Pumpkin dish ideas
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1 | I'm not a big fan of pumpkin but would like ideas of how or what I can add too it so I can start having it. Due to my strict diet at moment can only add herbs and spices. Any ideas and best type to use. cassie24 - 2015-05-14 14:53:00 |
2 | Cook in the microwave then mash and add some nutmeg and pepper and salt .......yummo !!!! petal1955 - 2015-05-14 15:10:00 |
3 | OK will try it. How long does it take in microwave and what sort is best? cassie24 - 2015-05-14 19:10:00 |
4 | Boil it up and eat it, I love it boiled, salt and white pepper...yumeeeeeee!! rainrain1 - 2015-05-14 19:21:00 |
5 | It's great added to hummus, I make a batch every few days. Use it in quiches, on pizza and it makes a good curry too. I put cut up pumpkin in the MW as it is (skin on) and bake for 5 mins. You can then scrape the flesh off the skin and mash with S&P & nutmeg/cumin or serve as is. nauru - 2015-05-14 19:41:00 |
6 | Chinese 5 spice is delicious either with mashed or roasted pumpkin sarahb5 - 2015-05-14 22:04:00 |
7 | I am a big roast pumpkin fan, to eat as is, but also makes for better soup if you roast it first. beaker59 - 2015-05-14 23:38:00 |
8 | If you roast pumpkin for soup, do you cook up onion in water or stock? barbiedoll - 2015-05-18 20:26:00 |
9 | Put it in your mashed potato 2/3 potato and 1/3 pumpkin. I've got my son and his girlfriend eating pumpkin that way. Or are you on that no carb diet, then you could mash it with some Kumara. Roasted is the best though. blueviking - 2015-05-21 08:49:00 |
10 | I make pumpkin lasagna cgvl - 2015-05-21 09:26:00 |
11 | layer some in with your potato bake rainrain1 - 2015-05-21 09:56:00 |
12 | Whole grey pumpkins make beaut roasted pumpkin soup for the freezer. Have a big brew on today. My version. fifie - 2015-05-21 13:40:00 |
13 | A favourite in our family. cary14 - 2015-05-21 19:16:00 |
14 | barbiedoll wrote: sarahb5 - 2015-05-21 21:20:00 |
15 | barbiedoll wrote:
You can roast the onion along with the pumpkin pieces as Sarah describes above (looks nice) or just finely chop and sauté in some butter before making the soup. I like to cook slow in butter for quite some time until it caramelizes well then add the peeled roast pumpkin and veg stock (or water or milk). Season well and you have a nice plain soup or add herbs and spices at onion stage to give the desired flavor profile. I use lots of garlic some fresh garden herbs like rosemary thyme and bay and some spices. beaker59 - 2015-05-22 15:44:00 |
16 | cary14 wrote: samanya - 2015-05-22 16:54:00 |
17 | My family like mashed pumpkin, sprinkle in chicken stock and plenty of grated cheese. Put in dish, top with a sprinkle of paprika. Can put more cheese on and Into oven or microwave. retired - 2015-05-24 17:57:00 |
18 | This soup is a favourite - another goodie from Alison Holst. Chop up 1/4 of a grey-skinned pumpkin into cubes roughly 1 cm square. fefeoc - 2015-05-24 20:53:00 |
19 | I find the microwave improves the flavour of even an early season pumpkin. I don't know why it works, but it does. I do a large number of pieces (enough to fill my biggest Pyrex) Sprinkle the pieces with water then sprinkle with dried mixed herbs and dried onion. Put on the lid and microwave for about 6 minutes. Place the pieces into a baking dish lined with baking paper. Spray/drizzle with a good olive oil and a little salt or herb salt and bake in the oven till tender. I then keep the extra pieces in the fridge for another meal or process for soup. roshu - 2015-05-25 22:15:00 |
20 | great iideas.. bev00 - 2016-05-24 22:07:00 |
21 | bump for pumpkin bev00 - 2017-05-25 00:27:00 |
22 | blueviking wrote: I like that mix for cottage and shepherds pie. hidecote01 - 2017-05-25 13:12:00 |
23 | Cumin, bacon, roasted. (Or leave out the bacon). unknowndisorder - 2017-05-25 20:51:00 |
24 | cassie24 wrote: sarahb5 - 2017-05-25 21:41:00 |
25 | sarahb5 wrote: Pumpkin is a great antioxidant, it can be a lot cheaper than other veges (weight-for-weight), is good for eye health, skin health, and has good amounts of vitamins and the minerals potassium, calcium, magnesium, phosphorus and zinc. It is also a good source of iron and copper for healthy hair. ""Pumpkins are a more nutritious food than potatoes in just about every way and they make a great replacement for steamed, roasted or mashed potatoes on your dinner plate. Where as eating too many potatoes can be fattening, eating pumpkins regularly could help you lose weight and improve your overall health and well-being. It’s a simple change but a valuable one."" http://superfoodprofiles.com/healthy-pumpkin *** To those above who advocate peeling pumpkin before roasting or removing it after roasting....... For soup, I also nuke my chunks (skin on) before roasting, for the same reason as #19 - it seems to improve the flavour. Then roast with garlic and onion wedges and sometimes, half a fennel bulb (the rest is finely sliced with red onion and oranges for a salad, since I tasted it like that at Shed 5 in Welly, years ago. Great crunch, brilliant flavour...). But I digress.... I also lightly saute walnuts in butter, take them out, and set aside in a dish. Then I fry off some curry paste in oil and butter, add a chopped small onion (extra to the ones roasted) and a couple of stalks of celery. When translucent, I throw the roasted pumpkin, onions, garlic, grated or minced ginger, the walnuts, 1/2 teaspoon nutmeg, and a handful of fresh herbs (tied in a bunch to remove later) into a heavy stockpot or cast iron casserole, and nearly cover with half home made chicken stock/half water and simmer until breaking down. Then it's wizz until smooth, add salt and pepper to taste, and serve with a dollop of sour cream or homemade coconut yoghurt and sprinkled with lots of fresh parsley. Soooooo warming and good for the body and soul. Pumpkin also freezes well, so buy when cheap, nuke, (roast if intended for soup) and freeze for soup or mash when they're dearer..... autumnwinds - 2017-05-26 01:58:00 |
26 | autumnwinds wrote: sarahb5 - 2017-05-26 07:38:00 |
27 | Boil it with potatoes, mash them both together... add salt and pepper or parsley as desired, add enough flour to make a soft dough... Edited by psychicxpress at 10:02 pm, Sat 27 May psychicxpress - 2017-05-27 22:00:00 |
28 | Bump I am over boiled and roasted pumpkin any other suggestions. dolphinlu - 2017-06-05 17:14:00 |
29 | The member deleted this message. dolphinlu - 2017-06-05 17:42:00 |
30 | fifie wrote: jan2242 - 2017-06-11 10:13:00 |
31 | jan2242 wrote:fifie wrote: rainrain1 - 2017-06-11 10:43:00 |
32 | tonight i have skinned & cubed a few slices of pumpkin (cm ish size cubes) & microwaved to par-cook them. Then sauted them with a splash of olive oil & add a good tsp of ground cumin & some sliced meat, just a couple of pieces (tonight I have had some sliced pastrami left over in fridge) but have used ham or bacon before. Its sort of an Indian taste but not overpowering & is a different way of the same old vege ... if DH had his way everything would be mashed to heck every night. buzz123 - 2017-06-12 20:16:00 |
33 | bump bev00 - 2018-06-12 23:11:00 |
34 | I've got into pumpkins a lot more recently as kumara has got so expensive but I've found so many great salad recipes with roasted pumpkin and now a big fan. wildflower - 2018-06-13 14:17:00 |
35 | The member deleted this message. iwikiwi - 2018-06-17 14:42:00 |
36 | pumpkin soup so many ways slimgym - 2018-06-17 16:16:00 |
37 | The member deleted this message. timturtle - 2018-06-17 18:13:00 |
38 | Pumpkin risotto, we found a recipe on Youtube sossie1 - 2018-06-17 18:29:00 |
39 | Chelsea Winters Thai pumpkin soup is delicious but maybe that’s because I like pumpkin - my children don’t and even if I were to wrap it in bacon and smother it in cheese sauce (which actually sounds delicious) they still wouldn’t eat it! sarahb5 - 2018-06-17 21:43:00 |
40 | Todays recipe in VIVA: uli - 2019-05-27 17:25:00 |
41 | dolphinlu wrote:
I use thin slices of pumpkin in place of pasta when making a lasagna pauline999 - 2019-06-03 10:13:00 |
42 | I used to stuff ravioli with pumpkin and a little fresh sage, it was delicious. frances1266 - 2019-06-03 10:59:00 |
43 | cary14 wrote: ...wow, had this once and been looking for a recipe, thank you. I think from memory, the pumpkin was sliced like apple slices, and layered on top of each slice, and lots of garlic in the cream. think I will do this tonight. korbo - 2019-06-03 14:27:00 |
44 | korbo wrote: samanya - 2019-06-03 16:29:00 |
45 | As an aside, I've tried Queensland Blue pumpkins this year & had a good crop & so far I'm liking them better than the usual Wangaparoa(sp) crown...maybe it's just the season, but they are deep orange & easier to cut than they look (always an issue for me) & very tasty. samanya - 2019-06-03 16:34:00 |