I found a recipe on line that I adapted to what I had in the kitchen, I used a medium sized cauliflower from Stop & Shop's organic Nature's Way. You don;t have to parboil it but it does help in creating a tender middle in the florets. It also makes it easier to pull apart.
Parboiling just takes five minutes .Boil water and put stripped cauliflower in the water.
After, to stop it from overcooking, plunge into an ice bath.
I added two ice trays worth of ice cubes to "shock" the cauliflower. This stops it from cooking more from the residual heat.
Now it's onto breading. I used a recipe from The Foodie Eats site./It's half a cup of water,1/2 cup of almond milk and 1/3 cup flour. I added two and a half teaspoons of Pereg's savory halwaij spice mix.
This is a traditional Yemeni spice that will be competing with the already trendy za'atar spice mix.
The floret looked a bit anemic so I decided to do a double dip. First a dip in the wet batter then dredging in a mix of halaij, flour , salt and pepper.
As you can see, it's a messy,messy job. Be prepared to get your fingers batter dipped too.
Now for air frying.
Set it at 350 F
For fifteen minutes.
This is the finished product. It's not as good with as my Mom's breaded and fried version. Thanks to the halaij it had an Indian curry vibe . The spice contains turmeric which gave the florets that nice golden glow. It had the sufficient crunch. I would make it a bit differently - possibly with onion powder and definitely more salt and pepper. The next time will be with panko crumbs.The most noticeable change is that I didn't have any stomach problems afterwards.
If you want a healthier fried cauliflower, this is the recipe for you. You can add a dipping sauce or just eat the florets plain.It's a different spin on my family's classic.