Thanks to the Hoosier Hills Food Bank's Garden & Gleaning Program, the Hub is well stocked with delicious and utterly autumnal acorn squash. These petite, late season squash have also come to us through our CSA with Heartland Family Farms, along with some lovely delicata squash.
Both of these beauties are perfect for roasting, and simple preparations, since they are packed with flavors that will warm your palate, while the oven warms your kitchen.
Our pantry patrons enjoyed sampling these two recipes: Basic Roasted Acorn Squash and Roasted Delicata (or Acorn) Squash with Red Onion.
Showing posts with label squash. Show all posts
Showing posts with label squash. Show all posts
Tuesday, October 14, 2014
Monday, August 11, 2014
A Plethora, a Sufficiency, an Abundance, a Plentitude - Just Plain Oodles and Scads of Zucchini!
Anyway, just in case you happen to be one of the lucky
people who have zucchini coming out your ears, or you’re picking it up at the
Hub or the Farmers Market, here are some ways to fix it that you might not have
thought of.
The first recipe, ZUCCHINI PIE, must be something dreamed up by a gardener one year when the apple
crop was bad. Who else would think to make an apple pie out of zucchini? Or
something similar, anyway. According to the headnote on the recipe, this is “A
scrumptious dessert that will please even the most avid apple-pie lovers.”
OK, so that one’s pretty far out. Let’s try something a
little bit more familiar. Have you ever had fried zucchini? You know, the kind
that’s breaded and then deep-fried and served with ketchup-y type dipping
sauces? Good, isn’t it? Or maybe you tried my OVEN FRIED ZUCCHINI at the Hub last Tuesday. It’s a lot easier to
bake it than to fry it. And while I don’t think it’s quite as good as the deep
fat fried kind, it turned out pretty good, if I do say so myself, and I do.
Speaking of being at the Hub on Tuesday, several people
asked me about some big white round "flying saucer shaped" scalloped things on the produce
table. They were patty pan squash. Similar to zucchini, just a very different
shape. You can use them in most any zucchini recipe, though you’ll have to cut
them into the right size pieces. The shape usually doesn’t matter, but some of
those things were huge! The way I usually cook patty pans is to cut them in
half so I have two “rounds,” and then cut each half into wedges, and then
proceed from there more or less like zucchini. As big as the ones at the Hub
were, I’d probably have to cut them into three or four “rounds.” Or you can
scoop out the middle and stuff them like you would zucchini or green peppers.
Or cook them up with some onions and tomatoes. Again, pretty much however you
would cook zucchini.
But back to recipes. Another unlikely sounding but actually
very good dish is ZUCCHINI WITH PINENUTS. I’m not positive, but it may have been the first zucchini dish that I
tried that I actually liked. And probably the first one where the zucchini wasn't mushy and watery, too! It calls for a simple buttermilk dressing, and you
may be tempted to make your own BUTTERMILK SUBSTITUTE to use, instead. Don’t. It won’t be the same. The Buttermilk
Substitute works great in things like chocolate cake or pancakes, where its
purpose is just to add a bit of acidity and make the end product light and
fluffy. The buttermilk in this recipe is too important, and you’ll want to get
“real” buttermilk instead. Not that it comes from making butter anymore (that’s
what buttermilk used to be, you know – the milk that was left after churning
cream into butter), but the cultured kind that they sell in the stores is fine.
And finally, here’s an alternative to salsa for something to
scoop up with chips the next time you’re having a barbecue. Or a picnic. Or
watching TV. Or anytime you feel like noshing. ZUCCHINI WITH CORN AND CILANTRO calls for frozen corn, and I almost
changed it to fresh corn, in keeping with the Hub’s emphasis on fresh veggies.
But then I thought, “Why waste perfectly good corn on the cob in a recipe when
it’s so good as and frozen works just as well?” and I decided to just say corn.
Feel free to use fresh corn, if you happen to have more fresh corn on the cob
than you know what to do with, or use frozen. Or canned, if that’s what you
have.
Enjoy your zucchini while you can! As crazy as the weather
has been this year, there’s no telling how much longer it will last.
---Mary Anne---
---Mary Anne---
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
Special Farmers Market Edition
I
went to the Farmers Market on Saturday and got some great bargains. I want to
give you a heads up on them, especially the produce that won’t last long. (Can
you believe it’s Fall already?!) And don’t forget that you can exchange a
dollar’s worth of food stamps for two dollars’ worth of market vouchers, so, if
you have food stamps, you can get stuff at the market for half price! I know
there’s probably not much left of this month’s food stamps, but you may be able
to find the same things there the first weekend in October, too. I’m sure there
are a lot more bargains at the Market. These are just the ones I happened to
come across when I was looking for stuff for me. I was almost done before it
occurred to me that there might be a column in it.
The
first place I stopped was at Tom’s Produce, on the north (at least I think it’s
the north – I’m terrible with directions) side of the Market, next to City
Hall. He had quarter bushels of canning tomatoes (about 14 pounds) for $6, or
half bushels for $12. That’s less than 50 cents a pound! Canning tomatoes are
just tomatoes that aren’t quite perfect, though I had trouble finding anything
wrong with most of the ones I got, except that maybe they were a bit small. I
got 49 tomatoes, so they cost 12 cents each. Don’t have a need or room for 49
tomatoes at a time? Share a box with a friend.
I
also got some red and green bell peppers from Tom, at 3 for $1. They were a bit
larger than what I would consider an “average” bell pepper, but then I picked
out the biggest ones he had. Some were a bit oddly shaped, but I didn’t see any
bad spots, at least on the ones I picked.
Tom
had potatoes, too, either white or red, 30 pounds for $12, or 40 cents a pound.
I have no idea how this compares to supermarket prices, but it sounds good.
Tom
expects to have the tomatoes and peppers for at least another couple of weeks,
and potatoes for a lot longer. Subject, of course, to the weather cooperating!
The
next place I stopped was the stall where I get big oddly shaped peppers for 50
cents each. They had a bunch of them again, red or green, but not yellow. These
were really big and heavy, and, other than being oddly shaped, were in fine
condition. The peppers I got weighed between 12 and 16 ounces, compared to
about 4 ounces for an average pepper. A few of the peppers they had had small
soft spots, but I just didn’t pick those peppers. This stall was, I think, in
the second row of stalls from the parking lot. I didn’t see a name on the
stall.
I
got some big green and yellow zucchini for 75 cents each. The big zucchini work
great for casseroles, soup, and omelets, which is what I use them for. Smaller
ones would work better for cooking up sliced.
Three
other things I got were at “market price” but still a good price. One was pie
pumpkins for $2 each (there were also small ones for $1). Pie pumpkins are
smaller than field pumpkins, or Halloween pumpkins, and the flesh tends to be
less stringy. They’re great for making pies, of course, but they’re also good
in savory dishes. I use pumpkin in chili, in stew, and pumpkin soup, and in several
other dishes. I’ll do a column on pumpkins before Halloween. You can also use
regular Halloween pumpkins for most things, even after you have carved them up
for jack-o-lanterns. And be sure to save the seeds to eat! I’ll include
directions for roasting the seeds in a later column. You can use the seeds of
spaghetti squash the same way you would pumpkin seeds. In fact, you can use the
seeds of any of the winter squashes that way. I got some big green and yellow
zucchini for 75 cents each. The big zucchini work great for casseroles, soup,
and omelets, which is what I use them for. Smaller ones would work better for
cooking up sliced. And finally, I got a big spaghetti squash for $3. I didn’t
like spaghetti squash when I was using it as a substitute for spaghetti. It is
not the same at all, even if it does look the same! But as a vegetable in its
own right it’s pretty good.
The
other two places I want to talk about both sell meat. I wrote a couple of weeks
ago about Kip and Whitney’s Marble Hill Farm and their grass-fed ground beef.
Again, it’s a good price, especially if you can get it for half price by using
your food stamps to get market vouchers. They also have beef soup bones for $3
a pack. The packs range between about a pound and about two pounds. You have to
be really careful with soup bones. Some places sell bones with practically no
meat at all on them and call them soup bones. Kip and Whitney’s soup bones are
slices of the leg, with lots of meat. The leg, or shank, has very flavorful
meat. It needs to be cooked “low and slow” and in liquid (like in soup!) or it
will be tough. But simmered slowly, or gently braised for a long time, the meat
is wonderfully soft. Kip’s stall is roughly the middle of the middle row,
facing Seventh Street.
Dove
Farms has a stall along the north side of the Market, a few stalls from Tom’s
Produce, alongside City Hall. They sell produce and eggs, but what I’m talking
about today is their grain-fed beef. They have ground beef for $3.50 a pound,
ribs for $2.79 a pound, and heart, liver and tongue for $1.69 a pound. They
also have the rest of the animal, but these are the inexpensive cuts that they
had on Saturday. Their animals are raised almost entirely on grain, so the meat
will taste and cook more like you are used to. It’s local, and they don’t use
hormones or antibiotics.
Grass-fed
beef like Kip and Whitney raise and grain-fed beef like you get from Dove Farms
are quite different. They are both local and raised without antibiotics or
hormones, but how they are fed makes a big difference in the meat. Grass-fed
beef is very lean, to the point that you really need to add some fat to it.
Because it is so lean, it can turn out very dry if you cook it too long or at
too high a temperature. You probably want to add some chopped veggies or an egg
or something to the ground beef to help make up for the lack of fat. It also
tastes a bit different than grain-fed or grain-finished beef. There are some
health advantages to grass-fed beef – it has more Omega 3 and less Omega 6, and
more CLA, both of which are supposed to be good for you. Grain-fed or
grain-finished beef, on the other hand, will taste more like you are used to.
Because it has more fat, it cooks more like you are used to, too, and is less
likely to turn out dry or tough. Some people flat out don’t like the taste of
grass-fed beef. Other people think it tastes better than grain-fed beef. I
can’t say that one is “better” than the other, or that you “should” eat one
instead of the other. It’s up to you. The beef from both Dove Farms and Marble
Hill Farm is better for you than what you get at the store, it’s produced
locally, is raised without hormones or antibiotics, and, at least for these
cuts, is cheaper than you’ll usually find in the stores. The ground beef costs
more than the cheapest, fattest ground beef at the store, but it’s about the
same as or cheaper than the super lean ground beef there.
I’m
sure that there are other bargains at the Market, but these are things that I
was looking for for me. I wasn’t looking at the prices on the rest of the food
there, or at the prices at each stall for things I did buy. (Wouldn’t it be
wonderful if they published the prices so you could comparison shop like you
can with the grocery stores?) If you have time on a Saturday morning, go down
and check it out. You’ll probably find some bargains of your own. And don’t
forget to exchange your food stamps for market vouchers! But be quick about it.
Tomatoes and peppers and zucchini and other summer produce won’t be around much
longer, though fall produce is moving in. And Tom’s Produce, Marble Hill Farm,
and Dove Farms won’t be at the winter market.
Instead
of the usual recipes and menus, I’m going to give some ideas for preserving the
wonderful summer produce.
CANNED TOMATOES – Talk to Kayte
about this. I’ve seen home canned tomatoes at the Pantry, so I’ll bet she knows
how to do it. It’s been years since I’ve done any home canning.
FROZEN WHOLE TOMATOES – This is the
easiest way to preserve tomatoes, but you do need freezer space. Don’t expect to end up with chunks or slices of tomato after
it’s cooked. It cooks down to pretty much nothing, but leaves behind its color
and its tomato flavor.
FROZEN DICED TOMATOES – Easier than
canning them, but, again, you do need freezer space.
OVEN DRIED TOMATOES – Have you seen
the price for sun-dried tomatoes in the stores? They’re way too expensive for
me. Oven dried tomatoes work just as well. They have a really intense tomato
taste and collapse down so they take up practically no space. Most
recipes say to dry plum or Roma type tomatoes, because they are less juicy than
regular tomatoes and also because they are smaller. Regular tomatoes work fine,
too, though they don’t get as dry. These are incredibly easy to make, and take
almost no preparation time. They just need a long time by themselves in the
oven.
FROZEN DICED PEPPERS – Easy to do, but like frozen peppers are best used in cooking. They're not much good for salads and eating raw.
ROASTED RED PEPPERS – Like sun
dried tomatoes, commercial roasted red peppers are expensive. Fortunately,
they’re also easy to make. It’s usually red peppers that are roasted, but you
can use any color, including green. Use them in any recipe calling for roasted
peppers, or for pimentos. Or add them to scrambled eggs or omelets, or to soups
or casseroles, or any time you want a mild pepper flavor and some color.
ZUCCHINI – Zucchini doesn’t freeze or
dry very well. It has too much water in it to dry, and if you freeze it you end
up with a little bit of zucchini and whole bunch of water. It’s fine for
putting in soups, but that’s about it. To freeze, either slice or shred it, and
put it in plastic freezer bags. Refrigerate until cold, then freeze. To use,
just dump the zucchini out of the bag into the soup.
Thursday, April 4, 2013
Pork and Vegetables
Most vegetables go well with pork. Ones that are traditionally associated with pork include:
Cabbage
Sauerkraut
Mushrooms
Acorn and other winter squash
Green beans
Peas
Broccoli
Corn
Potatoes
Pumpkin
Greens
Sweet potatoes
Dried beans and other legumes go well with pork, too, specially split peas and white beans.
Cabbage
Sauerkraut
Mushrooms
Acorn and other winter squash
Green beans
Peas
Broccoli
Corn
Potatoes
Pumpkin
Greens
Sweet potatoes
Dried beans and other legumes go well with pork, too, specially split peas and white beans.
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