cooking

Second Charlestown Farm CSA Pickup

Tuesday, June 09, 2009

Sorry I’m a bit late with this one - camera issues. Last week I brought home two heads of lettuce, 1/2 lb of leaf lettuce, 1/3 lb of arugula, 1/3 lb of mixed Asian greens, one bunch of turnips, and 1 1/2 quarts of u-pick strawberries. I also picked up some mint. Amazingly we managed to eat all of the greens in the week! I know many of us struggle with eating all of the greens that come in most CSA boxes - and we were the same last year.  However, I recently figured out a way to eat them all - and without eating huge salads for breakfast, lunch, and dinner!  My secret - Tabbouleh! This tasty Middle Eastern salad works as well with arugula as it does with parsley.  My recipe is below - you can use any flavorful greens that are edible raw (so arugula, mustard, tat soi, and mizuna are in, but this won’t work well with lettuce or kale). Enjoy!

Mixed Greens Tabbouleh
* = optional ingredients

I prefer my Tabbouleh to have equal amounts of bulgar and greens, feel free to adjust the proportions if you’d like.

Ingredients
2 c bulgar wheat
~2 1.2 c boiling water
2 roasted red peppers* (I used some we have packed in oil from last year, you can use canned if you like)
6 T oil
4 cloves of garlic, chopped
1 T lime juice* (or use lemon)
2 T lemon juice* (or use cider vinegar)
2 T mint, chopped*
3-4 green onions, chopped* (use any allium)
8 kalamata olives, pitted and chopped
salt and pepper
1 lb mixed greens, chopped finely (I use the food processor)

1. Put the bulgar in a boil and cover with the boiling water to reach about 1 inch above the buglar. Let soak up to an hour, until most of the water is absorbed and the bulgar is al dente.
2. Whisk the oil, garlic, lemon, and lime juices together.
3. Mix the olives, mint, onions, red pepper, and greens.
4. Combine the greens mixture, bulgar, and dressing.
5. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Adjust the oil and acid if necessary.

As it gets later in the season you can add tomatoes and cucumbers to this as well.

Posted by Eileen on 06/09 at 10:56 PM


Rhubarb Chutney

Sunday, May 31, 2009

rhubarb chutney

Although my first thought upon acquiring rhubarb is usually something sweet, like cobbler or pie, rhubarb also makes excellent chutney.  Today’s batch is based on Boxwallah’s chutney; though the recipe says to leave it at least a month before eating, the sample left over after I canned four half-pints is already quite tasty. 

Rhubarb chutney

1 lb rhubarb, chopped
1/3 lb onion, chopped finely (3/5 of a large onion)
1 c vinegar
1 T cumin seeds
1 t mustard seeds

1/2 c dried blueberries
1/2 c sugar
1/2 t ground coriander
1/2 t fenugreek
1/2 t dry mustard
2 T garam masala
pinch salt

Combine rhubarb, onion, whole spices, and vinegar in a saucepan and slowly bring to a boil.  Cover and simmer for half an hour, then add the dried fruit, sugar, and ground spices.  Simmer, uncovered, for two hours or until rhubarb has completely disintegrated and the desired thickness is reached.  Transfer to sterile jars and process in a boiling-water bath. 

Posted by Naomi on 05/31 at 10:02 PM


Pork Ribs for the Summertime

pork_ribs

I’m not sure exactly where (though I suspect it was years ago on Molto Mario) I heard that Tuscan cuisine prefers one (or, at most, two) herbs as opposed to more elaborate combinations.  Though Lynne Rossetto Kasper (from whose The Italian Country Table I learned this recipe), writes of this as a dish for winter, I tend to cook it only from late Spring until early Fall.  It’s worlds away from the muted flavors of roasted or braised meats, the dutch-oven specialties of winter.  Here, the emphasis on rosemary is simple and direct - something that I more often associate with the bright, fresh tastes of summer.  Perhaps that’s why I’ve found it to work well with warm-weather staples like grilled asparagus, potato salad, or a salad of tender summer lettuce. Of course, I can rationalize all I want about how the flavors are why I reserve this for warmer weather; the real reason is probably that I feel more at liberty to eat with my fingers when I’m eating outside. 

One final word - it is essential that you do not overcook them.  To that end, I recommend a using a meat thermometer if possible. 

Pork Ribs

4 cloves garlic
2 tablespoons fresh rosemary
1 teaspoon olive oil
1 rack pork ribs
salt and pepper

1.  Mince together the garlic cloves and rosemary; alternately, you could use a mortar and pestle or a food processor.  Combine with the olive oil and rub over the ribs.  Cover and refrigerate anywhere from six hours to overnight (the longer the better, though, obviously).
2.  Preheat the oven to 300.  Lay out the ribs on sheet pan and season with salt and pepper. 
3.  Roast for 30 minutes or until the internal temperature reaches 150.  Meanwhile, preheat the grill.
4.  Brown on a medium-low grill, 5-7 minutes per side. 

Posted by Kevin on 05/31 at 07:12 PM


Radishes and Radish Greens

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

soup

My CSA is filled with radishes right now. While I don’t dislike them, I just never really eat them or know what to do with them. A bit of searching around on the web found numerous recipes for radish greens soup - the greens! Of course! I made the soup below for a quick and easy dinner. I also had green garlic and baby kale, so I made a sort of very chunky “tapenade” for the top of some crusty Metropolitan bread. Radishes, when cooked (especially in butter) take on a milder, buttery flavor. A great accompaniment to the soup, together using the whole radish!

Radish Greens Soup
serves 4

1 Tbs. butter or Earth Balance
1 Tbs. olive oil
3 medium potatoes, peeled and diced
1 small yellow onion, diced
3 green onions, chopped
2 bulbs of green garlic, chopped
Greens from 2 bunches of radishes
zest of half a lemon
6 cups of vegetable broth
juice of one lemon
salt and pepper
1 cup local or homemade low-fat yogurt

Heat the butter and oil together in a thick sauce pan over medium heat until the butter melts. Add the potatoes, onions and garlic. Cook, stirring often, until the yellow onions become golden in color and the green onions soften. Add the greens, stirring well. Add the lemon zest and vegetable broth. Raise the heat to medium high and cover the pan. Cook the soup at a low boil until the potatoes soften, about 7 minutes. Remove the heat from the pan. Add the lemon juice, salt and pepper. Blend the soup with an immersion blender, or in two batches in a blender. Return soup to the pan and stir in the yogurt until the soup takes on a creamy consistency. Garnish with sliced fresh radish.

crostini

Radish and Baby Kale on Toast

1 Tbs. butter or Earth Balance
1 bulb green garlic, diced
6 small radishes, thinly sliced
2 small handfuls of baby kale
1/4 cup vegetable broth

Heat the butter in a large sauce pan until melted. Add the radishes and garlic, cooking over medium heat until the radish softens. Add the baby kale and the vegetable broth and stir well. When the kale wilts and most of the broth evaporates, remove from the heat. Serve over good buttered toast.

 

Posted by Erin on 05/20 at 03:55 PM


Rheally Versatile Rhubarb

rhubarb-cake
Like Garrison Keillor, I grew up on rhubarb pie in the early summer. (It was Wisconsin, so the rhubarb’s not quite ready til then.) Not strawberry rhubarb—just the rhubarb. We also ate sort of a stewed rhubarb like applesauce after dinner, as a snack, or at breakfast, although we didn’t call it “rhubarb sauce”; it was just “rhubarb.” Tonight I tried it in a bundt cake, and it’s pretty good. The recipe I adapted from Savoring the Seasons in the Northern Heartland published by University of Minnesota Press. Instead of sour cream, I used plain Pequea Valley yogurt. And tonight I picked up my Meadow Run Farm buying club order which included a dozen eggs from their pastured hens.

What’s my point? Don’t get freaked out by rhubarb. If you’re not used to it yet, chop it up and treat it like cranberries: tart, red, and good for cooking and baking. Nutritionally, it’s very high in vitamin K, and high in C, potassium, calcium, and manganese.

Posted by Allison on 05/20 at 02:04 AM


Dill, and a recipe

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

dill
I am not a fan of mayonnaise potato salads. This year I’m growing dill so that I can make my favorite and really simple potato salad.

Yogurt & Dill Potato Salad

Handful of fresh dill, chopped fine
Cracked black pepper (a couple of full cranks)
Sea salt to taste (a little at first)
Freshly snipped chives
1 garlic clove, crushed (optional)
6 to 8 oz Greek-style yogurt (no less than 2% fat; how much depends on absorption by the potatoes)
1 pound small new potatoes

Mix everything together except potatoes. Boil the potatoes until tender (peeled or skins on, or remove skins after they’ve boiled and are cool enough to handle). Combine. Taste after a couple of hours in the fridge and adjust the salt and add more yogurt if necessary. Keeps well for a 2-3 days.

Posted by Allison on 05/12 at 12:04 AM


Grid Magazine: The 100% Local Food Issue

Thursday, May 07, 2009

grid_cover_004

Just 6 months old, Grid Magazine, a free glossy about creating sustainability in Philadelphia, has put out some great thematic issues on energy, bicycling and gardening. The newest issue, hitting the streets or your internet today, is all about local, sustainable food practices. Alongside recipes from restaurant superstars Pumpkin and Tria and Denise Balcavag of http://www.urbanvegan.net, and interviews with Talulah’s Kitchen luminaries and the Lancaster Farm Fresh Cooperative, There’s also a piece about a West Philly High student making a nutritional difference in her community. Add to that a guide to composting, and an expose on the difficulty of finding fresh produce in North Philly, an outline of how to eat local on the cheap and an interview with farm-loving rockers Hoots and Hellmouth, this issue has it all! Pick up a copy at your local business (or ask them to carry it) or read it paper-free online!

Posted by Erin on 05/07 at 04:50 PM


Give me sorrel or give me death

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

sorrel (by farmtophilly)

This is simultaneously a great time of year and a frustrating time of year for seasonal eaters.  On the positive side, the first asparagus and rhubarb is starting to become available.  Sometimes you can find some Spring greens…but it’s so frustrating because it’s getting warmer and so many of us just want something new on the menu. 

I always have a substantial supply of sorrel in the garden each Spring, something that isn’t exactly the easiest thing to find for sale in markets.  And so even though I would gladly trade my entire garden for a sun-ripened, heirloom variety tomato right now, sorrel really is something different and I’m always looking for new ways to use it.

Last year I searched for some things to do with sorrel and came up with some recipes that I really liked.  This year I found some new ideas:

Of course, one of my favorite ways to use sorrel is also the simplest: sorrel mashed potatoes.  I think everyone has their own favorite way to make mashed potatoes, so I won’t bother to describe my own preferred method.  To get the sorrel in there, just grab a handful of sorrel out of the garden and give it a good wash, then cut into chiffonade.  Saute the sorrel in olive oil or butter until it’s slightly wilted and then mix it in with your mashed potatoes.  They are delicious!!

My sorrel mashed potatoes (potatoes from Lancaster Farm Fresh) were served with a chicken (Meadow Run Farm) roasted with sage (right out of the garden!) and the last of last year’s corn (Lancaster Farm Fresh).

 

sorrelmash (by farmtophilly)

Posted by Nicole on 04/28 at 10:05 PM


Necessity Is The Mother of (Mayo) Genius

A couple of months ago, I wrote a post about how to use egg whites to calm down olive oil mayo. Several of you wrote to me asking about homemade mayo’s longevity. Most people don’t use it everyday and wanted to know how long it would last. Sadly, not long. About a week, maybe a touch more, depending on how much lemon juice you add. How sad: a condiment that can so easily be made at home, without chemical preservatives, suffers from being too much of a good thing. You can’t freeze your mayo and you can’t go any smaller than one egg. Or can you?

Yes! Yes you can. I’ve been infected by the idea of Hope. If the country can elect a transformative president, then I sure as heck can learn how to make smaller portions of homemade mayo. The trick? Your freezer. The method? You only freeze half of the ingredients.

Here goes: mix up the egg, the lemon juice, the mustard, the salt and pepper and the garlic grass (if you so desire). Then take half of that mixture and freeze it. Or a quarter. Or two-thirds. Whatever! The rest of the mix, you whip in the olive oil (or any oil).

P1300005

Now, for the caveats. First, and this should kinda go without saying, don’t even try it in a large food processors. Use the little guy. They’re nice to have around. I got mine off of eBay (you remember: when eBay sold used items?). And second (and this is the great mystery), it will never make as much. I don’t get it. When I make a full batch, I come out with about a cup-and-a-half of mayo, sometimes almost 2 cups. Divide it? If I divided it in half, each half produces about one-third cup. At first I thought it had something to do with the freezing, but it also affects the fresh egg mixture. But hey, mysteries make life interesting, no?

P1300002

So now go forth and make mayo! With the little food processor, it’s quick, super-easy and you can make the tiniest of batches at-a-time. So there you have it. Spread the word ‚ I want your grandchildren singing songs about Charlotte Markward, the mayo genius.

Mayo Recipe
- 1 egg (farm fresh, of course)
- 1 egg white (farm fresh, but optional. It makes the resulting mayo less olive oil-y)
- 1ts dijon mustard
- 1ts lemon juice
- salt and pepper to taste
- garlic grass (optional: to make, simply put old garlic —you know, the kind that’s starting to sprout — into a small pot of dirt. Water it occasionally and harvest the “grass” sprouts by trimming. Much like chives)
- olive oil (or any oil)

Combine all ingredients up to garlic grass in food processor until frothy and the mixture turns a lighter shade of yellow. Then split the mix and freeze a portion.
Leave the rest of the mix in the food processor and then slowly add the oil, drizzling SUPER slow (I start by counting 100 drips before I even graduate to a drizzle). Splitting the batch makes the mayo come together much faster than a whole batch.
For the full batch recipe, click here.

Posted by Charlotte on 04/28 at 01:35 AM


Simply in Season

Monday, April 27, 2009

Simply in season

In the “Pinched – Tales from an Economic Downturn” series for Salon, Siobhan Phillips writes an interesting article explore the feasibility of eating SOLE - sustainable, organic, local or ethical – on a budget. She and her husband do their best on the food-stamp minimum in their Connecticut town - $248 for two people. And you know what? They do pretty well. Her secret is effort, some cooking skills, and some great tools. One of these is the cooking

  • recipes
  • reading
  • resources

  • Rhubarb Muffins

    Sunday, April 26, 2009

    IMG_3113

    Spring is for rhubarb, and I was so excited about the arrival of rhubarb this season that I had to do something with it this morning, despite the hot weather.  Fond as I am of rhubarb crumble-type dishes (this is my go-to recipe), I decided to make something not quite so sweet.  I ended up with muffins.

    Rhubarb Muffins

    2.5 c chopped rhubarb
    1/2 c sugar
    1 T water

    1 c white flour
    1 c whole wheat flour
    1/4 c sugar
    pinch salt
    2 t baking powder
    1 egg
    1/4 c oil
    1 T milk

    Combine rhubarb, sugar, and water (to keep the rhubarb from sticking to the pot at first) in a small saucepan.  Cook on low heat, stirring, until the sugar has dissolved and the rhubarb is starting to fall apart.  You could continue cooking the rhubarb until it completely falls apart and you have an applesauce-like texture; I was impatient, so I puréed it with my immersion blender.  Preheat the oven to 400ºF.  Combine the dry ingredients, then add the wet ingredients (including the rhubarb), stirring quickly and leaving a few lumps.  Spoon into a muffin tin and bake for about 15 minutes.

    I got twelve not very tall, very moist muffins out of this.  If you want them less moist, add a bit more flour.  Ginger, either powdered and mixed with the flour or fresh and cooked with the rhubarb, would also be really good in these.

    Posted by Naomi on 04/26 at 04:06 PM


    Spring collards

    Thursday, April 23, 2009

    collards

    I never really thought that my busy schedule would be to my benefit in terms of gardening.  Last Fall when the weather finally turned cold, I just didn’t have time to clean up the garden properly.  There were half a dozen collard green plants that ended up rotting in the garden over the Winter.  It was thrilling to see the collards sprout some green leaves this Spring, although I knew I would have to eventually pull the plants - they were getting ready to flower.  The other day I was motivated to get out in the garden and really clean up, so I harvested the leaves and tossed the old plants.

    I’m always amazed at the dearth of recipes for collard greens available online.  If you want to make greens with smoked ham neck bones or something like that, you’re all set.  There must be a zillion and one varieties to choose from.  Last year I did find a recipe for collard green pesto, and that was pretty good.  However, you just don’t fine a lot of recipes for collards that don’t involve cooking them to death.

    To use the collards from my garden, I thought I’d just throw some things together and see what happened.  I started by browning some pork from Country Time Farm and added in some mushrooms from Mother Earth Mushrooms.  I cut the collards from the garden into chiffonade, and threw that into the pan, and then mixed it all together with some spicy sesame pasta.  It was pretty delicious, and I felt good about finding a way to use the first greens out of the garden!

    mushcolpasta

    Posted by Nicole on 04/23 at 11:49 PM


    Leftovers!

    Monday, April 20, 2009

    I’m super excited because farmer’s market season is just around the corner: nearly every market in Philly and the surrounding areas will commence operations (not counting the year round markets, of course) in May.  Last year the earliest to reopen were Headhouse Square and the market in Collingswood, NJ (the first week of May).  I hope Headhouse reopens that early again because my dried bean supply is quickly dwindling and Margerum’s is my favorite source!

    beanschorizo (by farmtophilly)

    I recently soaked the last of the cannelini beans from Margerum’s, although I didn’t have a recipe in mind.  I mostly whipped through my refrigerator to see what needed to be used up.  There was a small dish of mix olives and some chorizo from Country Time Farm.  All chopped up and mixed with cannellini beans with a hit vinaigrette, it made for a great little salad!

    Update: Thanks to April at The Food Trust - Headhouse Square is reopening on Sunday, May 3 with lots of great festivities, and beginning May 9 the Saturday Headhouse market will be expanded to ten vendors!

    Posted by Nicole on 04/20 at 01:16 PM


    March? Winter Squash Three Ways and a Quiche!

    Tuesday, March 31, 2009

    How can it possibly be the last day of March? March 31, 2009! Does anyone else have the feeling that March was stolen from under their very eyes? It was a funny month. It began with a snow storm. Temperatures varied from the teens to the 70s. Just this past Sunday I got caught by a flash hailstorm whilst strolling through Washington Square. At my university there were weekly (or multiple in a week) conferences, colloquia and symposia to add to regular graduate student demands. Luckily, for my sanity, I continued to pick up my weekly CSA share from Keystone Farm, shopped at Mariposa, picked up my weekly bread order from Four Worlds Bakery and cooked any number of local and eco meals. Cooking really is meditative and good food provides the best comfort. Let me catch you up a bit on some of the highlights of this month’s eating!

    Inspired by Naomi’s delicious post on butternut squash pasta sauce, I thought I’d put up a few things I did with the puree from a kabocha squash I had gotten in my CSA share. The squash sat prettily on my counter for months, before I finally decided what best to do with it. I knew that I would be committing myself to intensive solitary squash eating, so I needed time to consider how exactly I wanted to address the dear kabocha. Finally I chose to halve it, poke holes in the outside and roast it. I then pureed the roasted squash, and that is where the fun began. Kabocha is a sweeter squash with a delicate flavor and firm, brightly orange flesh.

    I have a true love of apple butter and cheddar cheese sandwiches (on the spelt levain from Four Worlds). The squash puree, however, beckoned and I found that equally delightful is a sandwich of this sweet kabocha puree and the sharp cheddar cheese I regularly receive in my share.  I have mentioned before too, that I often make variations of Alice Waters’ soup of many vegetables. The addition of pumpkin puree to the vegetable soup not only gave it a beautiful color (which, for some sad reason is not apparent in this photo), but also added the most subtle pumpkin-y flavor to the broth.

       

    Longing for pancakes one weekend morning, I decided to use the last bit of kabocha puree to make, what turned out to be, the best pancakes I have ever made. Really incredible - if I may say so myself! They were light, fluffy and unbelievably tasty. I long for the fall to make these pancakes again!

    Soup of Many Vegetables
    adapted from Alice Waters The Art of Simple Food

    2 tbsp olive oil
    1 small onion, diced
    3 carrots, sliced evenly
    3 cloves garlic, minced
    2 tsp thyme
    2 tsp salt
    1 bay leaf
    1 cup white wine
    4 cups water
    3 potatoes, peeled and cubed
    1 cup winter squash puree
    Half of small head of cabbage (green), shredded
    2 cups prepared cranberry beans (cooked in water—3 inches above beans—with a bay leaf and garlic clove, allowing them to simmer after five minutes of a hard boil for about an hour, reserving the cooking water)

    In a soup pot over medium-high heat, sautee the onion and carrot until soft—about 10 minutes. Add garlic, bay leaf, salt and thyme. Cook another 5 minutes. Add 1 cup of wine and allow to boil for 2-3 minutes, add 4 cups water and bring to a boil. Add in potatoes, allowing to simmer/boil gently. Stir in squash puree. After 5 minutes add cabbage (you could cook cabbage ahead of time and add at the end with the beans). Cook another 10 minutes and add beans and reserved water. All the while stirring occasionally. Salt and pepper to taste. Once everything is cooked (potatoes are tender) serve.

    Best Pumpkin Pancakes
    adapted from many sources

    1 cup flour (I used a local PA white pastry flour)
    1/2 tsp baking powder
    1/2 tsp baking soda
    1/2 tsp salt
    1 egg
    3/4 cup plain whole milk yogurt (you could use buttermilk or a mixture of milk and yogurt)
    1/2 cup squash puree

    Mix dry ingredients. In a separate bowl mix together egg, yogurt and puree. Add the wet ingredients to the dry until just mixed (don’t over beat). Then cook them up in a pan with butter and enjoy with a drizzle of maple syrup or just as they are!

    On another note. Spring is creeping in and spinach is starting to show up in my CSA share. Keystone Farm has experimented for the first time with greenhouses this winter, and lettuces have been making their way into my box. The spinach, however, is a great treat. In a sea of potatoes and onions, there is nothing quite like some local organic spinach! For the first time ever, I decided to make a quiche. The picture will reveal that I make funny pie crusts. I use (again) a recipe from Alice Waters, and this dough does not shrink at all! I always forget to take this into consideration, which is why my pies and now quiches tend to have wavy crusts hanging over the sides of the pie dish….

    Spinach Quiche

    Crust:
    1 cup flour (again, local white PA pastry flour)
    3/4 cup cold butter in 1/4 inch cubes
    1/4 cold water

    I used my food processor and cut the butter into the flour and slowly added the water until the dough formed a ball. You could also use the more conventional way of cutting the butter into the flour with either knives, a pastry cutter or your fingers and then add the water. Form a loose disc with the dough and refrigerate for at least an hour. Roll out the dough and prebake for in a 375˚ oven for 15 minutes.

    (my pie dish is 10”)

    Filling:
    1 small onion, diced
    1 large bag spinach (I don’t actually know how many cups this is, but it is the size bag I got from the farmer’s market!)
    6 eggs, 3/4 cup plain yogurt
    ca 1/2 cup shredded cheese (I used cheddar)
    Salt and pepper to taste

    Sautee onion in olive oil. Add spinach and sautee until just wilted. In a separate bowl mix together 6 eggs, yogurt and salt. Sprinkle 1/3 of cheese over crust, add layer of spinach/onion mixture. Sprinkle more cheese and add rest of spinach and onion. Sprinkle rest of cheese and then carefully pour over the egg mixture. Bake for 45 minutes in an oven preheated to 375˚. Allow to cool for at least 15 minutes.

    On another note: The other posters have been doing an excellent job of keeping Farm to Philly readers up-to-date on all the fantastic coverage that the slow/local/eco food movement has been getting. It is a really exciting time to be a food activist (or a conscientious eater). For further inspiration and information, “The Garden” will be showed at the Rotunda this coming Thursday (4/2 7pm).

    Posted by Melanie on 03/31 at 03:21 PM


    Butternut Squash Pasta Sauce

    butternut pasta sauce

    I really love butternut squash.  It’s great cubed and roasted, the way I cook most root veggies, or made into a puréed soup, but sometimes I want to make something that requires less active prep or cooking time than either of those options.  Especially when my hands or wrists are tired or sore, I don’t want to peel and cube a squash, so I’ve found another preparation method that’s a lot easier for me.  I cut the squash between the bulb and the neck, then cut each piece in half and lay them flat, cut-side down, on a baking sheet, bake them until they’re soft, and then just sauté them a little with seasonings of various sorts and call the squash stuff a pasta sauce. 


    Pasta with Butternut Squash Sauce

    1 butternut squash

    ~12 oz pasta

    olive oil
    1 T caraway seeds
    3 cloves garlic
    2 t cumin
    1/2 t cayenne
    1/2 t salt
    1/4 t black pepper
    1 t dried basil
    1 t dried parsley
    2 T vinegar
    1 t garam masala
    ~1/2 oz sharp cheese (I used Birchrun’s Fat Cat)

    Preheat oven to 350ºF.  Wash and quarter the butternut and place the quarters face-down on a greased baking sheet.  (You might want to put the neck pieces on a separate sheet or otherwise plan to bake them longer than the bulb.)  Bake about 40 minutes or until there’s liquid bubbling under the pieces of squash and the flesh is soft.  Meanwhile, prepare the pasta, set it aside, and chop the garlic and start to sauté the caraway (or cumin, or fennel, or mustard) seeds and then the garlic.  When the squash is cooked, scoop the flesh from the rind and add it to the garlic and seeds.  Season to taste, adding liquid (I didn’t think of it while I was cooking, but white wine or beer would probably be good options) until the squash mixture is the consistency of a thick pasta sauce.  Add some cheese, stirring until it’s melted in, and then add the cooked pasta and stir to coat.

    Posted by Naomi on 03/31 at 12:58 AM


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