Butternut Squash
Roasted Butternut Squash with Brown Butter and Nutmeg
Serve this with roast turkey, lamb, or pork.
Calvados-Laced Squash Soup with Cinnamon and Bay Leaves
Dollops of cinnamon-flavored sour cream top this luscious soup.
Butternut Squash Soup with Star Anise and Ginger Shrimp
Active time: 20 min Start to finish: 40 min
Morrocan-Spiced Roasted Vegetables
This fragrant mélange mixes starchy tastes with sweet. The dish is like a stir-fry, only it's done in the oven—a great, no-fuss way to cook a slew of vegetables.
Israeli Couscous with Roasted Butternut Squash and Preserved Lemon
A U-shaped peeler with a horizontal blade (available at most supermarkets) makes peeling the squash easier.
Here it’s okay to pulse the parsley in a food processor rather than chop it by hand, but pat it dry with paper towels first.
Crown of Shrimp with Truffle Sauce
Though the truffles lend a wonderfully rich flavor to the shrimp, they are fairly costly, so you might want to save this dish for special occasions.
Winter Squash-Stuffed Pasta with Almonds
Tortelli di Zucca con Mandorle
Don't be fooled by the broth — this is not a soup recipe. Only a very small amount of broth is poured over the tortelli before serving. To grate the cheese, use the ragged-edged holes of a box grater (not the teardrop-shaped holes we recommend in our Recipe Tips). That way, you'll have the correct texture for the filling.
Active time: 2 hr Start to finish: 6 1/4 hr (includes making stock)
Honey Orange Butternut Squash
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Butternut Squash Pizza
Healthy bonus: Vitamin C and beta-carotene from the squash
Pumpkin-Pear Soup with Coriander
Active time: 30 min Start to finish: 45 min
Butternut Squash and Ginger Relish
Active time: 20 min Start to finish: 2 1/2 hr
Sort of Sephardic Sweet Potatoes and Squash
Sephardic Jews from Turkey, Greece, Morocco, and other countries of the Mediterranean region say seven special blessings over seven different symbolic foods at their Rosh Hashanah dinner. Five of these blessings are over vegetables — apples (candied or dipped in sugar or honey), leeks, beet greens or spinach, dates, and zucchini or squash. These blessings symbolize their hopes for the New Year. Many of these Jews trace their ancestors back to Spain, which is called Sepharad in the Bible. Over the centuries, the Sephardic Jews took advantage of the abundance of vegetables available in the Mediterranean countries, often throughout the year. Among these vegetables are sweet potatoes and squash, great favorites of my family. The special blessing you can say over your sweet potatoes and squash at the beginning of your Rosh Hashanah dinner goes like this:
Yehi ratzon mi-le-faneha Adonai Eloheinu ve-lo-hei avoteinu she-tik-rah ro-a gezar dinenu ve-yi-karehu lefa-neha za-hee-yo-teinu.
May it be thy will, Lord our God and God of our fathers, that you should tear up any evil decree and let only our merits be read before You.
Braised Meat with Butternut Squash
(Stufadin di Zuca Zala)
As many Ashkenazic Jews emigrated to the Veneto, it's not surprising to find a Venetian recipe for a stew reminiscent of the familiar Ashkenazic tsimmes, in which sweet potatoes or squash are paired with meat for a savory one-dish meal. In Mantua, a similar dish made with a beef rump roast is called brasato Rachele. Despite the use of the squash and Marsala, the stufadin is not overly sweet.
Butternut Squash Orzo With Fried Sage
Canned butternut squash purée (find it by the canned pumpkin!) makes this cozy, cold-weather recipe come together in a snap.
Sweet-and-Spicy Squash With Scallion Oil
Roasted squash loses its bland reputation and turns glossy and fragrant thanks to a gingery miso-glaze and a quick scallion oil.
Radicchio Salad With Blue Cheese Dressing
Blue cheese lovers, this one's for you. A glossy blue cheese dressing is tossed with radicchio, hazelnuts, and roasted squash for a satisfying fall salad.