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Dec 10, 2007

Winter Squash Primer


http://www.wholefoodsmarket.com/products/produce/wintersquash.html

Cooler days and nights announce the coming of winter and signal the start of something special — winter squash season! Planted in the early spring and allowed to grow all summer, winter squash is harvested at the mature stage in early autumn before the first frost. Winter squash, also known as hard squash, are available in a variety of shapes, colors and sizes. From the tiny deep-orange baby pie pumpkins to the oversized gorgeous blue hubbard, we love them equally for their variety, nutrient value and recipe versatility. Enjoy this seasonal treasure for decoration, eating or both!

Acorn
Small, deep green or pumpkin-colored squash. Shaped like an acorn, distinguished with deep ridges; golden acorns are the color of pumpkin. A good source of calcium (1 cup of baked acorn squash provides 11% of the RDA for calcium). Excellent baked and drizzled with butter, maple syrup and a pinch of cinnamon. Just halve, removed seeds, sprinkle with salt and place cut side down in about 1/2 inch of water. Bake at 400°F for about 40 minutes, or until skin can be easily pierced with a fork.

Blue Hubbard
Large with a unique, beautiful color. A lovely centerpiece when filled with stuffing.

Buttercup
Round and green with grey coloring. Firm and delicious for a fruity stuffing or chunks in soup.

Butternut
A bell- or peanut-shaped tan-colored squash with sweet orange flesh. Along with Hubbard squash, butternut contains more than 150% of the RDA for vitamin A. Rich squash flavor for baking or mashing. Delicious when cubed and added to stews with warm-flavored seasonings such as cloves, cardamom, curry, cumin, cayenne and paprika.

Delicata
A small, cylindrical squash with stripes in green and orange or tan. Also called sweet potato squash. Very sweet for baking. Wonderful cooked and whipped with apple sauce and brown sugar.

Gold Nugget
Tiny pumpkin shape and very firm (cook first, cut later). Sweet, buttery flavor.

Hubbard
A medium large round squash with skin mottled (sometimes even knobby looking) with colors from green to orange. Cooked hubbard squash may be mashed and mixed with sautéed garlic, leeks and sage.

Kabocha
Jade green rind with lighter streaks. A pale orange flesh that is tender, smooth and sweet when cooked. Choose squash that's heavy for its size. Cook as you would acorn squash; ideal for baking and steaming. Before cooking, be sure to halve and remove seeds.

Pie Pumpkins
Smaller than the jack o' lantern pumpkin with tender, sweet orange-colored flesh perfect for pies. Or perhaps a Caribbean-style pumpkin soup with tomatoes, garlic, marjoram, white wine and cinnamon.

Red Kuri
Bright orange with a very hard shell. Hearty, firm flesh is perfect for less sweet recipes.

Spaghetti Squash
Semi-soft and yellow, this large round squash is also known as vegetable spaghetti. When cooked, it separates into thin spaghetti-like strands. Its light, sweet flavor and delicate crunchy bite make it an excellent match for light pasta sauces or, when marinated in vinaigrette and chilled, a perfect addition to salads. Spaghetti squash is very low in calories (one 8-ounce serving contains about 75 calories) and is a good source of complex carbohydrates. Like all winter squash, this variety may be cooked a number of ways: boiled whole, baked whole, "steamed" in halves, or microwaved.

Sweet Dumpling
A very small light-colored squash with dark green stripes , with firm mildly-sweet, rich flesh. Serves one; great baked and stuffed with sautéed peppers and topped with goat cheese.

Turban
Colorful and flamboyant for decoration or meal presentation, fairly sweet and good to eat, too.


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Posted: Dec 10, 2007 10:43am
Dec 15, 2006
Focus: Health
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Location: United States
Winter In The Raw Part 1 ~ Setting The Scene
http://karenknowler.typepad.com/living_in_the_raw/2006/11/winter_in_the_r.html


>From Issue 17 of Successfully Raw:

Although not technically in winter yet, it sure feels like it today as I write this article for you!

And it's at this time of year that people curious about eating raw are asking, "How on earth do I go or stay raw in winter?". Others, those who may have been eating raw for a few months or on and off for a few years even, may find that this is the time of year where cooked foods start to become a very attractive proposition indeed!

In this article, the first of several, I'll be addressing a number of factors and my intention is that by the end of it, no matter where you are starting from, you'll feel clued up about the approach you personally will be taking this winter so that you are at peace with your decision and can move into winter with a spring in your step rather than dragging your heels! In future eZines I'll be getting into the more nitty-gritty aspects of eating raw in winter, featuring some great winter-warmer (raw) recipes to keep you smiling inside and out!

One of the most common questions I get asked, especially at this time of year, is “How do you stay raw in winter? I just can’t imagine not eating anything hot when it’s so cold. How can I do it?”

Well, I have to begin by saying that from what I have seen in others and experienced myself, it entirely depends on how new you are to raw foods. Eating raw in winter is a bit like training for a marathon – you can’t expect to run the whole way first time out; your body has to adjust and it has to adjust incrementally over a period of time.

I think the best way I can teach you about staying raw in winter is to share my own story with you. Through doing this you’ll be able to get an idea of the lengths of time involved, what to do and what not to do, and also why it’s important to see the raw food journey as something that has hills and valleys just like any other journey in life – sometimes you just have to accept what’s real and deal with it, so that you can press on and enjoy what lays over the other side!

My story begins in 1993 when I first discovered raw foods. I’d been dabbling since the spring of that year and doing really well on it. By the time it got to winter, naturally I felt colder than before and the thought of eating salads and tropical fruits throughout the winter wasn’t quite as attractive as it had been some months before! Bear in mind, however, that at this stage I was eating high raw and not all raw, so “staying raw” wasn’t the issue for me, just knowing how to keep warm without being tempted back into chips (fries) and greasy veggie-burgers and other more junky foods was my first and immediate challenge.

Well, those first few winters – about four of them – I approached the issue as I have done with all aspects of my raw eating: If it feels good do it, if it doesn’t – don’t. Yes, I wanted to eat as much raw food as possible, but if my body was freaking out about it, then there was no way I was going to force it on myself; that would be completely contra to everything I was aspiring to, which, besides eating raw, was a sense of greater wholeness, peace around eating and a better relationship with myself and my body.

So during those first four or so years I did the best I could. I ate as much raw as possible, but if I wanted porridge I ate it (but cooked it with water rather than milk and threw in lots of fresh banana, raisins and a big blob of honey). If I wanted a plate of chips with my salad I ate them (but they weren’t deep fried as they were years previously, they changed to oven baked, low fat, veg oil only). Jacket potatoes with mashed avocado, wholegrain rice or pasta with fresh wholesome sauces, or boiled potatoes swirled in olive oil, fresh garlic, chopped basil and lemon juice became my winter time staples. By eating these with salads I could happily stay high raw and get the heat I needed from those cooked foods while still keeping “with the program”.

By around year five I remember that I had moved into a cold, tiny, pretty drab flat for a short while and I can remember looking out of the kitchen window one day at the snow falling outside. I was about 6 months into what I considered to be my “100% raw forever if I can” phase and although I wanted to continue it, I said to myself “If I want cooked food this winter I shall have it, but if I don’t then I’ll just take it day by day and see what happens.” As it turned out, I had got so used to eating raw food having been doing it to such a high degree for so long that actually my body no longer wanted it. And so it was that I went through the whole winter not just cooked-food-free, but I didn’t even feel drawn to drinking herbal teas. That was pretty surprising, but it felt completely right. Cooked and hot foods no longer felt “right” at all and my desire for them had disappeared completely.

And this continued for the next five years in fact, where I didn’t eat any cooked food at all, apart from three weeks during pregnancy and that was in the February of 2002 and had nothing to do with the temperature outside!

What I learned from all of this is the following:

1) It takes time to go through a UK winter on all raw foods without feeling seriously deprived.

2) It probably can be done if you have a will of iron, but personally, because I am such a fan of the “whole person” approach, I do not recommend you forcing it until you feel genuinely ready, and this may take years (is there a hurry anyway?).

3) When I finally did stay raw throughout winter it became apparent to me that some of the previous cooked food longings during the colder months had been physiological for sure – the body does have to adjust – but I also became aware that a lot of it is also psychological, meaning that a lot of it is about habit and belief that hot food is necessary and this also has to be overcome to go all the way.

Although this has been my own experience I do need to add one final thing. Over the recent years I’ve become more interested in body types and blood types. While I’m no expert on either, what I have observed is that more “sturdy” types like me (I am slim now but certainly not skinny), seem to fare better on raw food all of the time, and those who have always been naturally lean can struggle more.

Personally I think the most important aspect to all of this is to look on wintertime as an opportunity to strengthen the relationship and intimacy you have with yourself and your body even further. Yes, there will be a tendency (just like there is in pregnancy!) to say “what the hell!” and eat whatever you want because the pulls to do so are stronger than normal, but I’d like to invite you to actually turn this inclination on its head and ask yourself, “How can I use the darkness, coldness and mystery of the winter to nourish myself at a deeper level via my food choices, my lifestyle habits and the way I utilise this special time of year to reflect on who I am and who I am becoming?”

Winter time may be cold, dark and even lonely in some regards, but unlike any other season it gives us the opportunity to turn inwards and see what’s real, what needs addressing and to take a look at how we can feed ourselves optimally now so that when spring comes around again we can awaken, ground, aspire, grow and blossom even more brightly next year than we have done during this. In this regard, winter becomes a gift, and a time of opportunity rather than challenge.

Choose to look on it this way and your winter in the raw will be a pleasure, especially when you know that a few months from now you can feel stronger, leaner and lighter in every regard than you currently do now, and that can only be a good thing!

© 2006 Karen Knowler

WOULD YOU LIKE TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR EZINE OR ON YOUR WEB SITE? You can, as long as you include this complete blurb with it: Karen Knowler, The Raw Food Coach publishes "Successfully Raw" - a free weekly eZine for raw food lovers everywhere. If you're ready to look good, feel great and create a raw life you love get your FREE tips, tools and recipes now at www.TheRawFoodCoach.com.

 
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Posted: Dec 15, 2006 2:35am

 

 
 
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