Squash!!! Pumpkins!!!
I was cooking up some squash and rediscovered one of the reasons I love my mom: pumpkin seeds, roasted in the oven with a dash of oil, salt and optional terriyaki sauce. Looks totally weird, but so tasty. And so definately a fall seasonal dish.
But in honor of the little lovelies from the field:
(yes, its a real recipe with measurements, which means it didn't originate from my kitchen...but I so love curry powder in my squash soups)(or a curry-squash-lentil soup....mmm)
butternut squash & apple soup
(from Barefoot Contessa via a friend)
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
2 tablespoons good olive oil
4 cups chopped yellow onions (3 large)
2 tablespoons mild curry powder
5 pounds butternut squash (2 large)
1 1/2 pounds sweet apples, such as McIntosh (4 apples)
2 teaspoons kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
2 cups water
2 cups good apple cider or juice
Warm the butter, olive oil, onions, and curry powder in a large stockpot uncovered over low heat for 15 to 20 minutes, until the onions are tender. Stir occasionally, scraping the bottom of the pot.
Peel the squash, cut in half, and remove the seeds. Cut the squash into chunks. Peel, quarter, and core the apples. Cut into chunks.
Add the squash, apples, salt, pepper, and 2 cups of water to the pot. Bring to a boil, cover, and cook over low heat for 30 to 40 minutes, until the squash and apples are very soft. Process the soup through a food mill fitted with a large blade, or puree it coarsely in the bowl of a food processor fitted with a steel blade.
Pour the soup back into the pot. Add the apple cider or juice and enough water to make the soup the consistency you like; it should be slightly sweet and quite thick. Check the salt and pepper and serve hot.
I was cooking up some squash and rediscovered one of the reasons I love my mom: pumpkin seeds, roasted in the oven with a dash of oil, salt and optional terriyaki sauce. Looks totally weird, but so tasty. And so definately a fall seasonal dish.
But in honor of the little lovelies from the field:
(yes, its a real recipe with measurements, which means it didn't originate from my kitchen...but I so love curry powder in my squash soups)(or a curry-squash-lentil soup....mmm)
butternut squash & apple soup
(from Barefoot Contessa via a friend)
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
2 tablespoons good olive oil
4 cups chopped yellow onions (3 large)
2 tablespoons mild curry powder
5 pounds butternut squash (2 large)
1 1/2 pounds sweet apples, such as McIntosh (4 apples)
2 teaspoons kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
2 cups water
2 cups good apple cider or juice
Warm the butter, olive oil, onions, and curry powder in a large stockpot uncovered over low heat for 15 to 20 minutes, until the onions are tender. Stir occasionally, scraping the bottom of the pot.
Peel the squash, cut in half, and remove the seeds. Cut the squash into chunks. Peel, quarter, and core the apples. Cut into chunks.
Add the squash, apples, salt, pepper, and 2 cups of water to the pot. Bring to a boil, cover, and cook over low heat for 30 to 40 minutes, until the squash and apples are very soft. Process the soup through a food mill fitted with a large blade, or puree it coarsely in the bowl of a food processor fitted with a steel blade.
Pour the soup back into the pot. Add the apple cider or juice and enough water to make the soup the consistency you like; it should be slightly sweet and quite thick. Check the salt and pepper and serve hot.
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Re: Foods I love about fall:
Fri, November 4, 2005 - 11:34 AMRoasted root veggies with kale and pumpkin seeds!
I use beets, carrots, yams, potatoes (purple ones are great), parsnips, celery root (yum!), etc. Whatever you like. (Beets make it really wonderful; I never skip those.) Cut 'em all up. Toss them with a bit of sesame oil, maple syrup, cayenne, Bragg's/soysauce. (If you prefer, you could go with olive oil, kosher salt, and herbs, but I reeeeeeally love the sesame/maple/Bragg thing.)
Roast at 400 until tender, about 40 minutes to an hour or so. The sweet potatoes might disintegrate a bit; I like this, because it makes for a yummier fond (the sticky stuff at the bottom of the pan). If you don't want them to disintegrate, you might want to add them about a third of the way into the cooking time.
While the roots are roasting, chop up some kale and steam it lightly (I put it in the microwave for a minute or two). Also toast some (out of the shell) pumpkin seeds (aka pepitas) until toasty. Set them aside.
When your root vegs are roasted, take them out of the pan. Put the pan on a burner and add a little sherry, stirring to deglaze the fond into a nice sauce (you don't need very much). Toss the kale in this lovely dressing, add the roots back in, combine gently, then top with the pumpkin seeds.
This is hearty and filling! If you want more protein, you can brown some tempeh while the roots are in the oven and add it in when you add the roots back to the kale. -
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Unsu...
Re: Foods I love about fall:
Mon, November 7, 2005 - 3:04 PMcall me boring, but i have been craving soup like a mad dog. -
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Re: Foods I love about fall:
Tue, November 8, 2005 - 1:33 PMI have been craving soup too, and so a friend and I have put together a soup night! Every one or two weeks, we meet up at a friend's house, and everyone either brings a (pre-specified) ingredient(s), bottle of wine, or bread. Then we make a huge pot of soup, eat it together, and then everyone gets to take some home for the upcoming week!
This week is Curried Cauliflower and Cashew Nut Soup! I'll post the recipe once I know how to make it! -
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Re: Foods I love about fall:
Tue, November 8, 2005 - 5:55 PMI have eaten soup for at least one meal every day since the weather changed two weeks ago... Today's was green bean with sweet potatoes and potatoes.
Sweet potatoes are another fall food that I love!
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Re: Foods I love about fall:
Wed, November 9, 2005 - 11:19 AMStew stew stewie stew -
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Pumpkin PIE!!!!
Thu, November 10, 2005 - 9:24 PMI love pumpkin pie. I give myself a stomach ache every fall...
but anyway, to give this gratuitous post some substance, here's my favorite '5 minute pie crust' recipe: (this is from the early 1960's version of the joy of cooking) (its quick and dirty and effortlessly vegan)
Combine:
2 cups flour
1 teaspoon salt
add 1/2 cup salad (e.g canola) oil
and 1/4 cup milk
The only critical element is that the ingredients need to be at or above room tempurature and you cannot chill the dough. I just made it substituting margarine for the oil (heating the margarine and the rice milk together) and it worked fabulously.
Now if I could only get my pie shells to look pretty... -
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Re: Pumpkin PIE!!!!
Thu, November 17, 2005 - 10:52 AMpretty pie shells ... if memory serves me, it has to do with the fat content. with the proper amount of fat, i know the crust will be flaky (that was probably the best compliment i paid Grandma V, one of my umpteen million grandmothers... and i swear for a woman who was tough as nails she was positively giddy that i'd noticed!). but how that would translate to the shells ... hmmmm... imperical evidence, so time to bake more pies!!! :) -
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Re: Pumpkin PIE!!!!
Thu, November 17, 2005 - 12:36 PM
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Re: Foods I love about fall:
Mon, November 21, 2005 - 6:19 PMPersimmons are here, in abundance!!! Wooohooo! -
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Re: Foods I love about fall:
Tue, November 22, 2005 - 7:57 PMbumping this up to help Milo with his root veggies!
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