Sunday, August 10, 2025

Roast Chicken Bacon Cauliflower Bolognese

This roast chicken, bacon and cauliflower Bolognese is rich and flavorful, putting your leftover roast chicken to the best use, a whole new delicious meal!

Food Lust People Love: This roast chicken, bacon and cauliflower Bolognese is rich and flavorful, putting your leftover roast chicken to the best use, a whole new delicious meal!

I must confess, and I don’t think I’m alone here, but I am generally incapable of going to Costco and not buying one of their roasted chickens. They are so much bigger and cheaper than grocery store chickens so I know that there will always be leftovers to make another dish. Often more than one! 

Our favorite is chicken salad with hardboiled eggs but it is followed on closely by any sauce to serve over pasta, sometimes creamy and/or cheesy, sometimes tomato based. And, then, of course, I must simmer the bones for stock/soup.

Honestly, priced at $4.99 since 2009, there is no bigger bargain that can be stretched to make a few meals than a Costco roast chicken.

Note to my friend Wendy and others who are vegetarian or have vegetarian family friends and family they cook for: Skip the bacon and set aside some sauce before you add the chicken and everyone can eat together! 

Roast Chicken Bacon Cauliflower Bolognese

If you have a little more or a little less chicken, if your cauliflower is a bit smaller or larger, it’s all good. This sauce is very forgiving on amounts and will still taste wonderful. P.S. Just to be clear, I am NOT being paid to talk up Costco. I just love that store, its staff members and their inclusive ideology.

Ingredients
10 1/2 oz or 300g leftover chicken (weight without bones or skin)
1/2 head cauliflower (about 1 lb or 450g)
1 medium onion, peeled and finely chopped
3 cloves garlic, peeled and crushed
1/2 cup or 60g cooked real bacon crumbles
1/2 cup or 120ml red wine
2 cans (14.5oz or 411g) crushed or petite diced tomatoes (no salt added)
1 can (6 oz or 170g) tomato paste
2 teaspoon Italian seasonings
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 bay leaf
Fine sea salt
Freshly ground pepper

To serve:
1 lb or 450g of your favorite pasta, cooked al dente to package instructions. 
Grated Parmesan
Chopped parsley

Method
Pull the chicken apart into pieces. I like to make most of them a bit bigger than bite-sized because then they don’t completely shred while cooking. Set side. 


Blitz the cauliflower, including stalks, in your food processor. You may have to do this in two batches, depending on the size of your processor. We are looking for fluffy pieces like cauliflower rice, not puree. 


Chop and peel your onion. Finely chop it or since the food processor is already out, go ahead and chop the onion in it. No need to wash it between uses.


Smash the garlic on a cutting board with a knife. Give the garlic a couple of casual chops as well. 


In a large skillet or Dutch oven, fry the bacon crumbles over a medium heat for a couple of minutes. 


Add in the onion, garlic and cauliflower. Sauté until the vegetables have softened. I find this goes faster with a lid on but make sure to remove it and stir often. 


There’s a lot of moisture in the cauliflower and onion but it can still catch if your lid isn’t really tight fitting. Add a little water if you need to stop it from scorching. 


Add in the red wine and cook for a few minutes. 


Add in both cans of tomatoes along with one can filled with water. Stir.


Add in the can of tomato paste and the Italian seasonings. Stir until the paste has dissolved. 


Add in the bay leaf and the baking soda. Stir well them simmer over a low heat, covered, for at least 45 minutes, stirring occasionally. If you have more time, a longer simmer won’t hurt.


Add in the leftover roast chicken and simmer, covered, for a further 20 minutes. 


Taste for salt and add some if necessary. We are watching our salt, so I rarely add any in a meaty Bolognese. Even the “no salt added” tomatoes have natural sodium (adding 140mg to the sauce) and, of course, the regular tomato paste adds about 100mg. In this case, the cauliflower is pretty bland so I think it needs some salt. But you do you. 

Give the whole pot a good few grinds of black pepper and stir. 


Serve over your favorite cooked pasta with Parmesan and a sprinkle of parsley, if desired. 

Food Lust People Love: This roast chicken, bacon and cauliflower Bolognese is rich and flavorful, putting your leftover roast chicken to the best use, a whole new delicious meal!

Enjoy!

It’s Sunday FunDay and today we are sharing one pot recipes. Many thanks to our host, Amy of Amy's Cooking Adventures| Check out the links below.


 
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Food Lust People Love: This roast chicken, bacon and cauliflower Bolognese is rich and flavorful, putting your leftover roast chicken to the best use, a whole new delicious meal!

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