How to peel and chop a winter squash
As promised many weeks ago, here is a post all about peeling and chopping winter squash.
This is the Chef Heidi Way of doing it, but it’s pretty effective and also safe (how many of you have cut yourselves trying to this another way?).
Start with a cutting board, a relatively sharp and good-sized knife, a mallet (if you have one), and the squash of your choice. Pictured here: Buttercup sqash, one of the yummy ‘turban family’ squash I talked about in my last post.
Cut the sqash in half from stem to blossom-end, starting your cut just to the side of the stem. If you have a mallet, use it here to help push the knife through. Whack the mallet on the knife. If you have no mallet (I don’t) and the squash is resisting your cutting efforts, just lift the whole thing up by the knife handle (the knife blade should be wedged in there so tightly that the squash will come up too) and firmly pat it down on the cutting board. This will also give enough force to push the knife through.
There! Now you should have two halves. Use a spoon to scrape out the squash seeds and membranes. You can save these for vegetable stock, actually. Very tasty.
At this point you can bake the squash, if that’s what you really want to do…
Now cut the squash halves into wedges like so:
Now lay each wedge on its side, to make a stable surface, and use your knife to cut away the peel. See, isn’t that awesome?
Repeat with remaining wedges.
Now use your knife to cut the peeled wedges into pieces.
Now you have perfect cubes of squash ready for roasting, putting in a soup or stew, or into a vegetable medley:
Never again will you just cut a squash in half and bake it. Right?
Awesome! Don’t have to worry about cutting my fingers off now ;) Any good recipe suggestion for that type of squash?