I’ve avoided writing about what’s going on in Japan. I want this site to be fun, informative and full of joy. Yet it’s hard to make your writing cheerful when your heart is breaking. I was planning a lighthearted post on picky eaters and vegetables, and playing with a way to make cauliflower appealing to children. Instead I just kept thinking “Comfort food, the world needs comfort food.” So I combined the two. This Cauliflower Mac and Cheese recipe is not only a kid friendly recipe, it combines cheesy cauliflower and macaroni and cheese, two of my favorite comfort foods. It’s also healthy, with cauliflower replacing the pasta and milk instead of heavy cream. If you just want the cauliflower recipe, feel free to skip to the bottom, I understand. If you want to read about my experiences doing disaster relief and how they’ve shaped me as a person, read on.
Laying in bed last night I realized that I never really processed my feelings about the disaster relief experiences I’ve had. I’ve told lots of stories, written letters of my experiences, but I haven’t truly gone through a recovery process for the emotions I experienced. There’s something called an inventory, where you make a list of everyone who has hurt you and everyone you have hurt. Then you write about how they hurt you, how it affected you then, how it affects you now, etc. Once you’ve got that done you can go through the forgiveness and amends process. I’ve done this, and now I’m able to do a kind of daily inventory without even trying. If someone has hurt me or I realize I’ve hurt someone else, I go to them immediately to do forgiveness and amends. Makes it much easier to sleep at night!
The thing is, all those experiences involved the wrong actions of a person. The things I saw in some of the countries I went to were not hurtful things done to me, they just hurt.
When I got off the plane in Sri Lanka, the four of us were picked up in a van and rode 6 hours to the remote coastal village where we would be building shelters. We met the village chief and drank hot Tang in the one shelter already built. We saw the tents donated by World Vision that no one could sleep in because corrupt politicians claimed them as their own and charged rent to use them. We met the villagers, took in their empty eyes as child after child numbly recited how many parents and/or siblings they lost in the tsunami.
As we were meeting the chief, a man burst into the shelter shouting frantically in their native language. Apparently the news had said another tsunami was potentially on its way. If it came, we would have no time to escape, and would have to simple climb a tree and hope it could withstand the torrent. My teammates looked alarmed, but I had a fascinating calm in my spirit. I knew I was in the right place. Whether I died, or survived and was able to help in the rescue efforts, I was where I belonged.
Fortunately, like most of Hawaii just experienced, it was a false alarm. The waves were big that day, but no further damage was sustained.
Then we went and visited a few other villages. We saw signs up saying, the government won’t give us the food that’s being donated. We saw babies dying of starvation because the mother who should be nursing them was killed in the disaster. There was a train that had stopped after the first wave of the tsunami, letting people climb on top to escape the flood waters. What the engineer didn’t know was that a second and third wave were on the way. Everyone on the train was killed, except for one small boy whose mother had shoved him into the luggage rack where he clung for dear life as the train was swept away and began to roll over and over. When it finally stopped, he was the only one above the water line. The dented top of the train cars, evidence of the palm trees they slammed into with each roll, told a story of destruction we couldn’t have imagined otherwise.
We wouldn’t start work until the next day, but we had one more stop before heading to our home for the next week.
We went to the home of a local pastor. Although Hindu was the prominent religion, there were small Christian churches that had faced great persecution before the tsunami. In fact the church we went to the following Sunday had been told that if they tried to hold Christmas services they would all be killed. No one knew the real destruction that would occur that Christmas.
At the pastor’s house, we watched videos. There were bodies, bodies everywhere. Not like a tv show or movie where I can tell myself it’s not real, but men, women, children…dead…forever. There were screaming mothers yanking their children from the water, frantically performing CPR. We wept with joy at the children who finally coughed and emptied their lungs, knowing they were brought back from the dead. We wept in agony for the children who desperately clung to the battered body of their parent who was just too broken to be brought back.
Finally we went “home”, utterly beat up and discouraged. How could we possibly make a difference? These people had been through so much. We were just four Americans, we were nothing in the wake of such devastation. Finally I snapped out of it. “Let’s do what we came here to do guys!” There was some confusion to this statement, because we didn’t actually know what we would be doing before we arrived. It wasn’t until we got to the village that we found out we would be building shelters.
But no matter what our task was going to be, I had known from the beginning what we were really there to do. “We’re here to bring hope.” Hope. The word was like the bright beam of a lighthouse offering warmth and safety in the bleakest of storms. We went to bed excited, and woke up with a mission.
The following day we had breakfast at the pastor’s house then rode over to the village. It was shocking to see the faces of the people before they saw us arriving. Never had I seen so many living people look so dead. Once they saw us, they smiled and called out, welcoming us. But I knew that wasn’t the norm.
We got right to work, four of us trying to build the simplest of shelters. Four walls, one doorway, one window, always facing the sea. The ocean, which used to be the source of life for these fisherman and their families, now a source of terror.
I noticed the villagers all stood around watching us work. At this rate we would be lucky if we got one shelter built in the four days we had to work. I asked our host how to say a couple words in the native tongue, come, and thank you. I called to the two boys who were obviously the leaders of the children. They were around 12 years old, both of them lost both their parents and were taken in by other villagers.
I demonstrated to the boys that I “needed” them to hold the board while I nailed it. For the next two hours these boys became my personal helpers. We carried boards together, they held each board in place while I nailed it up. I even let them take a turn at nailing.
We left for lunch, and when we returned, the boys were proudly each holding a hammer, a group of 15 children behind them waiting for their turn to help. Soon we had jobs for each of the children, sweeping the foundation of the house that used to be there before we began building around it, holding the carpenter’s square (which we all called triangle to make it easier to ask for) as we drew our lines, passing the pencil between the adults. In fact the kids were having so much fun, that it had the desired effect on the adults.
By the end of the day, we had all the men of the village helping as well.
When we arrived the next morning, it was a village of very different people. Even before they saw us, their faces had a softness to them that had not been there the day before. They knew something was different too. When we arrived they wanted to give us tea (which was powdered Tang, not hot, something we weren’t supposed to drink because of the risk of the water being contaminated, but that we couldn’t refuse).
We struggled to contain our emotions as the villagers went from the shambles of one house to another, looking for chairs that weren’t broken, teacups and saucers. They had practically nothing, yet wanted to honor us with what they could find.
From that morning on we all worked as one team. In three days we built FIVE shelters. It wasn’t because my team was so amazing, it was because the people of the village had hope. They knew that they could accomplish great things by working together. They knew that they were survivors and they could now get through anything.
That’s my prayer for the people of Japan. I know there are a lot of financial and physical needs facing them right now. But I think their greatest need is hope, and that is my greatest prayer for them.
Now for the comfort food! I have to put all my pictures in this post because I’m just so proud of them! I tackled two of the hardest foods to photograph, white food and casseroles.
I think this is Eric’s new favorite casserole. I love it because not only is it easy and oh so comforting, but it’s also very friendly to a lot of dietary restrictions. It’s vegetarian, gluten free, and it’s replacing the typical pasta in macaroni and cheese with a non starchy carb so diabetes friendly.
I bought a cauliflower the other day because I have some cauliflower seeds to plant and was wondering what I would make with the cauliflower if it grew well. I realized I’ve never actually bought a cauliflower before! We ate it a lot as kids, cooked with cheese sauce poured on it or raw with ranch dressing for dipping. But as an adult I never bought it.
After the success of this recipe, I’m thinking of quadrupling my garden space set aside for cauliflower!
Anyway, whether you’re dealing with working through an emotional experience, or simply worn out from a busy day, here’s the comfort food you can eat without feeling guilty later.
Cheesy and creamy, even better the second day. Enjoy, my friends!
Cauliflower Macaroni and Cheese
Ingredients
- 1 small head cauliflower
- 1 cup 2% milk
- 1/4 cup cream cheese
- 1 1/2 cups shredded cheddar cheese
- 1/4 cup light sour cream
- 1/4 tsp garlic powder
- to taste salt and pepper
- 3 TBS melted butter
- 2/3 cup Panko bread crumbs
- 1/2 cup chopped fresh parsley
- 1/4 cup fresh grated parmesan
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 400 degrees.
- Cut cauliflower into small macaroni sized pieces (florets and stems) and place in a casserole dish.
- Roast cauliflower for 15-20 minutes, until the edges are golden and it is easily pierced with a fork.
- While cauliflower is roasting, fill a saucepan with the milk, cream cheese and shredded cheddar. Heat on medium high.
- Slowly whisk the cheese as it melts until sauce is well mixed. Add sour cream to thicken. Stir in garlic powder, salt and pepper to taste.
- Remove roasted cauliflower from oven and pour cheese sauce over cauliflower. Mix evenly.
- Combine melted butter, breadcrumbs, parsley and parmesan. Spread over the cauliflower.
- Roast uncovered in the oven for 15-20 minutes, until crumbs are golden brown and cheese is bubbling.
Nutrition Information:
Yield:
4Serving Size:
1Amount Per Serving: Calories: 471Total Fat: 34gSaturated Fat: 20gTrans Fat: 1gUnsaturated Fat: 11gCholesterol: 95mgSodium: 763mgCarbohydrates: 23gFiber: 3gSugar: 6gProtein: 19g
Nutrition information is an estimate only.
Lovely post, and a reminder that hope and goodwill is needed as much as our donations. I’m enjoying your recipes – I love the intersection of healthy, frugal and delicious!
Thanks so much Megan. Glad you stopped by! I’ve enjoyed reading your stories and thoughts on motherhood.
Thanks Diana for your story of hope. Can’t wait to make this recipe with Cauliflower and have my family try it. Yum
Thanks Kelly, can’t wait to hear what they think!
I often mix cauliflower and macaroni to bump up the nutrition of our comfort food. I like your idea of doing the cauliflower alone like a gratin.
I haven’t found a lot of success growing cauliflower in central Ohio. They take up a good amount of room and require some tending to keep the florets sweet and white.
Yeah, I’m not sure how well they’ll work here in Washington either. I’m planting all kinds of things this year, flying by the seat of my pants. Hopefully I will have a few success stories to share!
This looks terrific. My family also loves roasted cauliflower. The crispy brown bit get faught over!
Thank you for sharing your story. Our family is extremely concerned for our daughter’s college roommate who is in Tokyo. Her family is in Yokohama and she is in Tokyo, She has been able tp communicate via email and we have her and her family in our thoughts and prayers. Hope is absolutely the key.
I’m so glad that she’s okay Karen. I have several friends in Japan and am so relieved that they are alright.
I’m definitely going to try just roasting cauliflower sometime, the bits I ate before mixing in the cheese sauce were delicious!
Thanks for sharing the recipie and about diaster relief.
Your post made me cry! We moved back from Japan a bit over a year ago and everyone we know there is safe, but the devastation breaks my heart. Hope is just what the country needs. Your trip to Sri Lanka sounds like a miracle and gives me goose bumps! I can just feel the Wind of the Holy Spirit there with you.
Thank you Abigail, it was a truly life changing experience. I think there’s book there one day!
I made your recipe for cauliflower and cheese on Monday night, and our reactions were mixed. My husband really liked it. I thought that it was good, but not quite a standalone dinner. I think it would be a great side dish with brauts or kielbasa.
Totally understandable, my husband and I tend to really like a big hearty vegetable dish for dinner sometimes. But I realize that some people prefer their vegetables as a side. I think it would be great with brauts! Thanks so much Lisa 🙂
What an awesome story. I really enjoyed the casserole just thinking of it as a casserole, not as mac and cheese, which always has to have tuna and peas!
This isn’t gluten free. Panko bread crumbs aren’t gluten free.
Hi KD, sorry if the way it’s categorized was confusing. I always put the notes for making a recipe gluten free at the end of the recipe. I recommend using crushed up rice chex in place of panko. I’m working on a tags system to help differentiate between gluten free and gluten free adaptable recipes. I have several friends and family members with celiac disease and take it very seriously.
They are now recommending that anyone with Celiac disease to avoid all grains because they all have protein that acts the same as gluten. At least this is the case for ones like me… my substitute that I am going to use is ground up pork rinds/skins … I think this will be great and I am looking forward to making this soon! Thanks for sharing this recipe
Such a heart wrenching account! Wanted to make something with cauliflower and this dish really intrigued me. Glad to have stumbled on your blog. It takes a lot of courage to see effects of disaster first hand and a big heart to help people rebuild their lives. You should really be proud of yourself! We all wish to help others but only few do it and those people, according to me, are heroes! You obviously are one!
Wow thank you so much Shumaila, your comment really made my day!
I am going to make this tonight- I’m so excited- thank you for this !
You’re welcome! Let me know how it turned out.
This was another delicious Dianasaur Dish – hmmm, “Delicious Dianasaur Dishes” – name for a cookbook…I loved this dish, really hearty and fewer calories than actual “mac ‘n cheese.” When the cauliflower pieces are cut small (as you indicate), one really does get the sense and texture of “mac ‘n cheese” – very clever, Diana! Thank you!
me from sri lanka……..wery good u………….
Oh my goodness this looks incredible! I’ve been in a cauliflower rut, I usually just roast them or eat it raw in salad, but this is exciting! I love anything that lets me add cheddar and cream cheese 🙂
Thanks Amanda! I get excited by it every time I make it 🙂
Be careful! This will not be gluten free if you use regular panko bread crumbs! Gluten free panko are very hard to find so you will have to use something else. Otherwise I cant wait to try this!
Diana, I don’t know how I missed this recipe before but I’m so excited to try this! Your story was so beautiful and heart wrenching. Thank you for taking the time to go there and serve and for sharing your amazing experience. May God bless you as weave his great love into all you do.