Roasted cauliflower: cut into bite size pieces or a bit larger, toss with olive oil, salt and pepper and roast in the over at 350 - 375 for 15 - 20 minutes. Can also be done with brussels sprouts, carrots, pearl onions, or fingerling potatoes. Or toss all the veggies together and roast. Easy, super healthy and delicious.
I also cut up raw bell peppers, celery, tomatoes, carrots, cucumbers or any combination thereof and have them out on the table to munch on.
Also good: pan roasted asparagus. Heat up a pan or griddle, DON'T add oil or butter or anything. Throw the asparagus onto the dry hot pan and sprinkle salt and pepper to taste. Cook, tossing around a bit, until you like. I prefer them a bit firm, and slightly charred.
Next time you make any sort of pasta, throw in a bag of baby spinach right at the end after you've tossed the pasta in the sauce. Cook just a couple of minutes 'til the spinach is wilted and serve.
Or do the spinach on its own: olive oil, slivered garlic, red pepper flakes heated in a pan, throw in spinach, cook 'til *just* wilted, salt, pepper, eat.
Broccoli rabe: olive oil, slivered garlic, red pepper flakes heated in a pan, throw in broccoli rabe (cut into slightly larger than bite size), toss for a minute, add a couple Tbsp chicken stock or water, cover, simmer for 6 minutes or so, serve.
Another cauliflower one: boil cauliflower 'til very soft, drain, put in food chopper, add a bit of milk, butter, salt, pepper, chop/blend until the consistency of mashed potatoes, adding more milk/butter as you like. A sprinkle of nutmeg right at the end is also yummy. I've actually argued with my kids that this was in fact cauliflower and NOT mashed potatoes.
The above broccoli rabe recipe can be used for baby bok choy also, but sprinkle on a bit of soy sauce and sesame oil at the end.
Eggplant: slice, sprinkle with salt and let drain for 30 min, rinse, dry, dredge with flour and fry in hot oil 'til lightly golden. drain on paper towel, salt, pepper.
And in winter, veggie soup: throw bite size pieces of any veggie (I use butternut squash, sweet potatoes, tomatoes, cauliflower, carrots, onions so my soup is a nice orange color) into a pot, cover with chicken or vegetable stock AND some tomato soup (like the ones in the rectangular containers, not condensed), bring to a boil and simmer 'til veggies are all nice and soft, add salt and pepper to taste, get your trusty stick blender and blend away until it's smooth and creamy - call it "cream of vegetable soup" if you like, even though there's not a drop of dairy in there. Make a huge batch and freeze what you don't use.
In salads: avocado, avocado, avocado! Healthy and delicious, although technically a fruit, not a veggie.
Enjoy!