Skip to main content

Sautéed Vegetables—One Healthy, Nonfattening Bite After Another.

Cooks' Note

This is the authors’ favorite cooked vegetable dish. It is quick and easy to cook and once mastered really requires no measuring of quantities. The resulting flavors, while varying somewhat, will always be tasty and also nutritious.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    serves 4

Ingredients

1/2 cup olive or canola oil
2 cups of any combination of:
Broccoli, cut into florets
Green or red cabbage, shredded
Cauliflower, cut into florets
Peeled and cubed eggplant
Any color onion, sliced
White button, portobello, oyster, or shiitake mushrooms, sliced
Any color bell pepper, cored, seeded, and cut into thin strips
Yellow summer squash or zucchini, cubed or sliced
Ripe tomatoes, cut into wedges
3 cloves garlic, chopped (optional)
Garlic salt or salt to taste
2 tablespoons chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley
1 or 2 teaspoons low-sugar balsamic vinegar (1 gram sugar)
1/2 lemon

Preparation

  1. Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the vegetables of your choice, the garlic, if desired, and the garlic salt or salt. Stirring constantly, cook until vegetables turn limp, tender, or translucent, 5 to 8 minutes. Stir in the parsley and vinegar. Cook and stir for 1 to 2 minutes more. If desired, squeeze lemon juice over the vegetables just before serving.

Sugar Busters! Quick & Easy Cookbook
Read More
Like banana pudding cake and beer can chicken.
Turn humble onions into this thrifty yet luxe pasta dinner.
No grill needed for this just-charred-enough sweet and spicy chicken.
Filberts, goobers, scaly bark nuts: Explore the world beyond almonds in this guide.
Assembled right in the skillet, no bowls needed.
Like swordfish steaks with tomatoes and Peruvian-style tofu.
Loosely inspired by pasta Amatriciana, a few pounds of zucchini stand in for tomatoes.
Stir-frying slices makes this dinner doable on any given night.