As I said. So after Thanksgiving we're going to be trying to use up a lot of the vegetables from the CSA pickup.
That's the stuff we haven't eaten already - a lot of carrots, sweet potatoes, and squash. The nieces, as a rule, don't like carrots, sweet potato, or squash. Orange vegetables as a group. I've already apologized, but it's GOT to be used up. Poor babies. I keep trying them in different ways, too, but... *shrugs*
Mostly we have butternut squashes, but there's this red one that looks like a small, red pumpkin. Not sure what sort of squash it is, but really, excepting spaghetti squash they're mostly interchangeable, aren't they?
As Ana was doing her homework she glanced over at me grating potatoes. "OOOH! ARE YOU MAKING POTATO PANCAKES?" Yup!
Then she watched me grating the carrots and parsnip that went in the pancakes as well, and I convinced her to try a little sliver of parsnip. "It tastes... a lot like a carrot." Yes, it does.
And THEN she looked over and saw the red squash thing. Itching for another distraction, or possibly just in a very good mood, she burst out with "Is that a pumpkin? Are we going to get to eat that?!?"
Me: No, it's not a pumpkin, sweetie, but we are going to eat that, probably next week.
Ana: Wait... is it... *face falls slightly* is that a SQUASH?
Me: Pumpkins are squash. And yes, so's that. And yes, we are going to eat it. Next week. It's got to be used up, and we're on a budget.
She took it very well, I must say. Now I just have to dig up some new recipes that maybe won't taste so offensively... well, honestly, I'm not sure why the nieces don't like orange vegetables, but it's an awful pity, they're cheap and filling and nutritious. Still, I wish I knew what it is about them that bugs the girls so much. (Evangeline used to adore carrots, at least, but for a while she's been copying her sister in that respect.)
That's the stuff we haven't eaten already - a lot of carrots, sweet potatoes, and squash. The nieces, as a rule, don't like carrots, sweet potato, or squash. Orange vegetables as a group. I've already apologized, but it's GOT to be used up. Poor babies. I keep trying them in different ways, too, but... *shrugs*
Mostly we have butternut squashes, but there's this red one that looks like a small, red pumpkin. Not sure what sort of squash it is, but really, excepting spaghetti squash they're mostly interchangeable, aren't they?
As Ana was doing her homework she glanced over at me grating potatoes. "OOOH! ARE YOU MAKING POTATO PANCAKES?" Yup!
Then she watched me grating the carrots and parsnip that went in the pancakes as well, and I convinced her to try a little sliver of parsnip. "It tastes... a lot like a carrot." Yes, it does.
And THEN she looked over and saw the red squash thing. Itching for another distraction, or possibly just in a very good mood, she burst out with "Is that a pumpkin? Are we going to get to eat that?!?"
Me: No, it's not a pumpkin, sweetie, but we are going to eat that, probably next week.
Ana: Wait... is it... *face falls slightly* is that a SQUASH?
Me: Pumpkins are squash. And yes, so's that. And yes, we are going to eat it. Next week. It's got to be used up, and we're on a budget.
She took it very well, I must say. Now I just have to dig up some new recipes that maybe won't taste so offensively... well, honestly, I'm not sure why the nieces don't like orange vegetables, but it's an awful pity, they're cheap and filling and nutritious. Still, I wish I knew what it is about them that bugs the girls so much. (Evangeline used to adore carrots, at least, but for a while she's been copying her sister in that respect.)
no subject
Date: 2011-11-22 05:38 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-11-22 02:39 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-11-22 05:13 am (UTC)Squash also freezes well, if you have freezer room.
I like squash, but have you tried it in a mixed scallop or gratin with other root vegetables? Orange cheese might disguise the orange vegetables for the Pickers. I seem to remember once eating twice-baked potatoes with shredded squash mixed into the mash along with shredded cheese--it was decades ago, so it's fuzzy, but fwiw...
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Date: 2011-11-22 05:21 am (UTC)I've stopped trying to make it make sense.
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Date: 2011-11-22 05:35 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-11-22 05:37 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-11-22 05:41 am (UTC)My own "pot pie" is a casserole in a large dish covered with one layer of crust. I don't have the patience to make a bunch of little ones, and I think a double-crust is too much crust for the typical depth of an American pie pan.
no subject
Date: 2011-11-22 05:45 am (UTC)Heh.
Date: 2011-11-22 05:49 am (UTC)Much better than trying to finagle a slice out of a scalding-hot pie with those useless "pie server" thingies.
Re: Heh.
Date: 2011-11-22 05:51 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-11-22 07:37 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-11-22 07:38 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-11-22 02:38 pm (UTC)2. OMG! NO PUMPKIN PIE? I FORGOT, ENGLAND!
If you promise to bake it, I'll send you a can of pumpkin (you can't really use any old pumpkin, it has to be a pie pumpkin or it's too watery) and a recipe. No pumpkin pie is my vision of hell. I love me my pumpkin pie!
*thinks*
All those recipes call for "pumpkin pie spice", I'll send you a recipe for that as well. I assume you can get cloves, nutmeg, ginger, vanilla extract, cinnamon? (I've heard Brits say Americans like cinnamon too much, so I feel the need to confirm!
3. Note, I say I'll send it, but I may put it off for a bit and you'll have to remind me. I'm horrible about this sort of thing.
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Date: 2011-11-22 02:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-11-22 03:33 pm (UTC)Yes, we can get all those spices and more. Waitrose may even have the cans of pie filling. We also have pastry :)
If this is going to be hassle, or the post will be silly-expensive, then please don't bother, lovely thought though it is.
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Date: 2011-11-22 03:54 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-11-22 03:56 pm (UTC)I just did a quick search, and yes, should I feel the inclination, Waitrose will provide.
http://www.waitrose.com/shop/ProductView-10317-10001-10003-Paula+Pumpkin+Puree
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Date: 2011-11-22 08:23 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-11-22 08:34 pm (UTC)I nibbled a bit of raw parsnip last year when I was putting one in a soup and quite liked it, though cooked it's horrible. I don't like anything of that ilk - parsnips, swede, turnips, or sweet potato, squash, any of that lot. So I can't help too much with recipes as I don't have any! That said, I do use them a bit in mulligatawny soup which I'm sure you could adapt to work with what you've got. (Its base is swede, carrot, sweet apple and onion, but any combination of like vegetables works. It's a wonderfully versatile meal. If you'd like the recipe, let me know.) Similarly you could try curried parsnip soup - whether their issue is texture or taste (for me it's both) that's a meal which disguises both.
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Date: 2011-11-22 10:28 pm (UTC)Parsnips are just very white carrots that are sweet!
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Date: 2011-11-22 11:51 pm (UTC)It's strange that they should not like orange veg, which tends to be the sweeter end of the spectrum, yet like green (if your recent comments about Eva and broccoli are anything to go by) on the bitter end.
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Date: 2011-11-23 01:09 am (UTC)Though my persistence is paying off, tonight Ana said she's starting to like carrots and sweet potato "a little", probably because I serve at least one of the two every week. (I don't make them swallow it down, I do expect them to take a small bite to see if their tastes have changed.)
* Which means the only brassica they don't like that much is cabbage, but admittedly I don't have many recipes for that. They also like collard greens at least some of the time. Yup, another brassica. What I love about that plant family is that most of them even have related names, so you don't need to know botany, just etymology to identify them. Even cabbage is the cole in cole slaw. Broccoli isn't a related term, but doesn't it LOOK related, with the col in the middle of it? Sadly, it's just a diminutive, but I like my version better.