Squash
Butternut Squash Soup with Cider Cream
Apples and apple cider lend a pleasant sweetness to this beautiful soup.
Halibut with Tomato-Sorrel Sauce
Serve with Garlic Mashed Potatoes. You don't know where the fish ends and the potatoes begin in this beautiful and satisfying dish Chef Desmond, of Island Cottage on Hare Island in Ireland, uses turbot that comes from the waters off nearby Clear Island. We call for halibut, which is more readily available here.
Grilled Chicken and Vegetables with Wild Rice
A marinade of balsamic vinegar, olive oil, honey, herbs and spices perks up the grilled chicken and vegetables in this dish. It's all served with wild rice.
Vegetable Ragoût with Cumin and Ginger
A mixed vegetable stew, seasoned with spices characteristic of Morocco. Serve it with rice or couscous.
Vegetarian Lentil Stew
Serve this hearty stew with plain yogurt or raita for a high-protein vegetarian meal.
Zucchini Gratin
By Danielle Brackett
Spirited Pumpkin Pie
Pumpkin pies have long been favored in New England; there is a recipe for a "pompkin" pie in Amelia Simmons's 1796 American Cookery. New England colonists, in spite of their puritanical reputation, were known to enjoy a tot of rum now and then. And if the liquor was hidden in a pie, even the ladies were able to indulge.
Beef-Short Ribs Tagine with Honey-Glazed Butternut Squash
Teamed with meats of all kinds in Moroccan cooking, dried fruits and honey impart flavor and sweetness to the sauce in this rich stew. Serve it with a Cabernet Sauvignon.
Great Pumpkin Pie
Pumpkin is one of those tastes you either love or hate, so there is no point in half-measures. Its earthy flavor should not be overwhelmed by molasses or too much spice, particularly mace. If you’re a pumpkin lover, when you bite into a piece of pumpkin pie, you want to taste pumpkin.
In this recipe, I cook the pumpkin and spices before baking, which makes for a more mellow and pleasing flavor. Puréeing the pumpkin in a food processor produces an unusually silky texture.
The crunchy bottom crust is the result of creating a layer of gingersnaps and ground pecans to absorb any excess liquid from the filling, and also of baking the pie directly on the floor of the oven.
By Rose Levy Beranbaum