I just picked up my Grant Farms CSA box full of goodies last night and (yippee) I found some UFO squash stashed between the potatoes and kohlrabi.
Pattypan, sunburst or scallopini – whatever you call them, these little gizmos are tasty and fun. If you want your dinner guests to say, aaahhhh, how cute when you bring out the plates, serve up some stuffed sunburst squash-ettes. And kids love nothing better than eating little yellow flying saucers or erupting volcanoes for dinner.
squash volcanoes (warning – launching pad recipe)
what you need
2 or more sunburst squashes
cooked brown rice *
Italian sausage (optional) *
onion, finely chopped
garlic, minced
assorted veggies (throw in some finely diced carrots or celery if you’d like)
oil or butter for sautéing
small amount of broth (vegetable or chicken) *
sea salt, fresh ground pepper, Italian seasonings
Parmesan cheese
* I almost always have some cooked brown rice and a container of chicken or vegetable broth stashed in the refrigerator for times like this.
* These are great with a small amount of cooked Italian sausage added to the mix, but it’s not necessary. I just happened to have some in the fridge, so I threw it in with the brown rice.
what you do
Carefully cut the more rounded end off the squash to make an opening, keeping the “lid” intact. The “flatter” end is the bottom. Gently clean out the interior part of the squash without cutting through the skin. Try to keep the chunks you dig out large enough to chop into pieces (don’t pulverize it). Set aside the part you’ve cleaned out. With the open end facing up, set the squash in a baking dish and add an inch or so of water to the dish. Make sure to include the lids. Cover with foil and bake in preheated 400 degree oven for 15 – 20 minutes.
While squash is baking, heat 1-2 tablespoons of oil (or butter) in a good-sized skillet. Add onions and other veggies, stir gently for 2 to 3 minutes. Make sure to include the squash you cleaned out, chopped and set aside when you did the prep work. Add garlic, sauté another 30 to 60 seconds. Spoon brown rice into the skillet and add a few splashes of broth to moisten the mixture, continue cooking for a couple more minutes. Mix well and season with Italian spices, sea salt and fresh ground pepper. You can also fold in some Parmesan cheese at this point if you’d like it more “cheesy.” Mixture should be moist, but not drippy.
* If you decide to use meat, add the cooked meat when you add the rice so the flavors blend and everything is heated to the same temperature.
Once squash has precooked, carefully take it out of the oven (don’t spill hot water on yourself). Using a hot-pad, transfer squash to a cookie sheet, gently fill with rice mixture, sprinkle with Parmesan cheese and return to oven for another 15 or 20 minutes.
This recipe isn’t precise, all of your amounts depend on how many squash volcanoes you’re making. Adjust accordingly.
Stay tuned as my share box was overflowing this week.
Hmmm — what should I make next? Squash frittata? Apple crumble? Or potato-crusted salmon?
Is this fun, or what?!
Melissa
Well, Melissa, whatever it is that you do next will you please share???
Mary
Mary,
Yes, I’m thinking apple crumble because I need a dessert for a dinner in a couple of days. Do you have a fruit share? I got a bag of apples and a bag of peaches this week. The apples are perfect for — well, anything! But they’re a bit tart, so they’d be delicious baked.
I made a squash frittata the other night out of all the various squashes I received and the leftovers I had in the fridge. With those Grant Farms eggs, it was soooo good.
More later.
🙂
I’ve never heard them called “scallopine” before, but I can see why they would. Whatever you call them, these little guys are awesome!
Melissa,
These are great! I’ve not seen these UFO squashes before, they look a lot of fun. But your stuffing sounds like it will work in so many other applications. A great launching pad recipe, a bit of black pudding in there would be just champion! 🙂
GDave
We call them pattypan, but I like sunburst better! What fun to make little volcanoes that you can eat. The filling sounds great and very adaptable as you say. I bet one could even clean out the refrigerator to fill up these goodies. 🙂
Shirley
Melissa,
I grew these once, I didn’t realise how many a plant would yield and grew six plants..talk about overload! Filling them is the only option as far as I’m concerned, I used Indian dal in mine.
Miles