As promised, here is the recipe for that lovely stuffed squash I made last weekend (and again this weekend):
The cast of characters (minus the rosemary, which I forgot, oops):
Grate about 3/4 cups of the cheese of your choosing. I used cheddar and parmesan because that's what I had on hand. Pick your favorite cheese and go with that:
Cut the bread up into small, dice-size pieces. You'll need about a cup and a half of cubes:
Dice up a very small amount of onion. This is just one slice from the middle of the onion, cut up very finely:
Remove the sausage from its' casing and brown:
Take the sausage off the heat when done and, in that same pan, cook the onions until softened, then add the garlic (1-2 cloves, minced) and continue cooking until fragrant but not burnt.
Put the sausage, bread crumbs, cheese, rosemary, onions, garlic and 3 TB half and half in a large bowl and combine until moistened. Meanwhile, halve the acorn squash and scoop out all of the seeds, then rub some olive oil on them and season with salt & pepper:
Fill the hollowed out squash with the filling, make sure to really pack it in there. You want the squash to lay flat when flipped upside down:
Flip the squash into a baking dish and put in a 375-400 degree oven:
After a half hour, check on it to make sure the bottoms aren't burning too badly. If they are, add a little bit of water to the dish.
After approximately an hour (mine took 50 minutes today), remove the squash from the oven:
Flip them back over and serve:
One half is usually a perfect meal for one person. See how it's all browned and crusty on the surface? SO YUMMY!
Here's the ingredient list with exact measurements:
1 link italian sausage (or 2 slices bacon)
1 slice onion (or 1 shallot)
1-2 cloves garlic
2 tsp rosemary (or sage, or whatever your favorite spice is)
1.5 cups bread cubes
3/4 cup grated cheeses
3 TB half & half
1 medium acorn squash
olive oil
salt & pepper
2 comments:
I love acorn squash. The eye appeal of this one is pretty high.
Instead of bread cubes, some of that pre-seasoned stuffing mix might work.
I agree, it just LOOKS super yummy. That was part of the reason I was so set on making it.
I think that pre-seasoned stuffing mix would work quite well. Plus it's way less labor intensive.
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