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July 26, 2021 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Where’d all these zucchini come from?!

It’s summertime and the garden is bursting with a lot of zucchini! We went to a pick-your-own vegetable farm a few weeks ago when I visited Mary in Dallas and had a great time in the hot sun. Lots of families and little kids. And lots of humongous zucchini no one wanted. We picked them, got a discount because of their size, and made some wonderful meals with them! Check out this farm website to find a pick-your-own farm near you!

The only problem with zucchini season is, they are so plentiful that people run out of interesting ways to eat them. Especially the oversized ones, which can have big seeds. Our Italian granny called them “gugoozt”. Not sure about that spelling. Don’t worry, the larger zucchini aren’t tough and they still have great flavor! Below are some wonderful recipes that will help you use your zucchini bounty.
Don’t forget, the zucchini blossom is edible as well – add the torn flowers to any of these dishes for a nice splash of orange.

Zucchini pancakes:  grate the zucchini on a box grater or food processor and toss with a couple tablespoons of flour.  To 6 cups of grated zucchini, mix in 1 cup chopped scallions, 3 eggs, ½ cup parmigiano, chopped fresh basil and parsley.  Right before frying the fritters, add the salt, about 2 teaspoons.  If you add it too early, the zucchini gives up liquid and the mixture becomes too wet.  Heat a saute pan or griddle on high, oil the pan and drop a spoonful of the mixture to form patties.   Fry till browned.

Zucchini pasta sauce: Sauté a little chopped onion and a couple minced garlic cloves in olive oil until softened.  Add 3 cups grated zucchini, 2 tbsp chopped parsley and 1 teas salt, cooking until zucchini is soft and wilted.  Add ½ cup water and continue to cook thoroughly.  Put a little cream in the sauce and bring to a simmer.  When your pasta is cooked, add a dollop of pesto or a large handful of chopped basil and stir.  Add the cooked pasta with a little pasta water and toss well.  Top with parmigiano

Zucchini ripieno, or stuffed: cut the zucchini in half length-wise and scoop out the seeds with a spoon/paring knife.  Saute chopped onion and minced garlic until onion is soft.  In a bowl, mix the onions with the chopped pulp, fresh bread crumbs, crushed tomatoes, oregano, basil, parsley, and parmigiano.  You can mix in Italian sausage or ground beef if you like. Lightly salt and oil the hollowed-out zucchini and stuff them with the mixture.  Put them in a baking dish, drizzle well with olive oil and bake till browned. For a Greek twist, use ground lamb and chopped mint.

Roasted summer vegetables:  Combine a mixture of cubed zucchini, summer squash, red/orange bell peppers and onion and lay out in a single layer on a large sheet pan.  If the zucchini is really huge, cut it lengthwise and scoop out the big seeds, then cube the remainder.  Place the veggies in a hot oven, 425-450, until well roasted.  Put them in a large bowl, drizzle a generous amount of great olive oil and toss with sea salt and minced fresh herbs,.  I like a combination of parsley, tarragon, thyme and basil.  TIP:  heat the empty, clean pan in the oven til it’s hot, wipe a scant amount of oil on the pan.  Let it cool before cooking the veg.  This keeps them from sticking and makes clean up easier too!

Here’s a great old photo of my mom in her vegetable garden picking a googutz!

She was brilliant with vegetables and some of these recipes are hers.  Grazie Mamma!  Ti voglio tanto bene

Filed Under: Blog Categories, seasonal vegetables Tagged With: how to use big zucchini, roasted summer vegetables, stuffed zucchini, summer dishes, zucchini, zucchini pancakes, zucchini recipes, zucchini sauce for pasta

August 5, 2014 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Zucchini Pancakes – Day Two

zucchini pancakesWhen I was growing up we always had a garden.  My dad did the flowers, my mom did the vegetables.  She’d compete with the neighbor to see who could grow the biggest carrots and it seems like she always lost.  Mainly because I remember her competitive spirit.   “That darned Larry Marks did it again!  What the heck does he feed his carrots??”  She composted and fertilized, weeded and sought out the best seeds.  She really cared about doing the best job she could in raising the vegetables she planted and we always had a bumper crop.

Summers of my childhood are remembered by our chores in the garden:  picking raspberries, knocking june bugs into cans of gasoline, weeding.  But actually picking the vegetables was mom’s job, she didn’t trust it to anyone else.

With zucchini, bigger wasn’t necessarily better and you had to pick them before they were what grandma called “gagooz”, really huge ones that were only good stuffed and baked.  Regardless of their size or number, Mom had a great repertoire of recipes to render them delicious.  I remember best her zucchini pancakes.  They made a perfect side dish to anything and we’d have them hot for dinner and cold the next day for lunch.  They’re easy and delicious, filled with grated zucchini, herbs, parmigiano and onion.  Held together with a little egg and a tablespoon of flour, fried in olive oil.  Enjoy!

Zucchini Pancakeszucchini batter
2 cups grated zucchini
2 eggs
½ cup grated Parmigiano
3-4 scallions, chopped
1 teas sea salt
1 tbsp each parsley and basil, chopped
Dash black pepper
2 tbsp flourzucchini batter
Grate the zucchini on a large grate into a bowl. Add the remaining ingredients and stir together well. Heat a saute pan or griddle with a little olive oil, add the zucchini batter in small rounds and fry. Flatten each pancake, flip when browned to brown the other side.

Don’t let the batter sit too long  before frying as the salt draws water from the zucchini and becomes very watery, in which case you might have to add another egg and some flour.

 

Filed Under: Blog Categories, seasonal vegetables Tagged With: zucchini crepes, zucchini pancakes

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