Saturday, November 28, 2020

PUMPKIN—FROM SOUP TO NUTS

 

My plan was to find a tasty Spanish recipe for pumpkin or squash—soup, side or dessert—prepare it for Thanksgiving, photograph the dish and blog about it. But, looking through my archives, I find I’ve already got so many squash recipes that I don’t need any new ones! Instead, I’ll treat you to a compilation of possibilities for using squash—from soup to nuts!


Squash, meaning winter squashes. They’re not grown in the winter, but their hard outer skins make them easy to store during colder months. The category includes many cultivars of pumpkin; the various squashes such as butternut, acorn and hubbard; some lesser-known ones such as spaghetti squash and delicata, and some almost unknown types such as the Malabar gourd, source of candied angel’s hair. In Spanish, they’re all “calabaza.”

Generally, one type of squash or pumpkin can be substituted for another. Pumpkin seems to have a more distinctive, squashy taste and the flesh is waterier than, for instance, the dense flesh of the butternut. (Drain it very well if you’re making a puree.) Butternut and acorn are noticeably sweeter too. Any one of them can be baked, grilled, sautéed, steamed or, yes, microwaved. 

Here we go, pumpkin and squash, from soup to desserts. Click the links to go to the posts with recipe. (By the way, if you’re looking for a Spanish recipe or more info about an ingredient, from squash to thistles, use the “search” function, that little window at the top left of the blog.) 


Cream of Pumpkin Soup
Soups, Stews and Vegetarian Dishes

Salads and Appetizers.

Desserts.



Pumpkin Stew (Alboronía)
Alboronía is originally a Moorish dish, meat stewed with eggplant and other pre-1492 vegetables, that the Arabs introduced into Spain. But, as it is prepared today, it contains all New World vegetables—squash--both pumpkin and zucchini, potatoes, tomatoes, peppers. Only the chickpeas, an Old World legume, and the seasoning of ground cumin are reminiscent of the pre-Columbian dish.

Baked Squash with Rice (Calabaza Guisada con Arroz)
I’ve turned this traditional Spanish recipe into a vegetarian main. The Spanish recipe calls for pumpkin, peppers, onion and tomatoes to be layered in a pan and simmered or baked until tender. I baked all the veggies on top of a layer of brown rice. I’ve used butternut squash from the garden instead of the more traditional pumpkin.

Sautéed Pumpkin   (Calabaza Frita)

“Fried pumpkin”  is the sort of frugal dish—pumpkin, bread and olive oil—that can be stretched to feed a family. Bread thickens the cooking juices, making a tasty sludge. Vinegar and oregano punch up the flavors. I have adapted the traditional recipe, using the bread to make crisp croutons to toss with pumpkin. This makes a great side dish with roast turkey or grilled sausages. Leftovers can be pureed for a soup.

Pumpkin Stuffed with Millet, Tofu and Chickpeas. (Calabaza Rellena)
This vegetarian stuffed pumpkin is a festive dish, just what is needed for the holiday season. The stuffing mixture can be freely varied in both ingredients as well as quantities. Quinoa instead of millet; kidney beans instead of chickpeas; walnuts in place of pistachios. I used traditional turkey-stuffing herbs—thyme and sage—but middle eastern spices can be used instead. Smoked pimentón adds a “meatiness” to the stuffing (tofu mixed with pimentón reminds me of chorizo). Season generously to give the stuffing some punch.

Pumpkin-Couscous Taboulleh (Ensalada de Calabaza y Cuzcuz).
  This colorful salad can be served as a starter, side or light lunch main. 


Winter Salad with Oranges and Squash  (Ensalada de Naranjas y Calabaza).

Winter is citrus season. Here’s a bright and sunny salad to light up the dark.


Spicy Moroccan Squash Salad (Ensalada de Calabaza). 
Moroccan spices, raisins and toasted almonds with butternut squash. Served room temperature, this makes a nice side dish with a holiday meal.


Flatbread with sardine, pumpkin jam.

   



 This is a cheffy recipe with many parts--marinated sardines on coca, a flatbread somewhat like pizza; served with pumpkin jam or angel’s hair with a scoop of almond-gazpacho sorbet alongside. A fine appetizer or starter and a recipe to keep you busy on a quiet quarantine day.








Pastry Squares with Pumpkin Custard Filling  (Miguelitos con crema de Calabaza)
Is this going to be your substitute for pumpkin pie? The pastry is easy to assemble with frozen puff pastry. The filling of creamy pumpkin puree has warm spices of cardamom and ginger.


Pumpkin-Fruit Compote.





This compote is an adaptation of arrope, a very old way to preserve fruit by cooking it in grape must (the juice extracted from grapes in the first step of wine making, before fermentation takes place). The must is boiled to a thick syrup, then fruits such as quince and apples and vegetables such as pumpkin, eggplant and sweet potatoes are cooked in the syrup.







Fried Pumpkin Puffs (Buñuelos de Calabaza)




    Buñuelos are fiesta food in Valencia. They are small fried doughnuts made with a pumpkin batter. They’re delicious eaten out-of-hand or dipped in thick, hot chocolate. Lovely for dessert or breakfast.








Spaghetti squash, for a different twist on pumpkin pie. 
A squash is a squash is a pumpkin. Using that logic, I decided to substitute spaghetti squash for smooth pumpkin puree in a pie. The result is a pie with traditional flavor plus lots of texture.
 



Candied Angel's Hair.


This pot of gold comes from an unusual squash called cidra. Cidra is the Malabar gourd, Cucurbita ficifolia, or “fig-leaf” gourd. In Spain it seems to be grown for only one purpose—the confection of cabello de angel, “angel’s hair,” a golden confiture of candied strands of the squash. Angel’s hair is used as a filling in many traditional pastries. 





Tart with Angel’s Hair and Almonds  (Tarta Mondoñedo)
This Galician tart combines the angel’s hair with almonds in puff pastry. Pumpkin jam can be substituted for angel’s hair.


Shortbread Bars with Angel’s Hair Filling. (Cortadillos de Cidra)
Made with rendered lard and filled with angel’s hair confiture, cortadillos are a pastry typical of winter’s hog butchering, when lard is plentiful. They are made for the Christmas holidays. 


Pumpkin-Almond Pudding.  (Arnadí)

And, to end with nuts! Made with ground almonds and spiced pumpkin puree, this pudding is like a gluten-free, dairy-free pumpkin pie.

Saturday, November 21, 2020

NEW ROOT ON THE BLOCK

 

These tubers, known as Jerusalem artichokes, are from a type of sunflower, . 

Ben dug up the garden bed next to the house, uprooting the invasive “sunflowers” that grow around the clementine tree and crowd out the strawberry plants. He dumped a heap of the roots on the kitchen cabinet. “Are these good for anything?”


Edible tubers can be cooked like potatoes.

     Yes. The sunflower (Helianthus tuberosus) grows from an edible tuber known culinarily as Jerusalem artichoke, sunchoke or topinambour.  My specimens were pretty small, but worth experimenting with.

     The tuber does indeed taste a little like artichoke, but it has nothing to do with Jerusalem (in fact, it is native to North America). 

     The name may be a phonetic scrambling of the word “girasol,” meaning “sunflower.” “Sunchoke” is the market name where the tuber is grown as a food crop. Topinambour is the French name (don’t ask) and the name that Spanish chefs use for the vegetable. 

     Jerusalem artichokes actually taste like a cross between globe artichokes and potatoes. They can be cooked in any way suitable for potatoes, but are also good raw (which potatoes are not). I tried them raw, roasted, mashed and stir-fried.  

Peeled, the tubers are white.

To prepare the Jerusalem artichokes, soak them in water for 15 minutes, then scrub them well to remove all the earth that clings to them.

Peeling small tubers is tedious. The skin is edible, but it gets leathery with roasting. Steaming is the best way to cook the tubers if they are to be turned into puree. 

Slice to use raw or stir-fried.

Crisp and crunchy, good raw in salad. 












With stir-fried vegetables and rice.


















Root vegetable extravaganza!


Sheet pan of root vegetables, ready to roast. On the left are carrots and potatoes; center, Jerusalem artichokes (a few unpeeled) with shallots; right, parsnips at the top, rutabaga (Swede turnip) below. The vegetables are tossed with olive oil, salt, pepper and sprigs of thyme, roasted at 400ºF for 45 minutes. 


Roasted root vegetables, including Jerusalem artichokes, served alongside salmon cake and cole slaw. The roasted veggies are also good with roasted salmon, turkey, chicken, pork.



By the way, the flower is a bright spot in the September-October garden. The tubers will continue to spread, however. So even though we dug these up, a few missed ones will begin to sprout next year. 



More recipes for root vegetables:

Saturday, November 14, 2020

EATING AT KILÓMETRO CERO

A house guest handed me a sack full of walnuts. What a nice gift, just in time for holidays when I always buy a bag of walnuts. In my Spanish market, they are always “California Walnuts.” But these, said Mike, were grown and picked at a friend’s finca in Spain. Kilómetro cero


Walnuts grown in Spain, with a very low carbon footprint.

Kilómetro Cero” is the Spanish manifestation of the locavore movement. The idea is to save the planet through a sustainable culinary experience—food grown and consumed within a 100-kilometer radius. (Although the walnuts came from near Valencia—more than 100 kilómetros from where I live—they were delivered by sailing vessel to a port close to me, thus reducing their carbon footprint.) 

Practitioners aim to support local farmers and small producers, minimize the environmental impact of transportation, emphasize seasonal foods, promote biodiversity and prevent the loss of ecosystems through the preservation of heirloom species, autochthonous livestock breeds, local styles of cheese making. Locally produced food is also likely to be fresher and tastier than that shipped long distances. 

Many of the precepts of Kilómetro Cero have been included in From Farm to Fork, a cornerstone of the European Green Deal, a series of policy initiatives proposed by the European Commission to make Europe climate neutral by 2050. 

From Farm to Fork, presented in May of this year, aims to increase the sustainability of food systems through a strategy to assure affordable and sustainable food, tackle climate change, protect the environment, preserve biodiversity and increase organic farming (including acquaculture). 

Clementines just steps from my kitchen. They are small mandarin oranges, similar to tangerines.


 
Like jewels, ruby-red pomengranate kernels enliven any salad. These fruit are from a friend's garden.

In my kitchen at kilómetro cero, I´m making salad. From a tree just steps from the kitchen, I picked clementines. I opened a pomegranate grown on a nearby friend’s property. I sliced avocados from Málaga plantations (my own tree has only two fruit). Dressed with my own extra virgin olive oil and a smidge of Sherry vinegar (ok, Jerez de la Frontera, provenance of Sherry, is 200 km. from my kitchen), my salad was finished with chopped walnuts, grown in Spain.  

A gorgeous salad for a holiday table, made with local ingredients. 




For the salad dressing, I've got fruity, fresh extra virgin olive oil. I picked the olives myself and took them to the mill.


Chopped walnuts add crunch. Almonds would be good too (I've got almond trees on the edge of my garden.)


Salad with Clementines, Avocados and Walnuts
Ensalada con Clementinas, Agucates y Nueces

Clementines are small mandarin oranges, similar to tangerines. 

I’ve used PX vinegar, made with Pedro Ximenez Sherry. It is slightly sweet, very mellow. Regular Sherry vinegar with a teaspoon of (local) honey is a reasonable substitute. 

Serves 4.

4-5 clementines or other tangerines
2 avocados
Lemon juice
1 pomegranate
1 cup coarsely chopped walnuts
Salad greens
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
1 tablespoon finely chopped shallot
2 ½ tablespoons PX vinegar
4 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
½ teaspoon salt
Freshly ground black pepper
1 tablespoon clementine juice

Peel the clementines and slice them crosswise. Discard any seeds. Slice the avocados and sprinkle them with a little lemon juice. Split open the pomegranate and remove seeds, discarding membrane. Place the seeds in a bowl.

Spread salad greens on a platter or on individual salad plates. Arrange slices of clementines and avocados on the greens. Spoon pomegranate seeds over the fruits. Sprinkle with walnuts.

For the dressing, combine in a small bowl the mustard, shallot and vinegar. Stir until mustard is smooth. Whisk in the oil, salt, pepper and juice.

Immediately before serving, spoon the dressing over the salad.



More about the European Union's Farm to Fork initiative:

More colorful salads for fall and winter:

More recipes with walnuts:

Sunday, November 8, 2020

HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME!

 I went out to dinner on my birthday! What a thrill. I haven’t eaten out since before the coronavirus lockdown. We went to one of my favorite restaurants on the Costa del Sol, Los Marinos José in Fuengirola (Málaga), where the seafood is superb. 


Los Marinos has its own fishing boat and local catch was displayed—Fuengirola octopus, shrimp and small red mullet—as well as big fish from the not-too-distant Atlantic coast, such as pargo from Tarifa. With such a fabulous array of fish and shellfish, how would I ever decide?

What a fabulous display of fresh seafood! On the far left are carabineros, giant red shrimp, and, on the far right, cigalas, sea crayfish. At the back is is 4-kilo black mero (grouper). Four of us ate half of it. (Photo by Ben Searl.)

Tempting as they were, we passed over the deep red carabineros (king prawns) and cigalas (sea crayfish) as starter. We ordered a round of conchas finas, large Venus-shell clams with glossy, mahogony-colored shells. Opened raw, they are served on the half-shell. Slightly chewy with a clean, sea flavor, conchas once were my favorite tapas treat on trips to Málaga. 

For our main course we happily agreed to share half of a 4-kilo black grouper (mero). It provided us with four thick grilled fillets plus pieces of the head, crisply fried. The fillets were cooked to perfection on the plancha. By perfection, I mean moist and flaky, not undercooked, not overcooked. Perfect. What a skill to get it so right. At first taste, I thought I wanted salt, maybe lemon. But, that was out of habit. It needed nothing. No salt, no sauce. Divine.

I'm delighted with grilled grouper and a fresh Albariño white wine. In the foreground are meaty chunks of the fish head and spine that have been crisply fried.  Using hands, eat it right off the bones. (Photo by Ben Searl.)

The waiter directed us to eat the fried pieces “with the hands, like chicken wings.” Crunchy and crusty on the outside, they yielded hunks of moist flesh tucked between bones and fins. (Even an eyeball, which my 16-year-old grandson ate. I´ll spare you the video.) 

A meme on Spanish social networks (I think it comes from an ad) goes like this: “Queridos ingleses: Aceptamos calcetines con sandalias si nos enseñáis a cenar a las ocho.” “Dear English folks: we’ll accept you wearing socks with sandals if only you’ll show us how to have dinner at 8:00.” In Spain, dinner, in normal times, is at 9, 10 or 11 pm. Our dinner reservations were for 8 pm and we were home by 10:30. Such is the culture in the days of coronavirus restrictions (new curfews in Andalusia require restaurants and bars to close by 11 pm.) I'm fine with eating early and delighted to dine again in a restaurant.

And, my birthday wishes came true! The very next day the U.S. presidential elections were called for the Biden-Harris ticket.

Los Marinos José Restaurante
Paseo Marítimo Rey de España, 161
Carvajal- Fuengirola, Málaga
(34) 952 66 10 12

I had another terrific birthday gift--a team to help me pick the olives. Thanks to Ben, Leo and Mike! I came home from the mill with 22 liters of extra virgin olive oil.


Ben cuts down high branches for me to pick. Cat patrols the grounds.


My grandson, Leo, whacks olives from the tree onto a tarp.


Visitor, Capitan Mike, rakes olives from the branches.




Olives on their way to the press.  More about how virgin olive oil is produced here.


At the mill: I've got my 22 liters of fresh olive oil!