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You’ll also need

  • chopping board
  • tea towel
    or kitchen paper (optional)
  • sharp knife
  • deep roasting tin
    (ours was 25 x 35cm)
  • kitchen scissors
  • tablespoon
  • teaspoon
  • garlic crusher
  • measuring scales
  • measuring jug
  • can opener
  • wooden spoon

Nutrition: Per serving

  • kcal477
  • fat34g
  • saturates12g
  • carbs23g
  • sugars10g
  • fibre9g
    high
  • protein16g
  • salt1.7g
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Method

  • step 1

    Before you get started take a look at our chopping and knife skills guide.

    Heat the oven to 200C/180C fan/gas 6. If your chopping board doesn’t have anti-slip grips, lay a dampened tea towel or sheet of kitchen paper on the work surface, then place the board on top to stop it from slipping. Pull the leaves off the cauliflower, discarding any damaged or wilted ones and reserving the rest. Cut the cauliflower florets and leaves into bite-sized pieces, then cut the stalk into smaller pieces. Tip everything into the roasting tin.

  • step 2

    Trim away the root end of the spring onions and peel off the papery skins. Snip the spring onions into small pieces directly into the tin using kitchen scissors. Drizzle the oil over the veg, then season with a pinch of salt and toss everything together with your hands. Put the tin on the middle shelf of the oven. Roast for 15 mins.

  • step 3

    Peel the skins off the garlic cloves. After 15 mins, carefully remove the tin from the oven using oven gloves. Squeeze the garlic cloves directly into the tin using the garlic crusher.

  • step 4

    Measure out the curry paste – you can do this using scales or estimate based on the quantity of paste in the jar – if it’s 200g, add roughly half (see tips below). Stir the curry paste and garlic into the veg.

  • step 5

    Use a can opener to open the can of chickpeas, then tip into a sieve over a bowl to catch the liquid (see below for ideas on how to use this liquid and save on waste). Tip the drained chickpeas into the roasting tin.

  • step 6

    Pour the coconut cream into the tin, then measure out 450ml water using a measuring jug and add this, too. Crumble over the stock cube.

  • step 7

    Weigh out the green beans using scales. If they have stalks, snap or carefully cut them off. Add the beans to the roasting tin.

  • step 8

    Weigh out the ground almonds using scales, then tip them into the tin. Hold the tin steady with one hand while wearing an oven glove and gently stir everything together using a wooden spoon. Return the tin to the oven for 25 mins, then carefully remove from the oven (there will be hot liquid in the tin). Serve the curry with cooked rice or naans and some mango chutney.

Recipe tips

Food maths

Most ingredients need to be carefully measured out, but sometimes you can estimate instead. For example, if a recipe calls for 100g and the packet contains 200g, use roughly half. This saves time and will help with applying maths skills.

Don't waste it

Chickpea water, called aquafaba, can be used in some recipes to replace eggs. Check out our vegan recipes collection for more plant-based ideas.

Recipe from Good Food magazine, May 2022

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Comments, questions and tips (7)

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Overall rating

A star rating of 4.3 out of 5.10 ratings

bifferoosipots@gmail.com

question

Dear BBC Good Food team, please can you tell us if the instructions for this recipe have been written by AI? They are detailed to a point I don't think humans require. We know, for example, how to open a tin and that things coming out of an oven might be hot.

student_life

An instant favourite. This is beyond delicious.

One tip is to not be so descriptive. This recipe is that it's really good, yet really simple, which is wonderful. Lines like the below make it unnecessarily long:

"If your chopping board doesn’t have anti-slip grips, lay a dampened tea towel or…

vikki.brennan@gmail.com

Full agree - “use a can opener to open the can of chickpeas

wpsychs

tasted nice but mine was a bit watery, so would recommend adding less water

Miai

question

I would like to add mushrooms, would it be better to cook first and add at the end or put them in uncooked at the start/during?

rrysz5mg8x04613

That sounds nice. Mushrooms produce a lot of liquid when cooking so I’d probably add them at the end so they’re not too soft.

andrewdonaghy529259

question

How does this have 16g protein per serving? The only real source is 1 tin of chickpeas

goodfoodteam avatar
goodfoodteam

Hello, thank you for contacting us with this query. The main sources of protein in this dish are, as you say, the chickpeas followed by cauliflower and almonds. In addition to this the other ingredients in the dish make smaller contributions to the total protein figure e.g. even the curry paste and…

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