Squash
Summer Vegetable Tart
Sautéed vegetables are piled atop a creamy goat cheese-custard filling.
Barbecued Chicken Pizza
Bonnie Wilkens Metully of Cincinnati, Ohio, writes: "As much as my husband and I love to go out to eat, it's just more fun, intimate, and cozy to cook and entertain at home. I've taught a lot of our friends just how easy it is to prepare restaurant-quality dishes themselves. Who taught me? My older sister, who's a professional chef. She showed me the importance of getting everything prepped beforehand and seeking out the freshest ingredients."
This terrific dish also works well as an appetizer if it's cut into bite-size pieces.
Roasted Kabocha Squash Soup with Pancetta and Sage
Pumpkins may be all the rage just now, but we've noticed another squash that's garnering a lot of attention lately. The inconspicuous kabocha squash—too bumpy, squat, and unseasonably green to be taken seriously as porch décor—is finally being hailed for its inner beauty. With deeply flavored meat more fiery orange than that of its famous cousin, the kabocha caught the attention of several readers, all of whom wrote to request recipes from various restaurants for kabocha soup. Such an incipient following may portend great things. Is there a Great Kabocha? Not yet, Charlie Brown, but here's a great kabocha soup.
Active time: 30 min Start to finish: 1 1/2 hr
Butternut Squash Chowder with Pears and Ginger
This autumnal dish is especially appropriate and welcome as the first course on a cool fall evening. The subtle sweetness of the squash is enhanced by the flavors of the pears, orange, and ginger, making it a great addition also to the Thanksgiving Table.
Baby Carrot Crudites with Green Onion and Mint Dip
Yogurt gives this dip a refreshing tang.
Great One Pot Vegetables
I leave the roots on the leeks until after cooking, so they don't fall apart. Just wash and trim beforehand.
Vegetable and Chicken Curry
This Cambodian curry is traditionally made with beef, but Mao Sokhen says his American friends prefer the chicken variation. Though you can use any brand of Thai red curry paste and Asian fish sauce for this recipe, Mao likes the brands recommended below because he finds they produce a dish that is closer to classic Cambodian flavor.
Broiled Vegetables with Toasted Israeli Couscous
Couscous is frequently thought of as a grain, but it's actually a pasta. This is more apparent in rounds of toasted Israeli couscous, which are larger and chewier than the familiar Moroccan kind. Try this dish with chicken or fish.
Spicy Vegetarian Chili
Denise Anderson, Lexington, Ky.
"I created this chili when my husband and I were trying to eat less meat."
"I created this chili when my husband and I were trying to eat less meat."
Summer Minestrone with Pesto
When a generous garnish of pesto gets stirred in, the soup turns a vibrant green and becomes perfumed with the intense and sweet aroma of basil mixed with garlic.
Ribboned Zucchini Salad
Preparing the zucchini for this dish won't heat up your kitchen — simply salting thin slices is enough to tenderize them.
Active time: 30 min Start to finish: 30 min
Pappardelle with Bean Bolognese Sauce
Butternut squash and a variety of beans give this vegetarian dish its hearty texture.
California Vegetable and Chickpea Chili
Only native Californians like two wine-making friends of mine in Salinas can regularly throw together a vegetable chili such as this utilizing their almost year-round abundance of fresh vegetables and herbs. For those of us with seasonal gardens, various substitutions often have to be made (canned tomatoes, dried herbs, and the like), but such is the availability almost everywhere today of certain fresh produce even in the coldest months that no imaginative cook should have much trouble concocting a very tasty vegetable and bean chili according to this basic recipe. One advantage, by the way, of using a 28-ounce can of tomatoes with their juices instead of the fresh is that most likely you won't have to add any water to keep the chili slightly soupy.