Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Peel and grate (like with one of those cheese graters on the big side) all the veggies (turnips, parsnips, sweet taters (not the onions...yet)).
 - Place all the grated vegetables in a bowl and toss in the TWO teaspoon of salt and mix all about. NOTE: Not all veggies are created the same. You will need to limit this to about 8 cups of the shredded three: Parsnips, Turnip Root, and Sweet Potato.
 - Take this salted-and-grated mixture and place it in a colander over a bowl to catch the drainage from the weeping root veggies. The salt will “pull” some of the water out of the grated root vegetables kind of like making brine when you make sauerkraut.
 - Crank that oven up to 425°F / 218°C to preheat.
 - Put two or more tablespoons of olive oil in that 12 inch cast iron skillet and stick it in the oven to preheat. You wanted to get wicked hot!
 - Finely chop up those two onions and get them ready.
 - Finely chop the fresh thyme and get it ready too.
 - Get your 1/4 cup of flour, the teaspoon of black pepper, and the other bit of salt and mix that together.
 - Beat up those six eggs.
 - Squeeze those salted root veggies and try to get as much of the liquid out as you can.
 - Now mix everything together (including that other teaspoon of salt) and make sure it's all mixed up real good. This is your “mixture.”
 - By now that 12 inch cast iron skillet is wicked hot and you may see a little smoke coming off of it when you pull it out of the oven. That's perfect.
 - Pour over your “mixture” into the very hot cast iron skillet and smooth it out real good (that cast iron will be sizzlin' along the edges). Then brush the top with a little bit of oil (or a lot of oil) and then stick it in the oven.
 - Turn the oven down to 375°F / 191°C. Let It bake for about an hour or until you stick a knife in it and it comes out kinda clean (like making a pie)
 - It’ll be all cooked in about (TIME TO COOK HERE).
 
Notes
NOTE: Not all veggies are created the same. You will need to limit this to about 8 cups of the shredded three: Parsnips, Turnip Root, and Sweet Potato. A medium sweet potato is not as "small" as a medium turnip root. You could attempt to "even" things out by creating a mixture of 1/3, 1/3, 1/3 but this isn't meant to be an exact science. Just go with what you have, mix it all up, and measure out about 8 cups of the shredded roots. You could do 10 cups if you have extra but adjust your other ingredients accordingly. 
Those sweet potatoes may "dominate" the mixture if your "mediums" look anything like my "mediums." Just experiment with this recipe until you get the hang of it.
Trial and error...it's the JOY of cooking!
