
  
1   cup finely chopped purple onion
1/4 cup finely chopped garlic 
2  teaspoons  salt
2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper
2 pounds shrimp, peeled and  deveined and minced
1/2 pound lump Surimi
1/4 cup finely  chopped fresh parsley
1 pound Gruyere, or mozzarella, finely grated 
. 
In a large frying pan, heat  the oil over medium-high heat. Add the onion, and cook, stirring, until soft,  about 4 minutes. Add the garlic and cook, stirring, for 1 minute. Add the  pumpkin, salt, and pepper, and stir to combine. 
 Serve immediately. 8 to 10  servings
** Surimi is "faux crabmeat" -- real crab can be used also.  Surimi fits my budget better. . . .
*** This is based on an Emeril recipe with a lotta changes 
  
Wednesday, October 29, 2008
1/4 cup coconut oil 
 1  7-pound green pumpkin, peeled, one inch cubes
 2 tsp basil
 2 tsp dill weed
 1/4 cup finely chopped green onions
  Place the pumpkin in a large pot  and cover with water.  Cover and bring to a boil. Continue to cook over  medium-high heat until the pumpkin is very tender, about an hour.  drain in a  large colander. Using the back of the spoon, press on the pumpkin to release as  much liquid as possible. Discard any liquid.
 Add pumpkin mixture to the shrimp,Surimi , green onions, and parsley and gently stir to combine. Taste and adjust  seasoning as necessary. Transfer to the prepared dish and spread the grated  cheese evenly over the top.  Bake in a 350 degree oven, until the cheese is  bubbly and lightly browned, about 20 minutes.
  *Cooks note: any type of bland  squash can be substituted for the green pumpkin in this recipe (merlitons,  yellow squash, or zucchini).   Long green Italian squashes would work great too.  Regular pumpkins can also be used (not the kind for pie, but the big, bland ones  more often used for Jack o'lanterns). Butternut or acorn squash does not work  with this recipe. The original recipe uses 1 (7 pound) green pumpkin.
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2 comments:
This is one great recipe that I'll really look forward to trying my love
I can't help but think that Patty Pan squash would make a great substitute for the pumpkin. . .
. . . but then, I'd certainly defer to your judgement
Patty Pan might well work. We can try several, since green pumpkin certainly is not available year round. Maybe even eggplant?
xox
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