Mouthful

What in the world are you eating?

Dealing with the zucchini mountain

24 February 2011 | 1:56 - By Phil Lees

The strongest memory I have of eating homegrown vegetables from my childhood summer is facing up to interminable weeks of zucchini and its less popular cousin, the choko. There is no pleasure in it, just the memory of overboiled, greying mush and vegetables left on the vine until they were roughly the size of your leg. Now I’m inflicting this seasonal terror on others.

Thanks to the ludicrous weather delivered by the season masquerading as summer in Melbourne, I’ve hit a mark just shy of growing all of the fruit and vegetables that I need to eat on a day-to-day basis. I’m still convinced that this will be a once off, freak occurrence; the one year that the weather conspires in my favour to deliver food on time. For all the locally grown cred, I still eat bananas and buy comical fruits from the Tropics whenever they go on special at my local market, so I’m not the most hardcore of locavores.

Mastery of home vegetable gardening is not really about delivering mountains of food, but manipulating the garden so that the food ripens at a predictable pace. It’s not a skill to which I can lay claim. The seasonal booms certainly help if the plan is to preserve fresh food for the grim months ahead, but, if you’re not prepared to spend multiple weekends boiling down your produce, it is mostly left to turn to grey slime in the crisper.

I have managed to grow a small mountain of fresh tomatoes – not enough to preserve tens of kilos for a year’s worth of bolognaise – but too many to avoid the chore of weekly processing. The pumpkins are starting to literally pile up. The zucchinis are about to approach the interminable point where there is nobody that I personally know who will accept them as a gift. You don’t really gift zucchinis to others, you encumber people with them like a giant, edible millstone. This year, I’m growing Tromboncino zucchinis, a heritage variety which look less like trombones as the name suggests but grow into the metaphorically appropriate shape of a yoke.

As with any vegie you don’t know what to do with, the answer is soup. SBS holds these other zucchini recipe tips:

  • Hide it in other unsuspecting meals. Zucchini is relatively neutral and can be concealed in practically any spicy dish – chopped into curries, sliced wafer thin into lasagne, shredded into hamburger patties. It gets into this recipe for the Cambodian stew samlor karkoo.
  • Pickles. Any vegetable can be pickled. Not every vegetable should be pickled, but it is at least a possibility.

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Comments (12)

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02 Mar 2011 23:05 AEST

ray

From:

just interested

does anyone have a recipe for pickled zucchini. not sliced but whole. similar to pckled cucumbers.

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02 Mar 2011 10:55 AEST

Phil Lees

From:

Zucchini Love

No really, I do love zucchini and if you've got a garden in Australia, they're by far the most productive vegetable to grace it with. It's just that after a good solid month of zucchini meals, they start to grind me down. This is probably why I'm not exactly a poster child for self-sufficiency: when I finally hit the mark of being self-sufficient, I complain about it.

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01 Mar 2011 23:28 AEST

mary merrington

From:

zucchini

Zucchinis are wonderful in soups, fritters, ratatouilles, with seafoods, and also pastas in various combinations. It's such a versatile ingredient in many recipes, and SO easy to grow if given space. water, sunlight and nutrients, and resistant to plant viruses and parasites. What more can one want if you like cooking and/gardening. The french call it courgette.

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24 Feb 2011 23:04 AEST

Marie

From:

Zucchini madness!

I always grow way too many just because they are so much fun! You can almost watch them grow like balloons being blown up, and if you sign your name on a sweet tiny baby one with a pin, you can see your signature a foot long a few days later! Their sheer exuberance just makes me smile, even before I start amusing myself by trying to hide them in the kids' dinner....

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24 Feb 2011 17:17 AEST

Vlad

From:

Zucchini pancakes

Zucchini pancakes - we love them. Grate zucchinis using a large hole grater, add eggs and flour (half plain half self-raising works better, or just plain) and fry in a frypan with oil..

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24 Feb 2011 17:01 AEST

Michele

From:

Zucchini overload

I love zucchini glut time of the year. Have a look at this recipe I made up to deal with the abundance. It's easy and scrumptious hot or cold. http://franklyfeisty.blogspot.com/2009/04/zucchini-madness.html

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24 Feb 2011 16:32 AEST

judith

From:

Zucchini - The Versatile Vegetable

More favourites: Zucchini Bread! Delicious!; Stuffed Zucchini! I grow my zucchini in a large pot on the balcony!

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24 Feb 2011 15:24 AEST

Meg

From:

Use your imagination!

You don't seem to like them much, so why do you grow them??? They're brilliant, make ratatoulli, bake them with cheese and mint, put them in stir-fries, chilli, curry, dahl. Steam them and put some cheese sauce on top. Put them in minestrone soup. Stuff their flowers. The options are limited only by your imagination!

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24 Feb 2011 15:01 AEST

emilija

From:

Zukes!

Zukes are great! they work with pasta & chilli, soup with mint, fritters. bbq'd roasted. You could never burden me with these!!!!!!

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24 Feb 2011 14:38 AEST

Billy

From:

Relish

My mum used to have a friend in Swan Hill who would pickle zucchini, but she'd slice and macerate them, along with sliced chillies. It was great on fresh bread as a snack. Yes, it was white bread. *shame*

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About this Blog

A blog about what the world eats, when and where it eats it, and why it matters to us all. Only much less ambitious than that sounds and with more excruciating puns.

Phil Lees grew up in rural Victoria, the first generation in his family to not have lived on the farm and thereby not slaughter their own meat.

In 2005 he moved to Cambodia and started the nation’s first food blog, Phnomenon.com, named after the best pun that he has ever made. It turns out that Cambodian food is delicious and unlike the warnings in most guidebooks, is not likely to kill you with any immediacy. Gridskipper called him a “national treasure”. Lonely Planet’s Greater Mekong guide called him “the unofficial pimp of Cambodian cuisine”. The New York Times laughed at a funny hotdog he saw.

Phil makes a mean sausage, a hoppy pale ale, a modest laksa. He owns three barbecues and is in the market for a fourth.

 
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