deborahjross: (prancing horse)
[personal profile] deborahjross
I love winter squashes. They're delicious, versatile, and packed with nutrients. Some varieties you can find in markets pretty much all year round -- acorn and butternut, sometimes chunks of banana squash or Hubbard, with specialty or health food markets carrying kabocha and a few others, too. Others are seasonal. Pumpkins are easiest to find in the fall, and I think it's a tragedy that so many end up rotting when their decorative days are over. Delicata doesn't store well, so grab it while you can. Then there are the heirloom varieties, oh my. We've hardly begun our exploration of them.

Favorites so far: buttercup, carnival, blue Hubbard, Tennessee sweet potato squash (with a delicate but distinct sweet potato flavor); pumpkins like Cinderella or Musquee de Provence, small sugar pumpkins. Not so fond of tromboncini, but that could be that it's better as a tender summer squash.

This year, our garden produced about 200 lbs of winter squash. A large fraction of that was the Tennessee sweet potato squash, as the plants are as prolific as they are robust. Then we saw a stand of pumpkins that looked like Musqee de Provence and a similar, smaller white variety, at a local market. They were marked down to $1 each, although many of them weighed 15 lbs or more. I suspect they had been displayed for Halloween and never sold. We bought almost all of them and have been working our way through the enormous pile. The pumpkins had been roughly handled and set on concrete, so we had to scramble to use the damaged ones first. If the skins are intact and you wipe them down with dilute bleach to kill mold spores, they'll happily keep all winter.

There's only so much squash soup that you can eat, so I've been looking for other ways to use it. Our smaller squashes -- buttercup, butternut, etc. -- are delicious as a vegetable, baked and scooped out of the shell at the table. It turns out that diced winter squash goes beautifully in a variety of recipes, everything from lasagna and enchiladas to vegetable soup. Even oatmeal! Here are some additional discoveries:

Rice Cooker Polenta With Squash (4 servings)

1 c. polenta (coarse-ground corn meal)

3 c. water

1-2 c. diced (1/2" cubes) winter squash

1-2 tsp sugar if desired, depending on sweetness of squash

pinch of salt

Put everything in the rice cooker, stir and set on Normal. After about half an hour, stir again. For additional creaminess, let it sit on the Keep Warm setting for a couple of hours.

Pasta With Sausage and Squash (4 servings)

6 oz uncooked spirals or other pasta (we use Tinkyada Brown Rice Spirals since my husband doesn't tolerate wheat)

a little olive oil (1 -2 Tbsp)

2-4 sliced, cooked sausages of your choice (we like Aidell's smoked chicken varieties)

2 c thinly sliced winter squash (about 1/4" thick, 1 to 1 1/2" square or rectangle)

1 sliced red bell pepper

1 sliced onion (optional)

1/2 c. sliced celery (optional)

Cook the pasta according to directions. While it's cooking, warm the oil in a deep saucepan that has a lid. Saute the vegetables for a few minutes, then add some water or white wine, starting with 1/4 c, cover and let steam on low/medium heat. A few minutes before the pasta is done, dump in the sausages, stir, and cover. You should have enough liquid to make a sauce. Add the cooked pasta, toss, taste and add salt and/or pepper to taste. You can top it with grated Romano or Parmesan cheese.

Date: 2014-04-02 09:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] desperance.livejournal.com
Pumpkin risotto is also a classic; try it with butternut or other squash, and with chestnuts or toasted walnuts, and/or chestnut mushrooms, and/or and/or...

Date: 2014-04-03 12:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] deborahjross.livejournal.com
Oh yes, risotto. I'm so lazy, I could never stand over the stove that long, but Rose is into risotto...maybe there's a rice cooker method? Mushroom chestnuts, a new variety?

Date: 2014-04-03 12:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] desperance.livejournal.com
Oh, sorry - "chestnut mushrooms" was a descent into unalloyed Englishness. Over here you call them crimini.

I have seen rice-cooker and other risotto recipes where all the liquid goes in at once; never tried them myself, because putting all the liquid in at once seems to me to fly in the very face of what a risotto is all about; it's the constant boiling dry and remoistening that draws out the starch of the grains. Or so I am led to believe. (And as you know, I really don't mind standing over a stove; besides which, you can actually walk away and do something else and go back, between ladlefuls.)

Date: 2014-04-03 02:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] deborahjross.livejournal.com
I love that name for criminis! I shall commence using it apace.

My problem is that I think I'm going to come back in a few minutes and then cats or story intervene and things get burned. This has become a running gag in both past and present households. So I do best with things that either turn themselves off or that I can go away, set the timer for an hour, and come back to something edible.

I agree with you about the need to stir risotto. If I understand correctly, that's where the creaminess comes from, slowly rubbing off layers of rice starch.

Date: 2014-04-03 12:37 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] deborahjross.livejournal.com
Coming up next -- butternut squash spoon bread!

Date: 2014-04-03 12:54 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] desperance.livejournal.com
Ooh now. Do you have a recipe for that?

Date: 2014-04-03 02:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] deborahjross.livejournal.com
I do indeed. Just need to check the squash quantity.

Where has spoon bread been all my life? (I do know the answer: it's not a typical part of a Jewish diet!)

Date: 2014-04-03 02:52 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] desperance.livejournal.com
Nor, I may say, an English one. So far I've only read about it: never met one in the flesh. In the skillet. Whatever.

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Deborah J. Ross

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