**Easier, updated method available in The Southern Vegetarian Cookbook**
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For the stuffing:
1 stalk celery (finely diced)
1 small onion (finely diced)
1 "Not-Chick'n" bouillon cube
1 cup chanterelles (quartered)
4 dried apricots (finely diced)
1/4 cup white wine
2 cups brioche or white bread (torn into pieces)
2 large eggs
1 tablespoon butter
salt and pepper
Beat eggs and add bread. Set mixture in the fridge for an hour or overnight so the bread soaks up all of the egg. Sauté celery, onion, and bouillon cube in the butter until lightly browned. Deglaze the pan with the wine and reduce until most of the liquid has evaporated. Add the chanterelles and apricots to the pan and warm through. Add salt and pepper. Chill mushroom mixture throughly before adding to the egg mixture.
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Stuff the squash:
Using a sharp kitchen knife and plenty of caution, cut a hole in the stem-end of the squash just as you would a pumpkin at Halloween. Keep the stem. Scrape the seeds and membrane out of the squash. Stuff your stuffing into the cavity -- be careful not to leave any air pockets. Replace the stem and secure with toothpicks or bamboo skewers. Take a moment to poke a few small holes through the flesh and down into the cavity. This will help keep your squash from splitting as the eggs expand during cooking. Place inside a baking dish, cover with foil, and bake the squash in a 375 degree oven for about 2 hours. I rigged up a soufflé dish with some aluminum foil so the squash could bake upright so as to not squish one side as it bakes. Once it is done, remove it from the oven and place it in the fridge to cool. You will want the squash to be cold when you slice it so that it stays together. All of steps up to this point can be done the day before. Slice cold squash into 1 in pieces and place onto an oiled baking sheet. Drizzle each slice with olive oil and place into a 375 degree oven until the color of the squash deepens and it is warmed through.
For the gravy:
1/2 cup dried barley
1/4 oz dried porcini mushrooms (finely chopped)
1 "Not-Beef" bouillon cube
2 cloves garlic (minced)
3 sage leaves (minced)
1 teaspoon flour
cracked black pepper
olive oil
water
Cook barley according to package directions but add the mushrooms, bouillon, and sage to the cooking water. Make a roux by heating the olive oil in a pot, adding the flour, and cooking until lightly browned. Whisk in 1 1/2 cups of water to the roux and cook for a few minutes until thickened. Season with black pepper and add the barley mixture. Adjust the viscosity to your liking using water. Spoon gravy over the squash and top with sage leaves that have been fried in olive oil for just a few seconds.
6 comments:
Fancy! Blows my little vegan Field Roast right out of the water!
Your food always looks so fancy. I'm amazed that all I would need to buy for this dish are the mushrooms. So pretty. I love pretty food.
How could you veganize this recipe? I imagine the egg is crucial to the stuffing staying put in the squash.
I would mess around with it first, but I'd be willing to bet that instant tapioca would make a great egg replacer. If you try it let me know if it worked.
I have never tried this. it is just an idea? any other vegans wanna try a stab at this?
Thank you Justin! I bought tapioca but didn't really know how to use it, haha, so I opted for Energy Egg Replacer. It's in the oven as I speak. I took a taste and even before it is done, it is delicious. This is definitely going to steal the show. I will let you know how it goes. Have a very happy thankgiving!
I used an Energy Egg replacer and white bread to veganize this recipe and wow, the stuffing was amazing! The only problem was that I chose a kabocha squash that was too large, so the pieces were difficult to keep together. I will make this again but with a smaller squash. Thanks!
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