Food Fruits & Vegetables Hearty Vegetable Recipes from Midwest Chef Abra Berens By Midwest Living editors Midwest Living editors Midwest Living's experienced editors create best-in-class travel, lifestyle, food, home and garden content you won't find anywhere else. We're loudly, proudly Midwestern, and we're passionate about helping our audience explore and create through award-winning storytelling. Midwest Living's Editorial Guidelines Updated on January 11, 2020 Trending Videos Photo: Brie Passano Michigan chef Abra Berens, author of Ruffage: A Practical Guide to Vegetables, shares some of her wholesome, vegetable-focused recipes. 01 of 08 Comfort food now Abra Berens. EE Berger In 2009, chef Abra Berens was working on a 2-acre farm, a venture she had started with a friend. To save cash, they ate what they grew, which sounds romantic but translated to a ceaseless parade of carrots, kale and eggs. Out of necessity, Abra learned to coax different flavors and textures from each ingredient, to season them simply, to unlock and maximize their potential. "I was broke as hell," she writes in Ruffage: A Practical Guide to Vegetables (Chronicle, $35), "but I was eating some of the best meals of my life." After she put the farm to bed for the season, she took a job at a pie shop and traded veggies for all the rich, sugary, indulgent foods she'd missed—and lasted just two weeks before fleeing to the produce aisle. She remembers roasting a pile of root vegetables to eat with greens and lemony, garlicky mayonnaise. "Popeye after a can of spinach never came back so strongly," she recalls. "I love meat and dairy and sweets, but [now] I know that it is the vegetables that keep me together." That year shaped Abra's career. Today she is resident chef at Granor Farm in Three Oaks, Michigan, creating menus for farm dinners and recipes to share with Granor's CSA shareholders. That work fed her cookbook, a hefty tome organized by vegetable. Abra's techniques are simple, her ingredient combinations surprising and her recipe variations endless. Some dishes are fully plant-based, but many include cheese, eggs, chicken, pork or fish. And olive oil flows (or glugs, to use her onomatopoeic measurement of choice) like water. Abra isn't interested in demonizing any food groups. She just knows most of us feel happier and healthier when we eat our vegetables. It's not macaroni and cheese, but it's comfort of a different flavor—and we're all in. 02 of 08 Winter Squash, Mushrooms and Arugula with Parmesan Brie Passano This dish hovers between stir-fry and salad— both light and wholesomely satisfying. Chef Abra Berens cooks squash and mushrooms in a skillet, developing great caramelization in minutes. The recipe comes from her book Ruffage: A Practical Guide to Vegetables. View Recipe 03 of 08 Roasted Broccoli with Wheat Berries, Blue Cheese and Cranberries Brie Passano The birds fly south. The bears hibernate. Where does broccoli salad go for the winter? Right here, says Abra Berens in her book Ruffage: A Practical Guide to Vegetables. Enjoy it fresh from the oven and at your desk the next day. View Recipe 04 of 08 Peperonata with Potatoes and Egg Brie Passano This classic Italian braised-pepper stew freezes beautifully. Abra Berens suggests heaping it over potatoes (or even pasta, polenta or couscous) and topping it with a poached or boiled egg. This recipe is from her book Ruffage: A Practical Guide to Vegetables. View Recipe 05 of 08 Green Salad with Chicken and Marinated Peas Brie Passano In her book Ruffage: A Practical Guide to Vegetables, Abra called this recipe Green Salad with Marinated Peas and Yesterday's Chicken because she makes it the day after roasting a chicken. A supermarket rotisserie bird makes things even simpler. View Recipe 06 of 08 Shaved Cabbage Salad with Apples, Ham and Mustard Brie Passano Ham adds just enough smoky richness to chef Abra Berens' vibrant salad to elevate a simple slaw to a lunch-worthy meal or a potluck stunner. Find other great salads in her book Ruffage: A Practical Guide to Vegetables. View Recipe 07 of 08 Roasted Cauliflower and Tomatoes with Olives and Garlic Breadcrumbs Brie Passano The details that elevate this recipe from a typical roasted dish are the briny olives and crispy breadcrumbs. Any olive works, but chef Abra Berens, author of Ruffage: A Practical Guide to Vegetables, uses a bright green Sicilian variety called Castelvetrano. View Recipe 08 of 08 Braised Green Beans with Tomatoes and Lentils Brie Passano This is a lazy Sunday—or tired Tuesday—recipe from chef Abra Berens' book Ruffage: A Practical Guide to Vegetables. Don't be alarmed by cooking beans this long. Make it vegetarian by using vegetable broth and skipping the Parmesan. View Recipe Was this page helpful? Thanks for your feedback! Tell us why! Other Submit