Sunday, September 27, 2009

More Super Squash!

These two tromboncino were ripe last weekend. Although not quite as big as the 3 footer from my last post, they were still pretty huge!

Just these two were enough to make squash carpaccio, cream of squash soup, and "crab" cakes.

Unfortunately, there was a boo-boo that ruined the "crab" cakes. I started this recipe by grating the squash and heavily salting it, then letting it drain. Later on, my husband continued it - made it into patties and sauteed them. Then after all that, he tasted one - and said "Ugh! These are really salty!" So I said, "Oh no - did you rinse the salt off?" Whoops, no he didn't.

The good news is, I picked another two squash yesterday. So we're making more bread and "crab" cakes take two tonight. I'll put those pictures up eventually, but for now here is the other two dishes we made last weekend. Unfortunately both of these pictures had to be adjusted since it was nighttime and the light in my kitchen is so bad. But hopefully they are good enough so you get the idea until I can get better equipment.

This was the Carpaccio of Raw Zucchini - based on a recipe by Tyler Florence. The only differences were I didn't have chervil or dill, so the herbs were chives, thyme and mint. Then I used a sweet italian pepper almond chreeze instead of ricotta that my partner made. This is the chreeze recipe - except instead of a hot cubanelle, he used italian frying peppers from the garden. I also used less leeks than Tyler's recipe called for - I didn't want to overpower it with onion.

I made this recipe to play along with Food Network Fridays over at Vegan Appetite. I really like Tami's blog. Right now she's having a contest to win a copy of Love Soup by Anna Thomas. Check it out here.
Here's the cream of squash soup. Really it was like cream of squash/potato/leek soup because I put a lot of potatoes and leeks in there too. I used this vegweb recipe as a base, but played with it quite a bit. First I sauteed 2 leeks, 3 celery stalks, 3 garlic cloves, 2 jalapenos & 2 fresh bay leaves in 4 tsp olive oil. Then I added about 5-6 cups steamed squash, 2 steamed potatoes, 4 cups broth, 1 cup soy creamer, 1 pack soft silken tofu, and 2 cups water and pureed it all with an immersion blender. It was a bit too liquidy so I added another steamed potato (luckily I had cooked extra). That really did the trick. Finally I added chopped fresh chives, thyme + s&p at the end. It was super creamy and had just the right amount of kick from the jalapenos. Delicious! My husband ate it up, and he doesn't even like squash. The leftovers were even better.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

VeganMoFo: Just One Week Away

It is a little depressing for me, since October means the end of major gardening season, but next week marks the start of another round of the Vegan Month of Food. I will be participating again this year, which means I have to write at least 1 blog post for every day of the week (not including weekends) throughout the month.

Last year I was very productive, and managed to complete all 20 posts. It really is what got this blog off the ground. Hopefully I'll be as productive this year. So expect a lot of new posts here soon!

Between this fun activity, putting up Halloween decorations, hiking while the leaves are changing, picking pumpkins, costumed parades and parties, I guess I'll get over the end of summer. :-)

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Super Duper Mega Gianourmous Squash!

Yes, it deserves that many adjectives. Finally, after no sign of a single squash all summer, my tromboncino squash grew the longest one ever!!

I didn't measure it, but it had to be at least 3 feet long. Here it is still growing on the trellis, close up to the left and a wide view of the whole plant below.








I also had to take the obligitory 'it's bigger than my dog!' shot. (Don't worry, it was on the floor for less than a minute and I thoroughly scrubbed it afterwards.)
Normally, you'd think this would be too large for a squash, but it was nice and skinny. Sure enough, when I cut it open, there were no seeds except in the little bulb at the end, as you can see from the following pics:

















I ended up using everything but the bulb at the end for zucchini bread. It made 3 1/4 cups thinly shredded! I used 3 cups for this recipe, except a low-cal version (and used the extra 1/4 cup shredded squash plus the bulb diced into an Italian vegetable stew). The changes I made were to use unsweetened applesauce for half the oil, only 1 cup of sugar, 1/2 cup chopped walnuts and 1/8 tsp grated nutmeg.

This was the first time I ever had zucchini bread. Even though it sounds like it would be gross, and looked more like it should be called Frankenstein bread as I shredded the bright green squash, I was delighted to discover it is absolutely delicious!! I already want to make another batch with another huge squash growing on the trellis right now.
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