Challenge #3: Squash

Tuesday, March 20th, 2012 06:56 pm
norfolkian: (Default)
[personal profile] norfolkian
I had a bit of a disaster with the squash challenge. I was going to make this:http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/8910/kale-pumpkin-and-bacon-pot - which I have made before and is very nice. But my bacon had gone hard and manky, but I'd already chopped up the squash when I discovered this. It doesn't work without the bacon. :(

In lieu of anything yummy to show you, please see this blog post I did a year or so a go when I made up a yummy squash recipe: http://nolovesincerer.blogspot.co.uk/2010/11/roast-squash-with-bacon-mushroom-rice.html

I hope to be more successful with my swede!
gominokouhai: (Default)
[personal profile] gominokouhai

IMG_0202
I bought these at the market this weekend. They are, I'm told, red onion squash. Peeled and chopped them and roasted them with a maple syrup glaze. It didn't work particularly well, mostly because I burned them. [personal profile] stormsearch was ecstatic however. Maybe I'm just not keen on squash. The smell was amazing though; candied orange peel and toasted walnuts. Between peeling and fishing out a metric shitton of seeds and cthuloid stringy pulp stuff, they took a billion years to prepare and I'm not convinced I'm going to bother doing them again. Were I to do so, the squash itself is fairly sweet and the maple glaze wasn't such a brilliant idea; something smokier, maybe involving paprika, would be a better idea.

I am rather more keen on the lime-and-coriander turkey burgers I made to go with them. They were fantastic, but alas this isn't turkey burger challenge week.

IMG_0222
Had a massive bowlful of seeds left over. Toasted them for fifteen minutes on a low heat (135°C). The first batch just with salt and pepper, the second lot with garlic and paprika. These were fantastic. They're also low-carb and low-GI (or is it high? whichever means good), if that's your thang.

Getting the pulp and stringy crap off the seeds was longwinded but actually quite relaxing, once I'd developed an algorithm for it:

  1. Spread everything on a piece of kitchen roll, and put another piece of kitchen roll on top. Press down to absorb some of the juice.
  2. DO UNTIL bored
    1. Turn everything upside down
    2. Slowly peel back the top piece of kitchen roll. Pick off any seeds that have separated themselves from the morass and stuck to the paper.
    3. Pick out any other seeds that have obviously come loose.
    4. Put another piece of kitchen roll on top, press down.
    END DO
  3. Throw remaining pulp into the stockpot. In doing so, you'll find a handful of extra seeds you missed.

I've had half a pig in the freezer for the better part of a year now. We named him Boris because of the resemblance. Last night, it was finally time to make some space in the freezer, so it was time to roast a rolled shoulder of Boris bigger than your head.

IMG_0224
Tried something a bit different this time. Rubbed the skin with oil, salted and peppered the fuck out of it, and dumped the whole thing in the oven on low (160°C). After an hour, dropped in the squash wedges and sat the joint back on top of them. Everything was nicely done, with Boris just medium rare in the middle and utterly fantastic crackling on the outside, after another hour and a half. Then I had plenty of pig-squash juices left in the tin with which to make gravy.

An odd thing happened when I went back for seconds. I microwaved everything, just for a minute, to warm it back up, and afterwards the squash had completely changed taste. I can't put my finger on what was wrong with it—wasn't quite bitter, wasn't quite sour, but something along those lines. In any case I was definitely less keen the second time around.

IMG_0253 IMG_0247 IMG_0259

Lo, am I like unto a culinary god.

And that concludes Squash Week. Frankly, I wasn't too keen on the squash itself, but the things that went with it were incredible.

davegodfrey: Marvin: ...and me with a terrible pain in all the diodes down my left hand side... (Marvin)
[personal profile] davegodfrey
Today I followed a recipe.

Ingredients:

1 can water chestnuts, drained
4 Spring onions, roughly chopped
1 onion, roughly chopped
1 tomato, eighthed
250g Mange tout
1 cucumber, halved deseeded and diagonally sliced 5mm thick
3 cloves of garlic, chopped
Groundnut oil
4 tablespoons vegetable stock
1 tablespoon rice vinegar
1 tablespoon Thai Fish Sauce or Soy Sauce
5g sugar

What you're supposed to do:

Heat the oil in the pan, add the garlic and fry until golden brown.
Add all the ingredients except the spring onions and fry for 2-3 minutes turning continuously.
Add the spring onions and fry for 30 seconds.

Serves 4

What I actually did:

Decide there wasn't any protein, so buy some prawns.
Forget to buy the onions, and rushing out at 8pm to get them, decide not to bother with the ordinary onion.
Heat the oil in the pan, add the garlic and fry until golden brown.
Boil some noodles with a stock cube and use this instead of vegetable stock.
Add all the ingredients, replacing "a tablespoon" with "a slosh" and "4 tablespoons" with "probably too much but I don't care".
Decide not to bother with the extra onions at the end.
Realise you've forgotten to add the water chestnuts until after you've served.
Stir fry these for about a minute in the rest of the stuff you haven't served.

Serves 2.

Photobucket

Verdict:
Needs more garlic and more vinegar. Goes quite nicely with DBC's "Chesil", a "straw-blonde Pilsner-style real ale".

ETA:

5: Discover cucumbers don't count for this week's challenge, cry.
missdiane: (Baby nom nom cupcake)
[personal profile] missdiane
Life's been so nuts lately with my new job that if I didn't have a challenge to make something with squash, I probably would've lived on bologna sandwiches this week since I just.can't.be.bothered. So thanks for encouraging vegatable-y goodness :)

I made a somewhat modified version of Roasted Corn Pudding in Acorn Squash from 101 Cookbooks (she has some awesome recipes). Go check out her pictures, they're lovely. I took a picture of mine but I'm too fried to bother with hooking up the camera and uploading and all.  It didn't turn out as fabulous as hers likely was because in my lazy version, I used a small can of creamed corn that I had and since I didn't have scallions, I used shallots. I also did what one commenter suggested and pre-cooked the squash in the microwave to shorten the time down since an hour and a half cooking time during the work week is a bit much. 

My results were ok. I think it looks better than it tastes. Perhaps if I'd have mixed in the cheese rather than just sprinkling it on top or did the full roasting at the beginning it would've had more character. As it was, it felt somewhat bland and the corn pudding texture didn't always marry well with the already starchy squash. 

I think I'll stick to the traditional sweet way of preparing acorn squash. You can't beat some butter, brown sugar, cinnamon and sometimes a dash of maple syrup. 

Challenge #3: Squash!

Wednesday, March 14th, 2012 12:32 am
miss_s_b: River Song and The Eleventh Doctor have each other's back (Fangirling: Beer!)
[personal profile] miss_s_b
Ended up using the squash with a healthy roast dinner:

Healthy Roast Dinner

That's pork roasted in cider (with crackling om nom nom), beetroot likewise roasted in cider round the pork, cauliflower & leek in cheese sauce, mixed variety steamed carrots, potatoes roasted in goose fat... and mashed butternut squash. So, you know, the squash wasn't really central to the meal, but it WAS yummy, and very easy to prepare once the ballache of peeling it was over. I steamed it till tender and then mashed it with a bit of butter. That's it.

My cheese sauce recipe, btw, is a thing of beauty and a joy forever. Ingredients in the order of adding to the pan:

One small onion, finely chopped and gently fried in butter till clear.
A pint of milk.
A garlic cube.
A teaspoonful of wholegrain mustard.
Some cornflour to thicken.
And once it's thickened, lots of cheeeeeeeeeeeese.

Challenge #3: Squash!

Thursday, March 8th, 2012 01:41 am
miss_s_b: (Fangirling: Yorkshire)
[personal profile] miss_s_b
This week's challenge is to use a gourd or a squash. Wikipedia has a handy list of all the things that count, but the common ones are pumpkin, butternut squash, courgettes/zucchini, and marrows. Have fun!

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