FoodRef · Recipe

Warm Caramelized Onion and Kale Dip

5.8/ 10Mixed
Median across 11 diets

4 approve · 2 caution · 5 avoid

Controversy2.8
Consensus2.8Divisive

Standard deviation of the 11 scores. Higher = the diets disagree more.

The verdicts

Disapprove (5)

  • Carnivore
    1.0
  • Paleo
    2.5
  • Keto
    3.2
  • Low-FODMAP
    2.0
  • Whole30
    2.2

Caution (2)

  • Zone
    5.8
  • GLP-1
    6.4

Approve (4)

  • DASH
    7.4
  • Mediterranean
    7.6
  • Vegan
    9.8
  • Anti-Inflammatory
    7.8

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. If you have a medium-sized (under 7 inches) cast iron skillet, heat it up. Otherwise, grab a regular skillet. Warm the olive oil in a skillet over medium heat. Add the sliced onions with a pinch of salt, and stir.
  2. Reduce the heat to medium-low. Let the onions cook, stirring only every few minutes, until completely softened, about 15 minutes. Continue cooking and stirring infrequently until onions have turned golden brown and take on a sweet taste, another 15-25 minutes, depending on the exact size and temperature of your pan and onions. I normally do all of the rest of the prep for this recipe while the onions caramelize.
  3. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. If not using a cast iron skillet to cook and bake in, prepare a lightly greased, small baking dish or ramekin.
  4. Increase the heat to medium. Add your shredded kale to the pan and stir well. Continue to cook and stir it until it wilts, turns bright green, and reduces significantly in size, about 4-5 minutes. Add the remaining 1 tbsp of olive oil and the minced garlic, and cook for 30 seconds or until fragrant.
  5. Add the dry ingredients (tapioca starch through dried oregano) and stir well, until they coat the onions and kale and start to smell a little nutty. Immediately add the non-dairy milk, the white wine if using, and the miso. Stir frequently, until the mixture starts to thicken, bubble, and look a little bit stretchy. Continue stirring until smooth, then remove from the heat.
  6. If not using cast iron, transfer the mixture to the prepared dish, and bake for 15 minutes to get hot throughout.
  7. Turn on the broiler to high if you have one, and cook for 3 more minutes. Alternately, cook at the same temperature for 6-7 more minutes - until the mixture starts to brown on top. Remove from the oven and serve hot with crackers, chips, etc.
  8. Leftovers keep well in the fridge and can be eaten warm or cold. I enjoyed mine spread on a bagel!

Diet-by-diet

DASHApproved

Plant-forward with kale, onions, and olive oil and only 1/2 tsp added salt plus miso, keeping sodium moderate. Saturated fat is low since it uses non-dairy milk.

MediterraneanApproved

Strong use of olive oil, alliums, leafy greens, and a splash of white wine fits the pattern well; nutritional yeast and non-dairy milk are neutral but it lacks fish or legumes.

VeganApproved

Entirely plant-based: vegetables, olive oil, non-dairy milk, nutritional yeast, miso, and tapioca starch with no animal products.

CarnivoreAvoid

Almost entirely plant ingredients with no meat, eggs, or dairy, which is incompatible with carnivore.

PaleoAvoid

Onions, garlic, kale, and olive oil are paleo-friendly, but tapioca starch, nutritional yeast, miso (soy), and non-dairy milk typically aren't.

KetoAvoid

Caramelized onions and tapioca starch contribute significant carbs, and 3 onions plus starch push net carbs too high for keto despite the olive oil.

Low-FODMAPAvoid

High in FODMAPs due to 3 onions, garlic, and likely soy-based miso/non-dairy milk—essentially a worst case for this diet.

Whole30Avoid

Disallows tapioca starch as a baked starch swap, nutritional yeast in a cheese-mimicking context, alcohol (wine), miso (soy/legume), and many non-dairy milks.

ZoneCaution

Carbs from onions and starch dominate over protein, which is minimal; fat from olive oil is moderate, so macros only loosely approximate Zone balance.

Kale, olive oil, onions, garlic, and miso provide polyphenols and prebiotics with no inflammatory oils or refined sugar.

GLP-1Caution

Good fiber from kale and onions and modest fat support satiety, but protein is low and the dish is typically eaten with chips or bread, limiting its GLP-1 alignment.

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