Butternut squash

Butternut squash

Taxobox
name = Butternut squash



image_width = 225px
regnum = Plantae
divisio = Magnoliophyta
classis = Magnoliopsida
ordo = Cucurbitales
familia = Cucurbitaceae
genus = "Cucurbita"
species = "C. moschata"
binomial = "Cucurbita moschata"
binomial_authority = (Duchesne ex Lam.) Duchesne ex Poir.

Butternut squash ("Cucurbita moschata"), also known in Australia and Great Britain as Butternut pumpkin [http://www.sydneymarkets.com.au/fandv/pum_index.htm Sydney Markets - Welcome to the World of Pumpkins] ] , is a type of winter squash. It has a sweet, nutty taste that is similar to pumpkin. It has yellow skin and orange fleshy pulp. When ripe, it turns increasingly deep orange, and becomes sweeter and richer. It grows on a vine. The most popular variety, the Waltham Butternut, originated in Stow, Massachusetts, on what is now the Butternut Farm Golf Club. ["Butternut Farm Golf Club." [http://stow.massachusetts.com/teetimes.html?Action=Information&CourseID=ORQ~14500] Access date 19 February 2008.]

Uses

Butternut squash is a vegetable that can be roasted and toasted and also be puréed or mashed into soups, casseroles, breads, and muffins.

In Australia it is regarded as a pumpkin, and used interchangeably with other types of pumpkin.

A common vegetable in South Africa, it makes a very tasty soup and can be cooked on a barbecue (known as a braai in South Africa) wrapped in foil with spices such as nutmeg and cinnamon.

It is a good source of fiber, vitamin C, manganese, magnesium, and potassium. It is also an excellent source of vitamin A.

Origin

The butternut and related species of squash originate from around Mexico - separate from pumpkins or "winter squash", which originate in South America.

External links

* [http://delectable-victuals.blogspot.com/2006/12/butternut-squash-side.html Recipe ] using butternut squash

Footnotes


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • butternut squash — ☆ butternut squash n. a small, bell shaped, smooth winter squash, with yellowish flesh …   English World dictionary

  • butternut squash — UK [ˌbʌtə(r)nʌt ˈskwɒʃ] / US [ˌbʌtərˌnʌt ˈskwɑʃ] noun [countable/uncountable] Word forms butternut squash : singular butternut squash plural butternut squash a long orange vegetable shaped like a bell with a hard skin and solid orange flesh that… …   English dictionary

  • butternut squash — kvapusis moliūgas statusas T sritis vardynas apibrėžtis Moliūginių šeimos vaisinis kultūrinis augalas (Cucurbita moschata). atitikmenys: lot. Cucurbita moschata; Cucurbita pepo var. moschata angl. butternut squash; cheese pumpkin; golden cushaw;… …   Lithuanian dictionary (lietuvių žodynas)

  • butternut squash — n a penis or dildo. The term was in use among adolescents in London in 2002, but is probably American in origin. The butternut squash is a long bulbous veg etable …   Contemporary slang

  • butternut squash — noun moschata: a vase shaped orange fleshed hard winter squash. Syn: butternut, butternut pumpkin …   Wiktionary

  • Butternut Squash — Moschus Kürbis Moschus Kürbis (Cucurbita moschata) Systematik Klasse: Dreifurchenpollen Zweikeimblättrige (Rosopsida) Unterklasse …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • butternut squash — noun 1. plant bearing buff colored squash having somewhat bottle shaped fruit with fine textured edible flesh and a smooth thin rind • Syn: ↑Cucurbita maxima • Hypernyms: ↑winter squash, ↑winter squash plant 2. buff colored squash with a long… …   Useful english dictionary

  • butternut squash — but′ternut squash′ n. pln a long, pear shaped winter squash with yellowish tan skin and sweet, orange colored flesh …   From formal English to slang

  • butternut squash — noun Date: 1945 a smooth somewhat bottle shaped buff colored winter squash (Cucurbita moschata) with usually orange flesh …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • butternut squash — 1. a yellowish winter squash having sweet, orange colored flesh. 2. the plant bearing this fruit. * * * …   Universalium

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”