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I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do not
eat the skin, just the flesh. http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg Jill |
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On Mon, 29 Dec 2014 17:56:41 -0500, jmcquown >
wrote: >I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do not >eat the skin, just the flesh. > >http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg > >Jill OMGosh, that looks roasted perfectly. koko -- Food is our common ground, a universal experience James Beard |
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On Monday, December 29, 2014 2:56:49 PM UTC-8, jmcquown wrote:
> I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do not > eat the skin, just the flesh. > > http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg > > Jill I love to put apple butter in the squash when it's roasted. |
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On 12/29/2014 7:55 PM, ImStillMags wrote:
> On Monday, December 29, 2014 2:56:49 PM UTC-8, jmcquown wrote: >> I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do not >> eat the skin, just the flesh. >> >> http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg >> >> Jill > > I love to put apple butter in the squash when it's roasted. > That sounds different. ![]() Jill |
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Filled with port wine/cranberry relish.
On Mon, 29 Dec 2014 17:56:41 -0500, jmcquown > wrote: >I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do not >eat the skin, just the flesh. > >http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg > >Jill |
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On Monday, December 29, 2014 3:56:49 PM UTC-7, jmcquown wrote:
> I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do not > eat the skin, just the flesh. > > http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg > > Jill Looks great...I used to grow those and it was a treat to roast them in the oven...company always enjoyed them. They can be done in the microwave oven but a conventional oven bake is better. Good pic as well. ==== |
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![]() "jmcquown" > wrote in message ... > I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do not > eat the skin, just the flesh. > > http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg > > Jill That looks very good. Cheri |
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On Mon, 29 Dec 2014 17:56:41 -0500, jmcquown >
wrote: > I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do not > eat the skin, just the flesh. > > http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg > Looks good to me! I've never considered eating the skin of an acorn squash, but was surprised to find that the skin of a delicata is just as edible as the skin of a zucchini. So they went onto the squash list. I love squash! Cutting it can be problematic at times, but eating? Rarely. ![]() -- A kitchen without a cook is just a room |
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koko wrote:
> > jmcquown wrote: > > >I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do not > >eat the skin, just the flesh. > > > >http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg > OMGosh, that looks roasted perfectly. YES it does, Jill. When I first saw the picture, I just wanted to grab a spoon and dig into the picture on my monitor. Thanks for the picture! This is why pics are good. If you had said you made baked acorn squash without a pic, I would have read that and moved on. Your picture really sold me! Sold me so much that I bought an acorn squash this morning and would like to recreate that. Would you please post a semi recipe? I assume you brushed it with some olive oil then spiced it somewhat. What seasoning did you use and how long was it roasted and at what temperature? G. |
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On 12/30/2014 7:51 AM, Gary wrote:
> koko wrote: >> >> jmcquown wrote: >> >>> I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do not >>> eat the skin, just the flesh. >>> >>> http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg > >> OMGosh, that looks roasted perfectly. > > YES it does, Jill. When I first saw the picture, I just wanted to grab > a spoon and dig into the picture on my monitor. > > Thanks for the picture! This is why pics are good. If you had said you > made baked acorn squash without a pic, I would have read that and > moved on. Your picture really sold me! Sold me so much that I bought > an acorn squash this morning and would like to recreate that. > Don't count on me taking food pics all the time. ![]() > Would you please post a semi recipe? I assume you brushed it with some > olive oil then spiced it somewhat. > > What seasoning did you use and how long was it roasted and at what > temperature? > > G. > Simplicity itself. 400F degrees, 1 hour. After scooping out the seeds, put a dollop of butter in the well of each half. Sprinkle with S&P and put it in the oven. After about 10 minutes when the butter has melted, brush the butter over the cut edges of the squash and add more butter if desired. Jill |
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On 12/30/2014 1:44 AM, sf wrote:
> On Mon, 29 Dec 2014 17:56:41 -0500, jmcquown > > wrote: > >> I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do not >> eat the skin, just the flesh. >> >> http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg >> > Looks good to me! I've never considered eating the skin of an acorn > squash, but was surprised to find that the skin of a delicata is just > as edible as the skin of a zucchini. So they went onto the squash > list. I love squash! Cutting it can be problematic at times, but > eating? Rarely. ![]() > > Someone (maybe several someones) here said the skin of acorn squash is edible. I tasted a small piece once and found it to be very bitter. I love squash, too. I bought the acorn squash at a nearby farm stand. They grow yellow (crookneck), zucchini, butternut and acorn squashes. No delicata. I'm sure I could find it at Publix, I just never think to look for it. Jill |
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>On 12/30/2014 1:44 AM, sf wrote:
>> On Mon, 29 Dec 2014 17:56:41 -0500, jmcquown > >> wrote: >> >>> I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do not >>> eat the skin, just the flesh. >>> >>> http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg You cut it on the equator! Very pretty! I always cut my squash in half the other way. Easier to stand it up in the pan. How did you get yours to sit straight? The acorn squash we get here are usually pointy on the bottom. Doris |
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![]() On 30-Dec-2014, Brooklyn1 > wrote: > Gary wrote: > >> jmcquown wrote: > >> > >> >I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do > >> >not > >> >eat the skin, just the flesh. > >> > > >> >http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg > > > >Thanks for the picture! This is why pics are good. If you had said you > >made baked acorn squash without a pic, I would have read that and > >moved on. Your picture really sold me! Sold me so much that I bought > >an acorn squash this morning and would like to recreate that. > > > >Would you please post a semi recipe? I assume you brushed it with some > >olive oil then spiced it somewhat. > > > >What seasoning did you use and how long was it roasted and at what > >temperature? > > There are many ways to season winter squash; butter w/s n'p, butter > with cinnamon, butter with dark brown sugar, butter with raisins, > butter with pineapple, and any combination thereof, only limited by > ones imagination... even a big spoon of orange marmalade works well. > Sometimes I'll fill the cavity with precooked breakfast sausage. I have tried all the ways Sheldon mentioned and liked them all, especially the sausage filling. As he said "limited only by ones imagination". A very imaginative person came up with a twist I thought odd but enjoyed quite a lot - stab the cavity with a fork several times, then fill cavity with Dr. Pepper. As the squash bakes, the Dr Pepper enters and flavors the flesh via the tine holes. -- Change cujo to juno |
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On 12/30/2014 12:58 PM, Doris Night wrote:
>> On 12/30/2014 1:44 AM, sf wrote: >>> On Mon, 29 Dec 2014 17:56:41 -0500, jmcquown > >>> wrote: >>> >>>> I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do not >>>> eat the skin, just the flesh. >>>> >>>> http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg > > You cut it on the equator! Very pretty! I always cut my squash in half > the other way. Easier to stand it up in the pan. > > How did you get yours to sit straight? The acorn squash we get here > are usually pointy on the bottom. > > Doris > > I always cut it that way. Sometimes the squash is pointy (or has a bit of stem that needs to be cut off one end). The two I bought (only showed one of them) were fairly spherical and not at all pointy. They sat very nicely on the baking sheet. Otherwise I'd have trimmed a small bit of the point off the end. Jill |
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On Tue, 30 Dec 2014 12:51:11 -0800, koko > wrote:
>On Tue, 30 Dec 2014 12:58:33 -0500, Doris Night > wrote: > >>>On 12/30/2014 1:44 AM, sf wrote: >>>> On Mon, 29 Dec 2014 17:56:41 -0500, jmcquown > >>>> wrote: >>>> >>>>> I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do not >>>>> eat the skin, just the flesh. >>>>> >>>>> http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg >> >>You cut it on the equator! Very pretty! I always cut my squash in half >>the other way. Easier to stand it up in the pan. >> >>How did you get yours to sit straight? The acorn squash we get here >>are usually pointy on the bottom. >> >>Doris >> >I trim off the ends so they'll sit still. Both methods work but slicing north to south ensure that each half's cavity is equal, slicing through their equater it's impossible to judge so that each cavity is equal... I've already sliced acorn squash through its equater and one half got like 80% of the cavity and the other got the remaining 20%. Squash cavities are very equally spaced port to starboard but not stem to stern. With butternut squash the uneveness is much more pronounced, that's why I slice off the entire narrow section and treat thet portion differently as it will have no cavity... sometimes I create a cavity in that part with a melon baller. Occasionally I will grill the halves that have no cavity long and slow in the Weber so that they turn out like fat free gouda cheese. Some years I havest hundreds of winter squash, I can't give enough away as everyone around here grows them and it's not easy to figure out how to cook them enough different ways. A lot of people use butternut squash for baking pumpkin pie... when you buy canned pumpkin it's actually butternut squash... they are so closely botanically related that's it's legally permitted by the USDA. |
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On 12/30/2014 3:21 PM, Brooklyn1 wrote:
> Gary wrote: >>> jmcquown wrote: >>> >>>> I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do not >>>> eat the skin, just the flesh. >>>> >>>> http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg >> >> Thanks for the picture! This is why pics are good. If you had said you >> made baked acorn squash without a pic, I would have read that and >> moved on. Your picture really sold me! Sold me so much that I bought >> an acorn squash this morning and would like to recreate that. >> >> Would you please post a semi recipe? I assume you brushed it with some >> olive oil then spiced it somewhat. >> >> What seasoning did you use and how long was it roasted and at what >> temperature? > > There are many ways to season winter squash; butter w/s n'p, butter > with cinnamon, butter with dark brown sugar, butter with raisins, > butter with pineapple, and any combination thereof, only limited by > ones imagination... even a big spoon of orange marmalade works well. > Sometimes I'll fill the cavity with precooked breakfast sausage. Butter, S&P was all I did. I do not like to add anything sweet to acorn squash. To me the squash tastes plenty sweet by itself. I have done the squash with cooked breakfast sausage thing but not in many years. Jill |
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On 12/30/2014 5:01 PM, Brooklyn1 wrote:
> On Tue, 30 Dec 2014 12:51:11 -0800, koko > wrote: > >> On Tue, 30 Dec 2014 12:58:33 -0500, Doris Night >> > wrote: >> >>>> On 12/30/2014 1:44 AM, sf wrote: >>>>> On Mon, 29 Dec 2014 17:56:41 -0500, jmcquown > >>>>> wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do not >>>>>> eat the skin, just the flesh. >>>>>> >>>>>> http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg >>> >>> You cut it on the equator! Very pretty! I always cut my squash in half >>> the other way. Easier to stand it up in the pan. >>> >>> How did you get yours to sit straight? The acorn squash we get here >>> are usually pointy on the bottom. >>> >>> Doris >>> >> I trim off the ends so they'll sit still. > > Both methods work but slicing north to south ensure that each half's > cavity is equal, slicing through their equater it's impossible to > judge so that each cavity is equal... (snippage) Sorry, but each cavity being equal doesn't rank high up on my list of things that are terribly important. ![]() Jill Jill |
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On Tue, 30 Dec 2014 17:23:34 -0500, jmcquown >
wrote: > On 12/30/2014 5:01 PM, Brooklyn1 wrote: > > On Tue, 30 Dec 2014 12:51:11 -0800, koko > wrote: > > > >> On Tue, 30 Dec 2014 12:58:33 -0500, Doris Night > >> > wrote: > >> > >>>> On 12/30/2014 1:44 AM, sf wrote: > >>>>> On Mon, 29 Dec 2014 17:56:41 -0500, jmcquown > > >>>>> wrote: > >>>>> > >>>>>> I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do not > >>>>>> eat the skin, just the flesh. > >>>>>> > >>>>>> http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg > >>> > >>> You cut it on the equator! Very pretty! I always cut my squash in half > >>> the other way. Easier to stand it up in the pan. > >>> > >>> How did you get yours to sit straight? The acorn squash we get here > >>> are usually pointy on the bottom. > >>> > >>> Doris > >>> > >> I trim off the ends so they'll sit still. > > > > Both methods work but slicing north to south ensure that each half's > > cavity is equal, slicing through their equater it's impossible to > > judge so that each cavity is equal... > (snippage) > > Sorry, but each cavity being equal doesn't rank high up on my list of > things that are terribly important. ![]() > Ha ha ha! -- A kitchen without a cook is just a room |
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My way is just as easy...I put the cut halves cut side down on a greased piece of foil and bake the
same, 400 for about an hour. I load it up with butter, salt and pepper, when I am ready to eat it. I do it upside down because my mom always did...no other reason. ;-)) N. |
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On Wed, 31 Dec 2014 06:13:29 -0800 (PST), Nancy2
> wrote: > My way is just as easy...I put the cut halves cut side down on a greased piece of foil and bake the > same, 400 for about an hour. I load it up with butter, salt and pepper, when I am ready to eat it. > > I do it upside down because my mom always did...no other reason. ;-)) > I started off married life baking them cut side up, but eventually switched to cut side down because the flesh stays moister and that's the way I like it. When they're hot, butter melts no matter which side was up in the oven. -- A kitchen without a cook is just a room |
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On 12/31/2014 8:13 AM, Nancy2 wrote:
> My way is just as easy...I put the cut halves cut side down on a greased piece of foil and bake the > same, 400 for about an hour. I load it up with butter, salt and pepper, when I am ready to eat it. > > I do it upside down because my mom always did...no other reason. ;-)) > > N. > I do it upside down, too. I use the microwave. It comes out fine. -- From somewhere very deep in the heart of Texas |
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On 12/31/2014 11:12 AM, Janet Wilder wrote:
> On 12/31/2014 8:13 AM, Nancy2 wrote: >> My way is just as easy...I put the cut halves cut side down on a >> greased piece of foil and bake the >> same, 400 for about an hour. I load it up with butter, salt and >> pepper, when I am ready to eat it. >> >> I do it upside down because my mom always did...no other reason. ;-)) >> >> N. >> > I do it upside down, too. I use the microwave. It comes out fine. > I have, on occasion, cooked acorn squash in the microwave. I didn't bother to cut it in half first, just cut some slits all around it in the middle so it wouldn't explode. Once cooked cut, scoop out the seeds and add whatever. ![]() Jill |
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On 12/31/2014 10:22 AM, sf wrote:
> On Wed, 31 Dec 2014 06:13:29 -0800 (PST), Nancy2 > > wrote: > >> My way is just as easy...I put the cut halves cut side down on a greased piece of foil and bake the >> same, 400 for about an hour. I load it up with butter, salt and pepper, when I am ready to eat it. >> >> I do it upside down because my mom always did...no other reason. ;-)) >> > I started off married life baking them cut side up, but eventually > switched to cut side down because the flesh stays moister and that's > the way I like it. When they're hot, butter melts no matter which > side was up in the oven. > I do them cut-side up because I like to let the butter permeate the flesh while it's roasting. ![]() Jill |
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On Wed, 31 Dec 2014 12:15:25 -0500, jmcquown >
wrote: > On 12/31/2014 10:22 AM, sf wrote: > > On Wed, 31 Dec 2014 06:13:29 -0800 (PST), Nancy2 > > > wrote: > > > >> My way is just as easy...I put the cut halves cut side down on a greased piece of foil and bake the > >> same, 400 for about an hour. I load it up with butter, salt and pepper, when I am ready to eat it. > >> > >> I do it upside down because my mom always did...no other reason. ;-)) > >> > > I started off married life baking them cut side up, but eventually > > switched to cut side down because the flesh stays moister and that's > > the way I like it. When they're hot, butter melts no matter which > > side was up in the oven. > > > I do them cut-side up because I like to let the butter permeate the > flesh while it's roasting. ![]() > I understand. Did it that way for years. -- A kitchen without a cook is just a room |
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![]() "jmcquown" > wrote in message ... > On 12/31/2014 10:22 AM, sf wrote: >> On Wed, 31 Dec 2014 06:13:29 -0800 (PST), Nancy2 >> > wrote: >> >>> My way is just as easy...I put the cut halves cut side down on a greased >>> piece of foil and bake the >>> same, 400 for about an hour. I load it up with butter, salt and pepper, >>> when I am ready to eat it. >>> >>> I do it upside down because my mom always did...no other reason. ;-)) >>> >> I started off married life baking them cut side up, but eventually >> switched to cut side down because the flesh stays moister and that's >> the way I like it. When they're hot, butter melts no matter which >> side was up in the oven. >> > I do them cut-side up because I like to let the butter permeate the flesh > while it's roasting. ![]() > > Jill Thats the way I like the winter squash, baked with butter. --- This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus protection is active. http://www.avast.com |
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On Monday, December 29, 2014 3:56:49 PM UTC-7, jmcquown wrote:
> I'm not very hungry so this is all I'm having for dinner. No, I do not > eat the skin, just the flesh. > > http://i61.tinypic.com/2lkutjq.jpg > > Jill The one I miss is Hubbard squash. I have not seen it in the stores for years. I suppose because they have to cut it down into pieces we can use. Too much work and maybe some liability. Anyway, it is so good. I worked for a produce farmer way back when and we sold tons (literally) of each variety of winter squash. DaleP |
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