tonic
The place where good lives - good news, good style, and good deeds... more about us
Positively good.

news / projects

us / world / business / social responsibility/ technology / science / entertainment / life & style / travel

Accepting Your Outer Squash

By Kirk Bromley | Saturday, September 12, 2009 4:30 PM ET

Email
Share:

Add a comment Add a comment

I have a half-baked confession. Squash has always frightened me. Not eating it. I always love that. But cooking it. Something about those large, hard, warted, motley husks with indeterminable squishiness inside makes me feel like nature's forcing me to cook a bowling ball full of brains, and get it just right.

Yet, regardless of my trepidation, squash season always comes. As fall settles in, massive bulbous misshapen spheroids start appearing in the markets, and I again whisper quietly to myself - what exactly am I supposed to do with THAT?

But this year is different, for I have been squashed by the light. And it's beaming upon me from SquashRecipes.net. As this attractive site points out, there are many kinds of squash. Or squashae. The squash family (in which I think I grew up) includes spaghetti, butternut, acorn, patty-pan, and Hubbard, as well as various zucchinis. It can be used in appetizers, soups, salads, main dishes, desserts, and baking, and it works well in curries, souffles, pasta, rice, and couscous dishes. Squash can be sauteed, oven roasted, grilled, and served on its own, but it's tastiest when incorporated with herbs, spices, and select complimentary ingredients.

There's a squashing load of great recipes at SquashRecipes.net, so before you go to the store this fall, I suggest checking them out. And hopefully, by then they will have posted a response to my request for a tasty way to serve a bowling ball full of brains.

Photo via Wikimedia Commons.

Kirk Bromley is a playwright and freelance writer living in Brooklyn.

Email
Share:

Add a comment Add a comment

Sign up now for the Daily Tonic! We ship a dose of goodness right to your inbox every day.

connect with tonic

RSS

Twitter

Facebook

YouTube

good you've done

  • Helped Project Angel Food prepare and deliver nutritious meals to men, women and children affected by HIV/AIDS, cancer and other life-threatening illnesses.
    Donated one year of Tonic Mailstopper to Project Angel Food for fundraising auction.
  • You helped Tonic plant 1,498 trees in North America, Central America, Africa and Asia.
    Tonic contributed to Sustainable Harvest International, American Forests and Trees for the Future.
  • Sent musical instruments to the U.S. Gulf Coast
    Donated $425 to Music Rising

...more good things