Full nutrition details in the recipe card below ↓
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More about Joe →Roasted until golden, fragrant with turmeric and warm spice this Anti Inflammatory Cauliflower Sweet Potato Bowl hits that sweet spot between hearty and genuinely good for you. It’s the kind of bowl that actually fills you up without weighing you down.
Spring always makes me want to reset my weeknight routine lighter than what I was cooking in February, but still something worth sitting down for. I first built this bowl back when I was deep in testing roasted vegetable combinations, trying to get that caramelized edge on cauliflower without losing its texture. After dozens of rounds in the test kitchen, the trick that stuck was high heat, dry florets, and giving everything room to breathe on the pan. That’s what makes it taste like a restaurant bowl not a sad desk lunch.

Anti Inflammatory Cauliflower Sweet Potato Bowl Warm Satisfying Real Nourishment You Need
Ingredients
Notes
- Store the roasted vegetable and quinoa mixture separately from the yogurt. Warm the bowls in the microwave and add the cumin yogurt just before serving.

Why You’ll Love This Bowl
This is the kind of dinner that feels like a reset without feeling like a sacrifice. After a long day, you can get it on the table in under an hour roasted vegetables, a fluffy grain base, and a creamy yogurt drizzle that makes every bite feel intentional. It’s low effort, minimal cleanup, and doesn’t sit heavy exactly what spring weeknights call for.
The Anti-Inflammatory Cauliflower Sweet Potato Bowl earns its name through every layer. Curry powder, paprika, and cumin aren’t just flavor builders they’re some of the most researched spice combinations for supporting a low-inflammation lifestyle.
What Goes Into It
Every ingredient in this bowl is doing real work. Here’s what makes each component matter:
- Cauliflower and sweet potato roasted at high heat until caramelized and tender, they form the hearty base
- Red quinoa cooked in water or vegetable broth for protein and satisfying texture
- Kale optional, but worth it; the quinoa wilts it perfectly without any extra effort
- Fresh parsley, lemon zest, and lemon juice combined with olive oil into a bright finishing drizzle
- Pepitas roasted and salted, they add crunch and contrast to the soft vegetables
- Cumin yogurt Greek yogurt, tahini, lemon juice, cumin, salt, and pepper whisked into something creamy and cooling
How to Make It
The process moves in three parallel tracks roast the vegetables, simmer the quinoa, and mix the yogurt sauce so everything comes together at once.
- Preheat your oven to 425°F. Toss cauliflower florets and sweet potato cubes with 3 Tbsp. olive oil, curry powder, paprika, garlic powder, 1/2 tsp. salt, and black pepper. Spread on a rimmed baking sheet and roast 35 to 40 minutes, tossing once halfway through.
- Meanwhile, bring red quinoa, 2 cups of water or vegetable broth, and 1/4 tsp. salt to a boil. Reduce heat, cover, and simmer about 15 minutes until tender. Stir in kale if using, then keep covered.
- Whisk together the cumin yogurt: Greek yogurt, tahini, lemon juice, cumin, salt, and pepper. Add 1 Tbsp. water to loosen.
- Stir parsley, lemon zest, lemon juice, and remaining 2 Tbsp. olive oil together in a small bowl for your finishing drizzle.
- Divide quinoa into four bowls. Layer on the roasted vegetables, drizzle with parsley oil, add a spoonful of cumin yogurt, and finish with pepitas.
Pro Tip: Dry florets and a hot, uncrowded pan are what give you that roasted caramelized edge instead of steamed vegetables don’t skip that step.
Can You Make This Bowl Ahead of Time?
Yes, and it holds up well. Keep the roasted vegetables and quinoa together in an airtight container, and store the cumin yogurt separately so it stays fresh and creamy.
- Rewarm the grain and vegetable mixture in the microwave before serving
- Add the yogurt drizzle only after reheating it should go on cold
- Assembled bowls keep in the fridge for up to 4 days
Easy Swaps Worth Knowing
The recipe is flexible. Here are a few swaps that work without compromising the bowl:
- Swap red quinoa for white quinoa or brown rice if that’s what you have
- Use vegetable broth instead of water when cooking the quinoa for deeper flavor
- Swap kale for baby spinach it wilts even faster with the same method
- Plain low-fat Greek yogurt works in the cumin sauce if full-fat isn’t available
- Sunflower seeds can replace pepitas with a similar crunch
This Anti-Inflammatory Cauliflower Sweet Potato Bowl is built to adapt use what’s in your fridge and it still delivers.
FAQs ( Anti Inflammatory Cauliflower Sweet Potato Bowl )
Is roasted cauliflower and sweet potato anti-inflammatory?
Yes. This recipe uses curry powder, paprika, and garlic powder – spices well known for their anti-inflammatory properties. Combined with produce-packed vegetables, it makes a genuinely healing weekday meal.
What sauce goes on cauliflower sweet potato bowl?
This recipe uses a cumin yogurt made from Greek yogurt, tahini, fresh lemon juice, cumin, salt, and pepper. It’s creamy, tangy, and balances the roasted spices perfectly.
Can I add protein to cauliflower sweet potato bowl?
This dish already delivers 14g of protein per bowl from quinoa and Greek yogurt. You can add more protein on top – check your recipe card for any suggested additions.
How long to roast cauliflower and sweet potato for bowl?
Roast at 425 degrees F for 35 to 40 minutes, tossing once halfway through, until tender. That high heat is what gives the vegetables their golden, caramelized edges.
Can I meal prep cauliflower sweet potato bowls?
Yes. Store the roasted vegetables and quinoa mixture separately from the cumin yogurt. Rewarm the bowls in the microwave, then add the yogurt once warm.

One Bowl, Real Results
This Anti-Inflammatory Cauliflower Sweet Potato Bowl comes together in under an hour golden-edged vegetables, creamy cumin yogurt, and that bright parsley drizzle tying everything together. It’s deeply satisfying, genuinely nourishing, and far more flavorful than anything that roasts this easily has any right to be.
If there’s one thing to remember from this recipe, it’s the dry florets rule pat them down, give them space on the pan, and let that 425°F oven do its job. That’s the difference between caramelized and steamed, every single time. And if you’re working with what’s already in your fridge? White quinoa, baby spinach, sunflower seeds all solid swaps that hold up beautifully. Store the cumin yogurt separately, reheat the grain and vegetable base first, and you’ve got lunch sorted for the next four days without thinking twice.
If you make this bowl, drop a photo in the comments or tag us on Pinterest it’s always great to see how yours turns out. Did you go full kale, or sneak in some spinach? The small decisions are what make a recipe your own. Share this one with a friend who’s stuck in a dinner rut. Sometimes the right bowl at the right moment is all it takes to get back into a rhythm.