About Me

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Southern France
Lynn Deasy is a freelance writer, author, foodie, and garden tinkerer. She lives in a 600 year old house in southern France with her husband, Christophe. Currently, she is looking for a literary agent for her memoir CA VA? STORIES FROM RURAL LIFE IN SOUTHERN FRANCE which examines the oddities of French provincial living from an outsider’s point of view through a series of adventures that provide more than a fair share of frustration, education, admiration, and blisters…. yes, lots and lots of blisters. Lynn blogs every Monday, Wednesday, and sometimes Friday.
Showing posts with label patisson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label patisson. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

The Patisson


Smaller patissons can be seen forming over the right patisson.


This odd vegetable has graced our garden for the last few years; the patisson.  It is also called the pattypan, scallop squash, granny squash, and the bonnet-de-prêtre.  A first, I didn’t know what to do with it, but I’ve found that the more I use it, the more I find uses for it.  It’s in the squash family, but don’t mistake it for a butternut or acorn.  It’s more like a zucchini, but firmer and nutty in flavor.

Besides running around the kitchen playing Pac Man with them, (Come on, they do look like the ghosts, don’t they?) I’ve stuffed them, put them on pizza, sautéed them, and put them into every dish possible.  We have both the yellow and white varieties, but I find the yellow to be more prolific and more resistant to diseases.  The plant itself can be 5 feet in diameter, so I feel rather successful as a gardener when these giant Amazon like plants quickly fill any empty space left in the garden.  I’ve found little history and background on them, expect, according to Wikipedia, the name comes from “a Provençal word for a cake made in a scalloped mould”.

Close up

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Inspiration


Red Sweet Onion, Yellow Patisson, Tomatoes: Gardener’s Delight and Black Prince, Basil

I love this time of year; well, I love this time of year besides the blazing, unforgiving, and constant heat.  I can walk into the vegetable garden with no idea of what I’m making for lunch and I can fill my basket with almost anything I’d like and I’m back in the kitchen with a plan.  It’s more than just having a menu idea; the vegetable garden is a place where I find ideas about my life beyond the kitchen.  I often sit on one of the stone walls in the evening and try to take it all in: the garden, the surrounding mountains and forest, and the setting sun.  I hone my future plans and realize what ones are worth keeping and what ones need to be modified.  Perhaps because it is the only green space for the moment, the various colors, or the appreciation I get from watching my seedlings grow into plants that tower over six feet tall, but the garden is a place where I find my inspiration.  I learn more about who I want to be and how to be a better person.  It is constantly changing, and I hope me too, for the better.

Friday, September 16, 2011

Know Your Vegetables!


Patisson
Species: Cucurbita pepo (meanings gourds and squashes)
Seen listings also calling it Pattypan squash, the Spanish artichoke, and bonnet-de-prêtre.
Size: 3-5  inches in diameter

Patidou
Species: Cucurbita pepo
Much sweeter than the patisson and has a slight nutty taste, also called the sweet dumpling.
Size: 2-3 inches in diameter and 3-4 inches tall

Tomatillo
Species: Physalis philadelphica
The fruit is encased in the outer husk that needs to be removed.  Also called the green tomato  and is essential in the Mexican cuisine.
Size: 1-2 inces in diameter

Lemon Cucumber
Species: Cucumis sativus
Heirloom Russian variety; very crisp and sweet, not bitter.
Size: 2-3 inches in diameter

And the bonus:
Round Zucchini
Species: Cucurbita pepo
Similar to the everyday zucchini, but much easier to stuff.
Size: 3-10 inches in diameter depending on when it is harvested