginny

    I’ve made this recipe several times. We love it! Due to oven space, I’m wondering what your thought are on making these either today or early tomorrow and then reheating right before we eat, Thursday night? If you think it would work how would you go about reheating? Thank you so much!!

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    • Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (20)

      PamelaModerator

      I think you should cut and refrigerate the veggie today and make them tomorrow morning. Leave them out at room temperature. Then when the turkey is out of the oven reheat in a 350 degree oven either in the serving dish or on the sheet pans you cooked them on. Just enough to get them warm — shouldn’t take too long. 🙂

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  3. Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (23)

    Ginny

    I made these Christmas Day. My husband, who professes to not like vegetables, told me that he would happily eat these every day of his life. Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!!!!!

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    • Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (24)

      PamelaModerator

      That is the best response! Nice job!

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  4. Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (25)

    Allison Thompson

    We have some beautiful beets in our garden. Do you think they would be a good addition or would they stain everything magenta?

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    • Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (26)

      PamelaModerator

      I think they would be perfect in here. Just peel them before roasting. They should not turn everything magenta.

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    • Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (27)

      PamelaModerator

      I think they would be perfect in here. Just peel them before roasting. They should not turn everything magenta.

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  5. Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (28)

    Tracy

    Pamela- Can the veggies be cut the day before or that morning, or will they turn color? also can you make the dressing for it the day before?

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    • Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (29)

      PamelaModerator

      Hi Tracy! You can cut the vegetables the day before, except sweet potatoes — they start to get spotty — and refrigerate. You can make the mixture you pour on top for roasting the day before.

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  6. Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (30)

    Amy

    Thank you so much for all of your helpful tips for Thanksgiving! It’s so generous of you to share your recipes and plans. I don’t have much of a say because my mom still hosts Thanksgiving and we’ve had the same menu since I can remember (we have some die-hard traditionalists that also might mutiny if certain items aren’t on the table.) But as I was reading your post about how everything is mushy and soft, I realized how right you are! I’m a huge veggie fan so I’m going to try to sneak this recipe in. Wish me luck 🙂 And thanks again!

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    • Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (31)

      PamelaModerator

      Good luck! You’ll do a great job! 🙂

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  7. Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (32)

    Thank you for a gorgeous dish Pamela!

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    • Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (33)

      PamelaModerator

      Thank you, Laura!

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  8. Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (34)

    erica

    this looks fantastic! and I would also definitely request it for Christmas as well!!

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    • Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (35)

      PamelaModerator

      This recipe for 80 people on Christmas Eve? Ha! I’m thinking raw brussels sprout salad with poppy seed dressing.

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  9. Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (36)

    Carol

    This is one of my favorite dishes. I have made these every year for Thanksgiving (since you had the class for us) and other holiday celebrations. Everyone loves them. I would make them for sure. Beautiful colors and the vegetables all go together so well.

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    • Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (37)

      PamelaModerator

      Thank you, Carol!

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Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (38)

I come from a large Italian-American family with 28 first cousins (on one side of the family!) where sit-down holiday dinners for 85 people are the norm (how, you might ask – organization! But more on that later …).

Some of my fondest memories are of simple family gatherings, both large and small, with long tables of bowls and platters piled high, the laughter of my cousins echoing and the comfort of tradition warming my soul.

Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (39)

Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (40)

Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (41)

Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (42)

Maple-mustard roasted vegetables recipe - Pamela Salzman (2024)

FAQs

How long should I roast my vegetables in the oven? ›

General Roasting Times for Vegetables

Winter squash (butternut squash, acorn squash): 20 to 60 minutes. Crucifers (broccoli, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts): 15 to 25 minutes. Soft vegetables (zucchini, summer squash, bell peppers): 10 to 20 minutes. Thin vegetables (asparagus, green beans): 10 to 20 minutes.

Can you roast vegetables at 350? ›

Setting the oven to 375 F is great, but anything in the 350 F to 425 F range will work. While the oven heats, cut the vegetables to the same size. Smaller vegetables can be roasted whole, as long as they are of even sizes. You want even pieces so the vegetables cook at an even rate.

Can you roast vegetables on parchment paper? ›

Line your pan with parchment paper.

This is one of my favorite tips. Maybe it's my imagination, but it seems to help the vegetables brown a bit better, and makes for super easy clean up. Winner, winner.

What is the secret to extra crispy roasted vegetables? ›

Yes, cornstarch—that box in your pantry is the secret to a super-crispy exterior on veggies, from potatoes to cauliflower.

What is the best oil for roasting vegetables? ›

For vegetables, chicken, and just about everything else, olive oil and ghee are our first choices for roasting at temperatures over 400°F. Not only do they help food cook up with the crispiness you crave, but each one also imparts its own unique flavor that you just don't get from neutral oils like grapeseed or canola.

What vegetables are best for roasting? ›

You can roast bell peppers, zucchini, broccoli, carrots, and more. It's delicious. Roasting vegetables in a hot oven brings out their natural sweetness. They come out tender and flavorful with crisp, caramelized edges.

Do you roast vegetables covered or uncovered? ›

There is no need to cover vegetables when roasting. Covering them creates steam, so they won't get as crispy and caramelized. Don't forget to stir once or twice while cooking so the vegetables get nicely browned on all sides. Other than that, you can't really go wrong.

Should you season vegetables before roasting? ›

Additional tips on roasting vegetables. Heavy duty pans are ideal since they allow for even heat distribution and circulation. Because salt draws moisture out of the food, season veggies just before roasting.

Which vegetable takes the longest to roast? ›

Root vegetables like sweet potatoes, carrots and turnips take the longest, followed by hard squash and cruciferous vegetables like butternut squash, cauliflower and broccoli. Tender items like cherry tomatoes or zucchini come next, then cooking greens, which have the shortest roasting time.

Do you flip vegetables when roasting? ›

Make sure to flip them as you would any other roasted veggies. There are several ways to get leftover roasted vegetables back to their deliciously crisp state. Put them back in the oven, spread them out evenly on a baking tray and reheat them for about 10 minutes.

Should vegetables be salted before roasting? ›

The vegetables should be well-coated in oil and well-seasoned in order for them to roast properly and taste great. A good rule of thumb: 1 tablespoon of olive oil + 1 teaspoon of kosher salt + 1/4 teaspoon of black pepper, per 1 pound of vegetables.

Is foil or parchment paper better for roasting? ›

A basic saying to guide your use of papers in the kitchen: "Sweet treats need parchment sheets; grill or broil, go with foil," says Weaver. Foil conducts and distributes heat, making it able to withstand high temperatures from baking, broiling, roasting, or grilling. For anything above 400 degrees, use foil.

What side of parchment paper goes up? ›

Since parchment paper doesn't have a helpful “this end up” sign with an arrow, it takes a little detective work. Just hold the paper up to the light and look for the side that's slightly glossier or shinier. It is the shiny or glossy side of the parchment paper that should be face up on your baking sheet or cake pan.

What is the best material for roasting vegetables? ›

Pick the Right Material

Aluminum heats well and tends to be the lightest and cheapest, but cheaply made aluminum pans can warp easily. Stainless steel retains heat well and tends to cook evenly, so it's another good choice for roasting vegetables, but it's usually heavier and more expensive than aluminum.

What is the key to roasting vegetables? ›

The perfect temperature– 400 degrees Fahrenheit is the perfect temperature for most roasted vegetables. It allows for a crispy, perfectly browned exterior and a fork tender interior. But it will vary based on the types of veggies and oil used. If your veggies are not browning enough, try increasing the temperature.

How do chefs roast vegetables? ›

Combine vegetables and oil and toss until completely coated. Add in seasonings of choice (if using) and pinch salt/pepper. Place on a baking pan, stone, or foil lined cookie sheet in a single layer. Bake for 25-60 minutes, turning once during cooking.

How to roast vegetables without drying them out? ›

Vegetables need to roast in a single layer without overlapping one another on the baking sheet. This will allow the air to circulate and crisp the outsides (otherwise, the veggies will steam and not crisp). Use Enough Olive Oil. Oil is necessary for the vegetables to caramelize.

What is the secret to restaurant vegetables? ›

The high, direct heat of your oven's floor is the secret to restaurant-quality roasted vegetables. Lucy Simon is a New York-based wine, spirits, and food writer has been with Food & Wine since the spring of 2021.

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