For the First Time Ever! A Recipe on Londonelicious…

Posted by Krista on December 21, 2009

Butternut squash nigella 
You know I'm not one for cooking. But when my friend Anna made this butternut squash dish a few years back at Thanksgiving, I had to have the recipe. I'm a sucker for butternut squash. And blue cheese. And pecans. (PEEcans, you say. pehCAHNS say I.) Easy, said Anna. Nigella.

So for the first time ever here on my London restaurant blog, I present you with–hold your breath–a RECIPE.

My dish definitely doesn't look as nice as Nigella's–I really should have crumbled the blue cheese a bit more and thank God for Photoshop and being able to clean my Corning Ware through the magic of computers–but here's the gist of how you pull it all together.

The Shopping List

  • Firstly, don't buy 2 kilos of real butternut squash like I did. They will be a bitch to cut up and who has that much time? Instead, look for pre-cut bags of butternut squash. I found mine at Waitrose. (350g per bag, so you might want to buy like six of them.)
  • Then, buy about 150 grams of blue cheese. I use Roquefort, as directed by Nigella.
  • You're also going to need about 150 grams of pecans. I've tried making this with both the plain roasted and the salted roasted pecans, and I definitely prefer making this with the salted roasted. I also like a lot of pecans, so I throw in some extra.
  • You also will need some thyme. As much as you'd like. (Nigella recommends four stalks, but I found this too paltry.)
  • Oh, and don't forget the olive oil and maybe some more salt.

The Cooking Bit

  • Get out a roasting pan. Throw butternut squash in.
  • Add as much thyme as you'd like.
  • Sprinkle with healthy dollop of olive oil.
  • Roast for at least 30 minutes. If you leave it in longer, the squash will get a bit more golden and crispy, which I personally like. Let rest for a bit. (If you don't, the Roquefort will melt.)

Final Preparation
After the squash has rested, throw in the pecans and the blue cheese. Maybe add some more thyme and some more salt. You want to throw everything together, but if the mixture is too hot, you could wind up just mashing everything together, which you don't want. So go gently. Enjoy!

Post to Twitter

You might also enjoy...

Not Completely Useless in the Kitchen...
Jamie Oliver's Chicken in Milk

8 Responses to “For the First Time Ever! A Recipe on Londonelicious…”

  1. alexthepink
    Dec 21, 2009
    Reply

    This is a historical moment! Sounds delicious…


  2. Krista
    Dec 21, 2009
    Reply

    < !DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
    Did I mention that I won 2nd place in my company's potluck with this dish??? It's a winner!


  3. Gourmet Chick
    Dec 21, 2009
    Reply

    Krista this is truly a ground breaking moment. You might like the recipe for roast sweet potato, fetta and chorizo salad on my blog – also a pot luck winner and I think it has a similar flavour combination to this – plus it has chorizo and we all know chorizo makes everything taste better!


  4. Feathers
    Dec 23, 2009
    Reply

    Can’t believe you didn’t mention you got second place with this??? Toot your horn. Have you sent this to Anna? I think we might have to have it xmas dinner…again.


  5. Krista
    Dec 23, 2009
    Reply

    < !DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
    I'm making it on Christmas day!!!


  6. Margot
    Dec 30, 2009
    Reply

    And what a great recipe, very intriguing combination of flavours :)

    Happy New Year Krista!!

    Margot


  7. msmarmitelover
    Jan 13, 2010
    Reply

    that looks great, I’m going to make it!


  8. Krista
    Jan 13, 2010
    Reply

    < !DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
    It is great. Especially when it's cold out…good comfort food!



Leave a Reply

Switch to our mobile site