Monday, January 30, 2012

Yummy Butternut Cranberry Bread With Whole Grains

If you read this blog a bit, you know we love winter squash at Aagaard Farms - us, the goats, the chickens: we're all eating squash!  We grow about eighteen kinds, and are fortunate to be able to store them for winter use.  We're always interested in new recipes.  I receive a fantastic e-newsletter from Simple Bites (use the link and go sign up now!), and this past week, it contained a fabulous link to an article on whole grains from Good Life Eats.  We're really committed to using more whole grains, for the health benefits as well as great taste, and there are some great tips in the article for using, storing, grinding and such.  It also contained a recipe for a whole grain pumpkin cranberry loaf.  Just so happened the night before, I had used part of a butternut squash in a chickpea stew so it seemed like it was 'meant to be' that I should try this loaf.  I had put the butternut not used in the stew in the oven to roast while I was cooking so it was ready to go!

Now, the recipe calls for pumpkin, and I have some 'Sugar Pie' pumpkin here but the butternut was roasted and ready to go.  You can replace any winter squash for another in any recipe - it will just change the outcome slightly.  Using butternut instead of pumpkin probably gave me something a little sweeter and a little smoother.  Once you've baked or roasted a squash, you just need to break it up with a fork or hand blender to get exactly what is in a can without preservatives, colorings, BPA or whatever else.  You've got the goodness of just plain, unadulterated squash.  If you'd like a little review of roasting and preserving winter squash, check out this post here.

Here's the recipe link: it called for whole wheat or spelt, oat and barley flour.  I had organic whole wheat, unbleached white and spelt.  Worked well, the result was a moist, dark loaf.  The cranberries add a nice 'zing'.  The recipe called for a little bit of the spice cardamom, which I didn't have, but I just used a  wee bit more of the other spices called for.  Really like this loaf - that recipe is a keeper!  And good to know that Farmer Man is getting his grains!  You don't have to tell them it's good for them - right?

5 comments:

  1. I was thinking of growing sugar pumpkins this year for the first time. Do you like them better for baking or is there much difference? I had no idea you could use any squash in a recipe like this so maybe sugar pumpkins really don't make that much difference

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    1. Marguerite! I replied with a big long paragraph right in the comments - I didn't reply right to you! Sorry! Pop back to the blog when you have a sec - and feel free to ask any further questions!

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  2. Sugar pumpkins are awesome: each winter squash will bring their own flavor to a recipe. Butternut is probably a little smoother/creamier, more of a nutty sweet. Sugar pumpkin has a wee bit more texture which would be nice with the whole grains (regular pumpkin is too much texture!) and more sweet without the nutty. Acorn would be drier and way more texture, and nutty without the sweet. Australina blue pumpkin would be awesome! Hubbard would be nutty, similar texture to sugar pumpkin. Butternut is almost too creamy/watery for pie and the color is pale yellow - so sugar pumpkin is a better choice for pie!

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  3. This loaf looks fabulous - I'm going to make it!

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    1. Sister Cathy: if you need a butternut I'll mail you one! The loaf is awesome - the cranberries have such a nice 'pop' that raisins wouldn't have!

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