Good Food
sideDish: Pumpkin Stuffed with Everything Good
Dorie Greenspan is best known for her cookbooks on baking. Her latest book is Around My French Table. In this week's sideDish, she shares a recipe for a stuffed pumpkin dish.
Dorie Greenspan is best known for her cookbooks on baking. Her latest book is Around My French Table. In this week's sideDish, she shares a recipe for a stuffed pumpkin dish.
Pumpkin Stuffed with Everything Good
Makes 2 very generous or 4 more genteel servings
Serving
You have a choice — you can either spoon out portions of the filling, making sure to get a generous amount of pumpkin into the spoonful, or you can dig into the pumpkin with a big spoon, pull the pumpkin meat into the filling, and then mix everything up. I’m a fan of the pull-and-mix option. Served in hearty portions followed by a salad, the pumpkin is a perfect cold-weather main course; served in generous spoonfuls, it’s just right alongside the Thanksgiving turkey.
Storing
It’s really best to eat this as soon as it’s ready. However, if you’ve got leftovers, you can scoop them out of the pumpkin, mix them up, cover, and chill them; reheat them the next day.
Bonne idée
There are many ways to vary this arts-and-crafts project. Instead of bread, I’ve filled the pumpkin with cooked rice — when it’s baked, it’s almost risotto-like. And, with either bread or rice, on different occasions I’ve added cooked spinach, kale, chard, or peas (the peas came straight from the freezer). I’ve made it without bacon (a wonderful vegetarian dish), and I’ve also made it and loved, loved, loved it with cooked sausage meat; cubes of ham are also a good idea. Nuts are a great addition, as are chunks of apple or pear or pieces of chestnut.