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July 26, 2021 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Where’d all these zucchini come from?!

It’s summertime and the garden is bursting with a lot of zucchini! We went to a pick-your-own vegetable farm a few weeks ago when I visited Mary in Dallas and had a great time in the hot sun. Lots of families and little kids. And lots of humongous zucchini no one wanted. We picked them, got a discount because of their size, and made some wonderful meals with them! Check out this farm website to find a pick-your-own farm near you!

The only problem with zucchini season is, they are so plentiful that people run out of interesting ways to eat them. Especially the oversized ones, which can have big seeds. Our Italian granny called them “gugoozt”. Not sure about that spelling. Don’t worry, the larger zucchini aren’t tough and they still have great flavor! Below are some wonderful recipes that will help you use your zucchini bounty.
Don’t forget, the zucchini blossom is edible as well – add the torn flowers to any of these dishes for a nice splash of orange.

Zucchini pancakes:  grate the zucchini on a box grater or food processor and toss with a couple tablespoons of flour.  To 6 cups of grated zucchini, mix in 1 cup chopped scallions, 3 eggs, ½ cup parmigiano, chopped fresh basil and parsley.  Right before frying the fritters, add the salt, about 2 teaspoons.  If you add it too early, the zucchini gives up liquid and the mixture becomes too wet.  Heat a saute pan or griddle on high, oil the pan and drop a spoonful of the mixture to form patties.   Fry till browned.

Zucchini pasta sauce: Sauté a little chopped onion and a couple minced garlic cloves in olive oil until softened.  Add 3 cups grated zucchini, 2 tbsp chopped parsley and 1 teas salt, cooking until zucchini is soft and wilted.  Add ½ cup water and continue to cook thoroughly.  Put a little cream in the sauce and bring to a simmer.  When your pasta is cooked, add a dollop of pesto or a large handful of chopped basil and stir.  Add the cooked pasta with a little pasta water and toss well.  Top with parmigiano

Zucchini ripieno, or stuffed: cut the zucchini in half length-wise and scoop out the seeds with a spoon/paring knife.  Saute chopped onion and minced garlic until onion is soft.  In a bowl, mix the onions with the chopped pulp, fresh bread crumbs, crushed tomatoes, oregano, basil, parsley, and parmigiano.  You can mix in Italian sausage or ground beef if you like. Lightly salt and oil the hollowed-out zucchini and stuff them with the mixture.  Put them in a baking dish, drizzle well with olive oil and bake till browned. For a Greek twist, use ground lamb and chopped mint.

Roasted summer vegetables:  Combine a mixture of cubed zucchini, summer squash, red/orange bell peppers and onion and lay out in a single layer on a large sheet pan.  If the zucchini is really huge, cut it lengthwise and scoop out the big seeds, then cube the remainder.  Place the veggies in a hot oven, 425-450, until well roasted.  Put them in a large bowl, drizzle a generous amount of great olive oil and toss with sea salt and minced fresh herbs,.  I like a combination of parsley, tarragon, thyme and basil.  TIP:  heat the empty, clean pan in the oven til it’s hot, wipe a scant amount of oil on the pan.  Let it cool before cooking the veg.  This keeps them from sticking and makes clean up easier too!

Here’s a great old photo of my mom in her vegetable garden picking a googutz!

She was brilliant with vegetables and some of these recipes are hers.  Grazie Mamma!  Ti voglio tanto bene

Filed Under: Blog Categories, seasonal vegetables Tagged With: how to use big zucchini, roasted summer vegetables, stuffed zucchini, summer dishes, zucchini, zucchini pancakes, zucchini recipes, zucchini sauce for pasta

September 8, 2014 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Zucchini Omelet

zucchini roundYou may be tired of reading posts on cooking zucchini.  But you see, that’s the way zucchini is:  relentless, never-ending, but delicious if you treat it right and give it a chance to make it, yet again, to the plate.

One of the most amazing egg experiences I’ve ever had, one that sent me into the kitchen to ask the cook how the heck she made that, was a zucchini omelet, redolent with fresh herbs and creamy with melted cheese.  I was in college, the kitchen was at my parent’s home and the cook was my Mom.zucchini

The zucchini was firm and there were flecks of fresh parsley and basil.  The egg was fluffy and light, filled with sharp and mellow notes of melted cheese.  It seemed to be heaven on a plate but apparently just another of my mother’s clever ways to use up the zucchini left over from supper the night before.

Zucchini Omelet
3 eggs
½ cup cooked zucchini
1 tbsp chopped parsley and basil
¼ cup swiss cheese and parmigiano
Sea salt
Pepper

Beat the eggs, salt and pepper together in a small bowl. Mix the zucchini, herbs and cheese into the egg.  Butter a small non-stick saute pan and when the pan is hot add the egg and zucchini. Allow the omelet to cook a little, pulling the sides into the middle and allowing the raw egg to run out and under the cooked egg.  Continue to cook until done to your liking then turn it out onto a plate and enjoy!

 

Filed Under: Blog Categories, seasonal vegetables Tagged With: zucchini, zucchini omelet

August 13, 2014 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

How to eat a Zucchini

Mom with ZucchiniThis zucchini series has gotten me thinking about my mother.  So many of my food memories come from her as she was an avid gardener and accomplished cook.  I have been surprised to see how many of my zucchini recipes come with a memory of Mom and started looking at the roots of these thoughts.

Mom grew up in the Depression, and like so many of her generation learned at an early age what it was like to have very little and to make the most of what you did have.  Nothing was thrown away in our house until all possible use for it had been exhausted.  Plastic bags were rinsed out and reused, especially after they invented Ziploc.  Brown paper bags were saved to drain bacon or  fried foods.  Rubber spatulas were constantly called upon to scrape the least little bit out of a bowl or pan.  Small bits of vegetables were saved to make stock or soup, and inedible scraps were composted to enrich the soil of the garden.  In short, nothing was wasted.  I carry that mantra with me and have met loads of people who grew up with the same generation of parent.

We always had a garden, it was one of mom’s hobbies, and we ate what she grew.  So in the summer, when both her hopes and fears were realized as the zucchini plants began to bear fruit, and continued to produce beautiful dark green zucchini which doubled in size overnight, she did what any frugal Depression-age baby would do:  she searched out and developed new ways to cook it.

For the most part she was hugely successful.  There was a green-tomato-incident that I recall in which the entire family revolted; however, the zucchini dishes became family favorites that I still make today.  Zucchini is forever linked with my mother in the memory of my family.  And with the bounty I’ve found this summer I feel what she must have felt.  An urgency to use what we’ve been given, to not throw away but to turn the abundance into a wonderful repast.  Thanks Mom!

Filed Under: Blog Categories, seasonal vegetables Tagged With: gardening, mom, zucchini

August 10, 2014 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Spiced Zucchini Bread

round zucchiniYou could grind up just about any vegetable and bake it in a batter with cinnamon and allspice and it would taste delicious with coffee!

Day five of our zucchini series is a light, yummy zucchini bread that is baked in a small loaf or bread pan.   It’s just like a pumpkin bread or carrot cake and is equally delicious with a cream cheese frosting.

So that’s what I did with some of those big zucchini. I used several small pans as I made a double batch, loaded up the zucchini, and gave them to friends. zucchini cake

Zucchini Bread
3 cups flour
1 teas baking powder
1 teas baking soda
2 teas cinnamon
1 teas allspice
¼ teas nutmeg
½ teas sea salt
3 cups grated zucchini, large grate
1 ½ cup sugar
1 cup vegetable oil or melted butter
3 eggs
Mix the flour and all dried ingredients together. In a large bowl beat the sugar and oil/butter (I like half and half) until lightened, beat in the eggs one at a time. Gradually mix in the dried ingredients and then the zucchini. Pour the batter into buttered and floured bread pans, about half way. Bake at 375 until set in the center.

 

Filed Under: seasonal vegetables Tagged With: zucchini, zucchini bread, zucchini cake

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