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19 times puree was the smooth operator

Puree adds creaminess and whether you lean into puree, dip or sauce, we're backing these recipe delights.

Skordalia: purple-skinned white sweet potato and garlic mash

Source: Rob Palmer

If the word puree has you thinking of baby food (or, worse, hospital food), you're in for a real treat. 

Pureeing your veggies or beans until silky smooth can really change up what your dish is, well, dishing up. Don't believe us? Think of a creamy mashed potato proudly topping a pie. Or scooping a spoon of pea puree to add to your mouthful of steak. Or how about hummus? The world is a better place because of hummus.

So, here we go, mashing and smashing and sieving our way to pureed perfection.
Grilled broccolini and miso white bean puree
Add some grilled broccolini then finish with parmesan and a squeeze of lemon. Source: Adam Liaw
Eat your beans via a white bean and miso mix-up. All this nutrition-packed puree needs is a little seasoning to finish.
Roasted Spanish mackerel with broccoli puree and crispy capers
No restaurant-quality dish is complete without a colourful puree. Source: Benito Martin
Don't just top your puree with broccoli, make it. Broccoli puree is proof that any vegetable is superior when in puree form. Especially when it's served with a perfectly glazed Spanish mackerel.
Cauliflower puree
Cauliflower puree may be smooth and silky, but its deliciousness encourages rough and ready bowl-licking. Source: Petrina Tinslay
Cauliflower is the puree du jour and for good reason: it tastes just as good as mashed potato with far fewer carbs. (And if for some reason you're now craving slow-roasted balsamic lamb shanks, see here.)
Paris mashed potatoes
Potato mash is both satisfying and easy to make. Source: Chris Abbott
Surely a good potato mash is the champion of all purees? Guillaume Brahimi certainly thinks so.
Pan-roasted snapper with fennel puree
The slight aniseed flavour of fennel works wonderfully with most types of seafood. Source: Benito Martin
This happy snapper shows why fennel puree works so well with seafood. The slight bite of aniseed pairs so well with the sweetness of the fish.
Braised duck leg
Naturally you'll be serving your blood orange puree with duck. Source: Benito Martin
A puree is how you take full-flavour advantage of blood oranges. Simmer for two hours, remove seeds, then blitz them, skin and all.
Curried sweet potato mash
Slow-roasted sweet potato mashed with butter, yoghurt and spices for a creamy and warming side. Source: Adam Liaw
Naturally, sweet potatoes make excellent puree (because they are good at everything). Here Adam Liaw has zhuzhed them with curry spices, making them twice as nice.
Lemon roast chicken with parsnip puree
Now that's the kind of bed a lemon roast chicken deserves. Source: Petrina Tinslay
The darling of early 2000s kitchens, parsnip puree is sweet, creamy and extra-silky. It goes well with everything, but especially good ol' roast chicken.
Skordalia: purple-skinned white sweet potato and garlic mash
You can also make skordalia with white beans or even bread. Source: Rob Palmer
With its garlicky, lemony heart, Greece's skordalia is potato puree done right. It makes a wonderful starter served on rounds of sourdough toast, or as a side with grilled souvlaki or roast beetroot.
Broad bean puree with shanklish
Mixed with shanklish, broad bean puree makes a fabulous party appetiser. Source: Brett Stevens
When is a puree a dip? This broad bean puree will tell you that's an entirely moot question.
Hummus and babaganoush dips
Try serving balsamic roasted vegetables on a bed of hummus and you'll soon understand it's appeal across all cuisines. Source: Tammi Kwok
Chickpea puree (aka hummus) has to be one of the most beloved purees of all. It would probably have to fight mashed potato for the gold, but we reckon it would just get over the line. Baba ganoush would run a very close third.
Bacon, peas and eggs
Pea puree is somehow even greener than the peas themselves. Source: Adam Liaw
For a fresh take on your standard bacon and egg breaky, try baking the eggs in a pea puree and then topping with bacon and cheese. Yes, peas!
Apple puree
Apples, just glorious apples. Source: Pixabay
A classic of the puree genre, apple feels as pure as puree gets. So, yes, this is one puree that could be for babies - if there was any leftover.

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