Mock Coconut Pie (made with yellow squash)


You can easily fool anyone with this pie's taste, but if you have a finicky eater peel the squash to ensure your deception stays sealed. It does nothing for the taste but makes the shredded squash indistinguishable from coconut once cooked.

1 ½ cup grated squash
1 ½ cup sugar
4 eggs
2 tbsp. flour
1 tbsp. each of coconut, lemon and vanilla flavoring
½ cup shredded unsweetened coconut

Grate a yellow squash using the fine setting on a mandolin or handheld grater. Mix all ingredients except coconut and pour into uncooked pie shell. Sprinkle the coconut over the top. Bake at 350 degrees for 35 minutes or until brown on top.

I used unsulferized unsweetened coconut, if you can’t find that reduce the sugar in the recipe by ¼.

Easy Pie Crust

1 cup cold butter
3 cups All Purpose Flour
3 TBLS sugar
1/3 cup cold water

In the mixer combine the flour and sugar, add butter cut into small pieces. Mix until incorporated well. Add the cold water and mix until it is crumbly. Form into two balls, flatten into disc and refrigerate for an hour.

Zucchini Bread


This is the easiest, tastiest, and most moist Zucchini bread recipe I have found. It does well with ingredient variations, so if you only have three eggs, no applesauce, or only white sugar power on!

4 eggs
4 cups grated Zucchini ( I use 4 but you can get similar results with as few as 2)
½ cup oil
½ cup applesauce
2 teaspoons vanilla
3 cups Whole Wheat Flour
1 cup white sugar
1 cup brown sugar
2 tablespoons Cinnamon
1 teaspoon baking soda
¼ teaspoon baking powder
½ cups nuts (optional)

Makes two 8 inch loafs or 24 muffins.

Grate the zucchini into fine strips. A mandolin chopper works well for this.

I froth the eggs for a few minutes, then add applesauce, oil, vanilla, and shreaded zucchini.

Next, I mix all dry ingredients into a bowl and stir to combine well. I use a combination of half whole wheat pastry or bread flour with half regular whole wheat.Combine wet into dry ingredients and stir to mix.

Bake at 325 for one hour.

Freezing Squash


Our garden has been producing enough squash to feed an entire city block each day. This is pretty common. I heard a joke the other day that here in the South that you should never leave your car unlocked in the summer, not because it will be stolen, but because it will be filled with squash when you get back. Well, I love my squash so I won’t be filling anyone’s car but I want to preserve it to eat after the season is over. After some Internet research I found blanching and freezing is the best method to keep squash. This can be done with pretty much any variety of summer squash. I prepared some Yellow squash and Zucchini.

Step 1:
Wash and trim the squash, then cut into ½ inch disks. Make sure not to cut the squash up too far in advance as it does oxidize if exposed to air for over 30 minutes.

Step 2:
Blanch in boiling water for 3 minutes. You want them to still be crisp and green but blanched long enough to destroy the enzymes that break the squash done.

Step 3:
Drain from the boiling water and immediately put it in an ice bath. Let it stay in the ice bath for about 5 minutes.

Step 4:
Drain the squash on towels. I put one kitchen towel under the squash and one over to help pull the water out.

Step 5:
Put into freezer bags and press out as much air as possible before sealing.