Skip to main content

Baked Onions

Banana shallots (sometimes known as torpedo), the most generously proportioned and mild tasting of the shallot family, roast superbly, their translucent flesh almost melting inside their skins. I have eaten them this way with creamy goat cheese mashed with herbs (thyme, tarragon, chives) and with a lump of good, mouth-puckering Cheddar too. Yet they will also stand as a vegetable. I think it worth including them here for that alone.

Ingredients

banana shallots – 4 per person
olive oil
thyme sprigs
a little cheese, such as Caerphilly or Cheddar

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Preheat the oven to 375°F (190°C). Bake the shallots in their skins, with a light drizzle of oil and a few sprigs of thyme, for about thirty minutes, until soft to the touch. Test one; it should be meltingly soft inside.

    Step 2

    Put the shallots on serving plates, cut into each shallot, then pour in a drop or two of olive oil and add a few thyme leaves and a few thin scraps of cheese. Press together until the cheese softens. Push the shallot from its skin and eat while hot.

Tender
Read More
Turn humble onions into this thrifty yet luxe pasta dinner.
Like fattoush salad and strawberry shortcake roll.
We’ve got baked cheddar and leek pasta, maple-mustard sheet-pan salmon, and a strawberry shortcake roll.
Keep this easy frittata recipe on hand for quick breakfasts, impressive brunches, and fridge clean-out meals.
Add a bag of potato chips and you've got yourself a party.
Thinly sliced and cooked hot and fast, pork tenderloin is the juicy, cook-quicking weeknight champion of this vegetable-heavy stir-fry.
The most efficient method takes less than an hour, but you might not even need it.
Think a Hugo spritz, a gin basil smash, and plenty more patio-ready pours.