I had one more butternut squash to use, and decided to make a recipe that is in one of my Root Cellar books.
Warning: long blog post again (sorry)
Hubby and I took a road trip Sunday, and I took along my Root Cellar book. He is motivated more now that ever to get things done around here.
Why?
Well, he put down a payment on his new motorcycle. The plan is to go pick it up soon, when the weather is more conducive to riding it home. He's a pretty happy man right now. He even bought me a helmet. I just need boots, but that can wait.
Back to the recipe. I found a butternut/onion/hummus recipe in the this book:
So I made it. Monday was a long day in the kitchen.
You roast about 3 cups of butternut squash, along with garlic and onion. Oh, and some olive oil. The recipe states "cloves of garlic" so I chopped them. Not sure if I should have left them whole or not. You let that cool, add some chickpeas, lemon juice and olive oil. I had organic canned chickpeas, so I used two cans and rinsed and drained them. You can use cooked chickpeas too (2 cups).
I tasted it and really didn't think it had the garlic taste I like with traditional hummus (using Tahini). I ended up adding more minced garlic, then mixed it up again in the food processor.
The family love it. I loved it. I am so thrilled I found another reason for Hubby to dig that root cellar. When I told him the hummus was from a butternut squash I could store in a root cellar, vs. buying expensive Tahini (which he can never locate in stores and gets upset I asked him to pick it up), he was shocked.
I had to put it into two containers so we could all share, but it was quickly gobbled up. I bet it would make a nice sandwich spread too. And to think you get your vegetables in it, and less fat.
That's not all I did in the kitchen. Surprisingly, along with vacuuming, laundry (etc.), I whipped up a batch of homemade wheat thins to go with that delicious hummus. The dough is a bit sticky, so I have extra flour on hand when I roll it. So far, the extra flour has never hindered my cracker results.
I am sharing photos in case you have never made them. I roll small bits at a time, because I roll them very thin. I use long metal spatulas to move the dough to the parchment lined baking sheets.
I then use my pizza slicer, and cut the crackers. I don't even sprinkle extra salt or prick the crackers. I just put it right in the oven. I rotate the pan half way through the baking time.
I let the baking sheet sit a few minutes before dumping the crackers into a container. I reuse the parchment for the next batch, while another is baking. I should really weigh or count these, but I get a good amount of them. Even rolling these very thin, they do not break when we dip the hummus.
I got some more organic dandelion greens blanched and in the freezer. By blanching, these taste delicious in my breakfast, and do not have that bitter taste.
And lastly, I made a batch of homemade Thousand Island dressing for our salads. This also tastes great on a grilled burger with bacon and jalapenos.
Warning: long blog post again (sorry)
Hubby and I took a road trip Sunday, and I took along my Root Cellar book. He is motivated more now that ever to get things done around here.
Why?
Well, he put down a payment on his new motorcycle. The plan is to go pick it up soon, when the weather is more conducive to riding it home. He's a pretty happy man right now. He even bought me a helmet. I just need boots, but that can wait.
Back to the recipe. I found a butternut/onion/hummus recipe in the this book:
So I made it. Monday was a long day in the kitchen.
You roast about 3 cups of butternut squash, along with garlic and onion. Oh, and some olive oil. The recipe states "cloves of garlic" so I chopped them. Not sure if I should have left them whole or not. You let that cool, add some chickpeas, lemon juice and olive oil. I had organic canned chickpeas, so I used two cans and rinsed and drained them. You can use cooked chickpeas too (2 cups).
I tasted it and really didn't think it had the garlic taste I like with traditional hummus (using Tahini). I ended up adding more minced garlic, then mixed it up again in the food processor.
The family love it. I loved it. I am so thrilled I found another reason for Hubby to dig that root cellar. When I told him the hummus was from a butternut squash I could store in a root cellar, vs. buying expensive Tahini (which he can never locate in stores and gets upset I asked him to pick it up), he was shocked.
I had to put it into two containers so we could all share, but it was quickly gobbled up. I bet it would make a nice sandwich spread too. And to think you get your vegetables in it, and less fat.
That's not all I did in the kitchen. Surprisingly, along with vacuuming, laundry (etc.), I whipped up a batch of homemade wheat thins to go with that delicious hummus. The dough is a bit sticky, so I have extra flour on hand when I roll it. So far, the extra flour has never hindered my cracker results.
I am sharing photos in case you have never made them. I roll small bits at a time, because I roll them very thin. I use long metal spatulas to move the dough to the parchment lined baking sheets.
I then use my pizza slicer, and cut the crackers. I don't even sprinkle extra salt or prick the crackers. I just put it right in the oven. I rotate the pan half way through the baking time.
I let the baking sheet sit a few minutes before dumping the crackers into a container. I reuse the parchment for the next batch, while another is baking. I should really weigh or count these, but I get a good amount of them. Even rolling these very thin, they do not break when we dip the hummus.
I got some more organic dandelion greens blanched and in the freezer. By blanching, these taste delicious in my breakfast, and do not have that bitter taste.
And lastly, I made a batch of homemade Thousand Island dressing for our salads. This also tastes great on a grilled burger with bacon and jalapenos.
Comments
Your husband found a motorcycle! Yay, I was hoping that would happen. Just in time for good riding weather. Vroom-vroom, off you go!