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Pumpkin festival and butternut bruschetta

We headed to a pumpkin festival this weekend. I have to admit that on the way there I had a ‘wow, this is what my Saturdays are now about’ moment. But it turned out to be a really really lovely afternoon. It was on the Billesberger farm and as much as I was fearing a single stall with a couple of pumpkin there was tons on offer.

 They had set up one of the barns as a farmers market and were selling homegrown seasonal vegetables as well as fresh eggs and bread. There was locally made tofu, elderflower syrups, local beer and pumpkin chutney. The farm also grows spelt and produce their own spelt pasta which was being cooked and tossed with pumpkin in an asian ginger sauce by a chef.

There was pumpkin cake (good!) and apple layer cake (so very good) as well as Emilio coffee (yes please!). They had pumpkins for sale to take home or for you to sit and carve with the family. Most of it was lost on the baby but she loved the goats and the inquisitive farm dog and hanging out on the grass watching the world go by, stealing pieces of pumpkin.

We brought home lots of goodies and today I made a really good butternut bruschetta. Its nothing fancy, just the cumulation of really good produce. Local garlic, local butternut, roasted and then mashed onto dark bread and topped with some crumbly goats cheese. YUM!

Ingredients (serves 4)
Half a butternut squash peeled and cubed
1 tbsp rapeseed oil
2 sprigs sage
Pinch dried chilli
1 clove garlic
4 slices good bread
40g crumbly goats or sheep cheese

Method
Preheat your oven to 180C
Place the squash into a roasting dish and coat with the olive oil
Sprinkle over the chilli and add in the sage and the garlic
Roast for 25mins or until soft
Once roasted, rub the bread slices with the garlic
Mash the butternut squash in a large bowl
Spread generously onto the bread and top with a sprinkle of cheese
Season well and enjoy

 

Butternut squash soup with cumin, ginger and crispy butternut

When I was making this soup I was thinking about the food I eat. I grew up eating the simplest of foods. I was reminiscing about how simple the food was when we were little. We ate rye bread with a slice of goats cheese and pepper every day for lunch. No packed lunch boxes, our open bread sandwiches were wrapped in brown paper and sealed with an elastic band. We got an tangerine or an apple as our pudding. There were no special drinks just the water fountain at school. Treats were baked at home or a simple raisin bread bun from the bakery. We had weekly meal planners on our fridges and dinner was cooked at home. Breakfast was porridge or homemade muesli with plain yogurt and berries. Bread was thick and dark and wholesome.

Eating whole, fresh, natural food isn’t a fad to me. It was the way I was raised and is the way that I understand. It is the way I know how to nourish myself and those around me. It isn’t anything revolutionary or exciting. It is just stripping away, holding back and making the most delicious combinations. It is eating food in its natural, unrefined state, not because someone tells me to, but rather because its best that way. Its food as energy, love, togetherness and nourishment. Its the opposite of a diet, its eating more of the good.

This soup is simple. It is based on one vegetable that is in abundance at this time of year. Butternut squash packed with nutrients known as carotenoids which are often shown to help protect against heart disease. Butternut boasts very high levels of beta-carotene which your body converts to vitamin A. Vitamin A is important for healthy eyes and a strong immune system. This soup uses ginger to give the soup a little bit of heat and also to help keep us winter fit. I love this butternut soup served with crispbreads or chunky slices of sourdough. If you are extra hungry then simply add in some cooked butterbeans or chickpeas for an added boost. The crispy butternut peel takes the place of croutons..extra delicious, extra nutritious. To make the butternut ‘croutons’ all you have to do is simply rub the peel with a little coconut oil and then roast in the oven for 10 minutes at 180C.

Ingredients
1 medium butternut squash – peeled and diced
1 onion
1 tsp coconut oil
1/2 tsp cumin seeds
2 tsp grated ginger
1ltr vegetable stock

Method
Place the oil into a large pan with the cumin seeds
Over a medium heat stir the cumin seeds until they begin to pop
Add in the diced onion
Stir for a few minutes until the onions just begin to soften
Add in the butternut squash and stir for a minute or two
Add the stock and stir well
Bring to the boil and then simmer for 15 minutes before adding in the ginger and simmering for a further 5 minutes
Place into a blender and blend until silky smooth