T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2094.1 | Delicious Squash/Chestnut soup | REORG::AITEL | Hunter clawed by tiger - a foe paw. | Tue Nov 20 1990 09:10 | 58 |
| I just tried this last night, and it is delicious approaching
chocolate, which is very strong praise coming from a certified
chocoholic:
Victory Garden Chestnut Squash Soup
2 Tbsp butter (I used Latta, a butter substitute)
1 onion
1 stalk celery
1 carrot
a 2-3 lb squash (mine was more like 4, but who is counting)
of some orange-fleshed winter variety (mine was butternut)
5 cups chicken broth (I only had 4 on hand, so added a cup of water)
1/2 lb chestnuts
1/4 tsp ground ginger
1 1/2 cups light cream (I'm not going to use this)
salt/pepper
Melt butter in a 4 quart pot/sauce pan. Chop onion, celery, carrot.
Add to butter and saute over low heat. Peel chestnuts* and add to
pot. Peel and deseed squash. Cut squash into chunks (1 to 1 1/2
inch cubes is fine) and add to pot. Add 4 cups broth. Bring to
a boil and simmer 30-40 minutes or until squash and chestnuts are
tender. Add ginger, if desired. Puree soup in a blender (best done
in small batches to avoid spilling), adding the additional 1 cup
broth. Stir in cream; correct salt if needed (I used chicken broth
granules) and add freshly grated pepper to taste. Reheat to serve.
Comments:
- The amount of squash is not precise - I used a lot more. You could
get away with canned or frozen squash, very likely.
- The type of broth is not critical - chicken, turkey, or vegetable
would all be fine.
- I made this last night, planning to add the cream and reheat the
soup on Thanksgiving day. After tasting the soup, I don't think
it needs the cream at all - it was very very good. So I'm going
to leave out the cream - I don't need the extra calories and fats
anyhow!
* Peeling Raw Chestnuts: This is easier said than done. You can
always buy the ready-peeled type in jars, although that is expensive.
Victory Garden Cookbook suggests bringing some water to boil in
a large pot, cutting an x in the top of each nut, boiling for 10
minutes, removing and cooling to a touchable temperature, and then
peeling with a sharp knife. I tried microwaving in a closed
container (after cutting the x) - they were difficult to peel. Be
sure to use the knife and not your nails - you will have hurting
fingers from jamming shell under your nails otherwise. Also be sure
to remove all the bitter brown skin, and check out every discolored
spot for rot or borers - one nut I peeled had 4 borers in it but it
looked pretty bad.
This soup is well worth the extra effort. I have never compared the
deliciousness of anything to chocolate before!
--Louise
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2094.2 | microwave butternut? | SPESHR::JACOBSON | | Tue Sep 15 1992 10:18 | 7 |
| Has anyone Microwaved butternut squash. I have a 3 lb squash that I
want to half and cover with butter, brown sugar and cinnamon. It takes
too long to cook in the conventional oven so I thought I would try the
microwave.
Anybody know how long it would take?
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2094.3 | | CALVA::WOLINSKI | uCoder sans Frontieres | Tue Sep 15 1992 11:22 | 16 |
|
Rep .2
I do it all the time, here's what I do.
Cut the squash in half remove the seeds and place the
butter, ... in the seed cavity. Place the squash in a
microwave safe container and add about 1/2" of very hot
to the container. Cover with plastic wrap and nuke it
for 15 minutes on high power. Check for doneness and
nuke it somemore if needed.
-mike
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2094.4 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Tue Sep 15 1992 11:51 | 10 |
|
>> butter, ... in the seed cavity. Place the squash in a
>> microwave safe container and add about 1/2" of very hot
>> to the container. Cover with plastic wrap and nuke it
Uh-oh, I see a pattern here, Bill. Maybe you get sucked
into a black hole if you type the word "water"....ahhhhhh!
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2094.5 | | CALVA::WOLINSKI | uCoder sans Frontieres | Tue Sep 15 1992 13:08 | 13 |
|
Rep .4
Oops, mea culpa, yes it should read "1/2" of very hot water"
I don't worry about black holes btw I got sucked into one
in another life but it spit me out because it didn't like
the taste!!! ;-) <it's Mike btw>
-mike
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2094.6 | yes, I know it's Mike | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Tue Sep 15 1992 16:56 | 11 |
|
>> the taste!!! ;-) <it's Mike btw>
I was directing the comment to Bill French, who noticed the missing
word in another recipe.
Diane
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2094.7 | ex | USCTR1::JTRAVERS | | Wed Sep 16 1992 16:36 | 5 |
| I Microwave butternut squash, but I peel it and cut it into chunks, put it
in a covered micowave dish with just a couple Tbs of water for about 4
min, stop and stir, drain some of the liquid if there is now too much
and microwave for another 3-4 minutes at a time until the squash is
tender. I find that done this way the squash is not real watery.
|
2094.8 | inverted | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Laura | Mon Sep 21 1992 13:18 | 5 |
| If you halve the squash and turn it cut side down on a plate, you
should need little or no water and no plastic wrap cover.
L
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2094.9 | Variations on a theme | LANDO::EBENS | Mary Jean Ebens - BXB2-2/G06 | Wed Sep 23 1992 15:25 | 6 |
| Another variation is to use the cavitity part like acorn squash.
I put in a dab of butter, 1 Tablespoon Sherry (or apple juice), some
cinnamon cover lightly with wax paper and cook until done.
mj
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2094.10 | Another variation.... | SPEZKO::SKABO | Money talks, mine say's GOODBYE! | Thu Sep 24 1992 12:19 | 8 |
|
My wife takes acorn squash, split in half and seeds out, rubs butter on
cavity side, and bake in the over (cavity side down @350� till
tender +/- 30 minutes). Then makes a sauce (heat on stove) of butter, brown
sugar and maple syrup, turn squash cavity side up and fills the cavity
with the sauce, heat for a few more minutes....
GREAT Stuff - and the kids (and George Bush!!) will even eat it!!!!
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