Cauliflower Cheese is a British dish that is served as a side or even as a main (vegetarian!) It’s a cauliflower bake, smothered in a creamy cheese sauce that’s popped in the oven until bubbly and golden. While perhaps not the lightest dish in my repertoire, it is however hands down the most delicious cauliflower recipe I know!
Cauliflower Cheese
A really great Cauliflower Cheese recipe has been on my radar ever since I experienced a great example at a well-known steakhouse in Sydney some years ago!
There’s plenty of recipes out there that tell you to just boil up some cauliflower, cover it in a béchamel sauce, throw in some cheese, and bake it. While that’s totally fine, you do end up with that distinctly sulphurous, boiled cauliflower flavour (not my favourite taste in the world) and run the risk of patches of watery sauce.
The better way to make Cauliflower Cheese? Roast the cauliflower. It’s got better flavour and avoids the pitfalls of a watery sauce. Second tip: Umm … don’t hold back on the cheese! Be bold and true to the name – Cauliflower CHEESE!!
What goes in Cauliflower Cheese
Here’s what you need to make Cauliflower Cheese:
1. Roasted cauliflower
As mentioned above, I really believe it’s better to roast rather than boil or steam the cauliflower like most recipes do. Roasting coaxes out more flavour instead of boiling it all away!
To roast cauliflower, we just need salt, pepper and a little olive oil. And a cauliflower. 😂 A big one! We need 1kg / 2lb of florets after removing from the main stem. This equates to around a 1.25kg / 2.5lb whole cauliflower head (or 2 small, or 1 1/2 medium).
2. Cheese sauce for Cauliflower Cheese
Here’s what you need for the cheese sauce. This is called a Mornay sauce, and is nothing more than béchamel sauce (white sauce) with cheese added!
Flour and butter – Melted butter cooked with flour is called a roux and this is what thickens the Mornay sauce;
Milk and cream – The liquids for this cheese sauce. Cream is optional. It enriches the sauce for an extra-luxurious finish and I highly recommend it if you’re making this for company. But for everyday purposes, just using milk is fine!
Cheeses – I like to use two different cheeses in the recipe. Specifically:
Red Leicester – A sharp English cheddar-like cheese which packs a good flavour wallop, and adds a distinct orange-y tinge to the sauce. Easy sub for US: Your orange cheddar. It has the same colour and similar flavour. Other subs: Any cheddar cheese;
Gruyère – A semi-hard Swiss cheese with the most gorgeously nutty flavour and superior melting qualities. It is not the cheapest cheese here in Australia, so reserve this for when you want the best of the best. For other times, use Swiss cheese (which is a mass-produced cheese in the style of gruyère and similar Alpine cheeses), Jarlsberg, more cheddar, Colby or other melting cheese of choice;
Nutmeg – A classic inclusion for béchamel-based sauces, which lifts the creamy flavour. But it’s not the end of the world if you don’t have it! Use freshly grated nutmeg if you can. Whole nutmeg for grating are inexpensive and last “forever”, and the flavour really is so much better!
🇦🇺 PRO CHEESE TIP for fellow Australians: Give Tasty cheese a miss for cream sauces like that for Cauliflower Cheese. It has a tendency to split and the melting qualities are not always the best.
How to make Cauliflower Cheese
Here’s how to make Cauliflower Cheese:
Prepare to roast – Break/cut cauliflower into bite-size florets. Toss in oil, salt and pepper then spread on a large tray. Don’t make them too small otherwise they will cook too quickly and become overly soft which can lead to a watery sauce (overcooked cauliflower leaches water);
Roast for just 20 minutes at 220°C / 430°F (200°C). The cauliflower will be mostly cooked but still be a bit firm inside and will have a bit of colour on it. It will finish cooking in the sauce;
Heat milk and cream using your method of choice, either in a saucepan or a jug in the microwave. Heating the milk helps to ensure the sauce is silky smooth with less whisking effort;
Make sauce – Using a large saucepan or small pot (big enough to hold the cauliflower added later), cook melted butter and flour for 3 minutes over medium-low heat. This step is to cook out the rawness from the flour.
Make sure it’s on a low heat so the mixture doesn’t brown. We want a white sauce! Now slowly pour the hot milk in while whisking continuously to ensure your sauce will be lump-free. Keep stirring the sauce over the heat for about 1 minute and you’ll notice it thickens quite quickly;
Add cheese – Stir in the cheese. This thickens the sauce considerably, which is why we don’t need to cook the sauce to thicken it as long as we do in other recipes made with béchamel sauce;
Coat cauliflower – Add cauliflower and mix to coat in the cheesy sauce;
Transfer to baking dish – Pour the mixture in a baking dish and top with shredded cheese; and
Bake 30 minutes until it’s bubbly, golden and fabulous. That moment when you pull it out of the oven … *faints*!!!
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Isn’t the golden colour of the sauce amazing?? That’s the Red Leicester at work. It’s worth hunting down for this dish! As I mentioned above, those of you in the States can just use your everyday cheddar for the same colour effect and very similar flavour. 🙂
What to serve with Cauliflower Cheese
This is a cauliflower side dish that’s unapologetically indulgent, intended to replicate the luxury you’d expect from sides offered at high end steakhouses or a particularly lavish Sunday roast.
So with that in mind, some mains that come to mind that will go exceptionally well with this include:
Steaks – Cooked using a cheffy technique of basting the steak with garlic and thyme-infused butter;
Prime Rib – the creme de la creme of all beef roasts! Got an economical or lean roast beef joint instead? Marinate it!
Roast Chicken – Slathered in herb and garlic butter. Else try a brined one, use your slow cooker, or make Crispy Herb Roasted Chicken pieces instead;
Roast Pork – With a crispy crackling to die for!
Roast Lamb – Either a leg, Slow-roasted Lamb Shoulder, or Lamb Rack (crumbed or rosemary and garlic-marinated).
Or for something a little speedier, try:
Juicy pan-seared marinated Pork Chops;
Quick, crispy Garlic Chicken Thighs;
Crispy Pan-fried Fish Fillets;
Garlic Prawns/Shrimp <–- YES!!
And as I mentioned in the introduction, while most people think of this as a side dish, it’s certainly also main-worthy. Vegetarians in particular have good reason to go bonkers. But no one at all in their right mind would ever turn down a big bowl of this!! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Cauliflower Cheese
Ingredients
Roasted cauliflower:
- 1kg / 2 lb cauliflower florets (1 very large, 1 1/2 medium or 2 small cauliflower heads, Note 1)
- 2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
- 1/2 tsp sea salt
- 1/8 tsp pepper
Cheese sauce (Mornay sauce):
- 60g / 4 tbsp unsalted butter
- 3½ tbsp flour , plain / all-purpose
- 1 cup milk (full fat best)
- 1 cup cream (or more milk)
- 1/2 tsp cooking salt (kosher salt)
- 1/4 tsp nutmeg powder (freshly grated is best)
- 1 cup Red Leicester cheese (or cheddar), grated (Note 2)
- 1/2 cup gruyère cheese , grated (or other melting cheese of choice, Note 2)
Topping:
- 1/2 cup Red Leicester cheese (or cheddar), grated (Note 2)
- 1/2 cup gruyère cheese , grated (or other melting cheese of choice, Note 2)
Instructions
Roasted cauliflower:
- Preheat oven to 220°C / 430°F (200°C fan).
- Toss cauliflower in oil, salt and pepper. Spread on a large tray.
- Roast 20 minutes (don't turn). Cauliflower should still be a bit firm, but with some colour on them. Remove from oven.
- Turn oven down to 180°C/350°F.
Cheese sauce (Mornay sauce):
- Heat milk: Heat milk and cream until hot – either on the stove or in microwave.
- Make roux: Melt butter in a large saucepan or small pot over medium heat. Add flour and cook, stirring regularly, for 3 minutes.
- Add milk: While stirring, pour in half the milk. Once the roux is dissolved into the milk (mixture will thicken), stir in remaining milk. Stir on the heat for 1 minute – mixture should be thick enough to coat a wooden spoon.
- Add cheese: Turn the stove off, but leave the pot on the turned off stove. Stir in salt, nutmeg and both cheeses. The cheese will thicken the mixture so it's like a thick sauce.
- Mix in cauliflower: Add cauliflower and toss to coat in the sauce.
Bake:
- Fill baking dish: Transfer mixture to a 2L / 2qt baking dish (30 x 20 x 5cm / 12 x 8 x 2").
- Top with cheese: Sprinkle over gruyère followed Red Leicester cheese.
- Bake at 180°C/350°F for 30 minutes until the cheese is melted, and cauliflower is bubbly and golden.
Recipe Notes:
- Red Leicester – An orange coloured, sharp English cheddar-like cheese. Used for its excellent flavour and colour. US: Sub with your cheddar, it’s virtually the same. Others: Sub Swiss cheese (which is mass-produced gruyère-like cheese), Jarslberg, Colby, cheddar, or any other cheese. (For Australia, I do not recommend Tasty cheese, it doesn’t melt so well in this type of sauce);
- Gruyère – A type of Swiss cheese with a gorgeous nutty flavour and superior melting qualities. Sub with any of the above listed, or other type of Alpine cheese (emmental, comte).
Nutrition Information:
More baked and roasted vegetable goodness!
Life of Dozer
Action shot of Dozer captured by Kevin from Unleashed Northern Beaches Dog Photography at Bayview beach on the weekend!
Carol Walden says
Best cauliflower cheese X
Deborah March says
Our FAVOURITE cauliflower cheese recipe! Thanks!
Ashley says
I want more recipes please
Neil says
A very good take indeed on cauliflower cheese – I (accidentally) took the roasting a bit far, but the charred notes were delicious rather than burnt! Also your cauliflower slicing method is a great way to get neat florets quickly, and I chopped most of the core fine so it wasn’t wasted. Also, Red Leicester in the cheese sauce makes a great change from Cheddar again…
Mike says
Red Leicester is available at nearly every Coles, Woolworths or Aldi in Australia.
What really lifts the sauce, for me, is a big spoon of original Philadelphia as part of the cheese mix… disgustingly decadent !!!!
Morwenna Brown says
Used this recipe for a roast dinner buffet and it was a massive hit! I did add some additional herbs though such as fresh chives, fresh parsley, oregano, rosemary and Thyme! I left out the cream and just added in extra milk and used Mozzarella as a melted cheese of choice 🙂
Tim says
Aahh scratch that ! Just spotted the metric/cups button ! Nice .
Tim says
Please can you indicate what a cup of cheese looks like in grammes or ounces ?
Katie says
Hi , I made this beautiful recipie a while ago and its a game changer baking the cauliflower first. I’m making it again right now . Thank you so much for all of your recipes
Jo Butler says
This recipe broke me… I’m normally pretty good with portion control. After having my first bite, I couldn’t stop wanting more. It was worth all the effort of using my mandolin and finely dicing the cheeses – I realised at the last minute we do not have a grater or food processor for the cheeses. 🤦🏻♀️ This dish will be on repeat.
Kate says
I made this last Christmas to go with your 12 hour shoulder of lamb- everyone loved it!
My big question this year, is can I make it ahead and freeze it?
Thank you!
Kt says
Second time I am back now for your recipe- and I figured I would comment to let others know how awesome this dish is!! ♥️
Linda says
Made this today for Thanksgiving. The roasted cauliflower was amazing and the sauce would have been good but it didn’t end up thick at all after baking and seemed to be a bit oily and was way over the top too salty. I can’t imagine why as it only has 1 tsp salt total which isn’t much. I used hand grated Swiss and store bought shredded sharp cheddar. I wonder if the cheddar might have added the extra. Being in the US about the only way to get Red Leicester is online but I may try that along with gruyere another time.
Diana says
I’m confused in the make ahead instructions, it says to cool the cauli, toss sauce, then heat the sauce when ready to bake so you can stir in the cauli..but the cauli is already in the sauce
Paula says
I toss mine in the sauce and then refrigerate. Heat all of it up when ready to cook so I can toss it again in the cheese sauce that has settled in the bottom of the container. Just love this recipe!
Tracie says
Every time I make this my family can’t get enough! Tastes so good!
Gail Eagen says
We loved this recipe. We added panko in melted butter on top. We did half the recipe since there are just the two of us. Great heated up as leftovers. We will make again!
Gail says
This was excellent. Made half the recipe because there are just the two of us. I put panko crumbs in melted butter on top. So glad we have leftovers for tomorrow night! Thank you!
Elise says
Love this recipe. I pair it with sausages and peas, my toddler absolutely demolishes it!
Chels says
What a dangerous cauli recipe! I made a little 2 person pan and am trying not to go back and eat the rest. I used what I had, tasty cheese and a ball of moz. Definitely adding to the sides rotation. Thanks Nagi
Chris says
I used to think I made a pretty good cauliflower cheese – just steam some cauliflower, make a white sauce, stir through some grated cheddar and a spoonful of mustard, put the cauliflower in a dish, pour over the sauce, top it off with grated cheddar and put it in the oven. This recipe just shows how wrong I was! This is my cauliflower cheese from now on!