We love butternut squash and have been growing it for years. You'll see my many posts and pictures from years past if you search for butternut squash (
here's a sample). This year, now having the time to do more in the kitchen (thanks retirement!), I finally experimented with saving the squash seeds.
Thanks to Mother Earth News (instructions and recipes in the link), the first roasting occurred and it was a huge success. The process was quite simple:
- Scoop seeds out of squash into a colander (the norm when roasting squash)
- Rinse the seeds removing all pulp
- Spread on a paper-towel on a plate in a single layer to allow to dry for 2-3 days in warm place
- Roast!
- Note: no need to hull the squash seeds. Some folks find pumpkin seed hulls tough and inedible. The squash seeds are lighter and edible.
I roasted mine in a fry pan following the Mother Earth News Spicy recipe. I warmed the olive oil, spread the seeds in a single layer, then sprinkled with cayenne pepper, paprika, salt and pepper. The results didn't last very long as hubby and I gobbled them down quickly. Well, to be honest, mostly I did the gobbling. Another batch is being fried up today. The part I like most is the nutrition in squash seeds:
1 cup seeds: 285 calories, 12grams of protein, 12% of your RDA of iron, 34g Carbs, 12g Fat, 4% of your calcium. Of course, add about 120 calories for the oil they are roasted in. This is still tremendously good nutrition.
I'll never compost another squash seed again.
Will be trying this with my next squash. Thanks for the tip
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