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Food blogging: Pumpkin baked ziti with caramelized onions and sage crumb topping

Another winner from Veganomicon. And it’s easily adaptable for omnivores; just substitute 2 cups of your favored ricotta for the cashew ricotta, and swap butter for the margarine in the topping.

mmm, tasty

Recipe below.

  • 1 pound uncooked ziti or penne
  • 2 onions, sliced very thinly
  • 3 T olive oil
  • 1 recipe cashew ricotta (follows)
  • 1T brown sugar
  • 1/4 t. ground nutmeg
  • White pepper and cayenne
  • 2 c or 1 15-oz can pumpkin puree (not pie mix)
  • 1/4 c. vegetable broth

Cashew ricotta (makes 2 cups):

  • 1/2 c. cashew pieces (approx. 4 oz.)
  • 1/4 c. fresh lemon juice
  • 2 T olive oil
  • 2 cloves fresh or roasted garlic
  • 1 lb. firm tofu, drained and crumbled
  • 1-1/2 t. dried basil
  • 1-1/2 t. salt

Sage bread crumbs:

  • 2-1/2 c. bread crumbs, preferably freshly made
  • 1/4 c. Earth Balance or olive oil
  • 2 t. dried, rubbed sage
  • 1/2 t. ground paprika
  • salt and freshly ground black pepper

Preheat oven to 375. Lightly grease a 9×11 or 9×13-inch lasagna pan with olive oil. Prepare ziti according to package directions. Drain, rinse, drain again and set aside.

While ziti is cooking, make the caramelized onions: preheat a large, heavy-bottomed pan over medium heat. Saute onions in oil until some onion bits are very brown and caramelized, about 12 to 15 minutes. Set aside.

Make the cashew ricotta: In a food processor, blend together the cashews, lemon juice, olive oil and garlic until a thick creamy paste forms. Add the crumbled tofu to the food processor, working in batches if necessary, until the mixture is thick and well blended. Blend in the basil and salt.

Place cashew ricotta in large bowl and fold in pumpkin puree, brown sugar, nutmeg, white pepper, cayenne, and vegetable broth. Add the cooked ziti and the caramelized onions. Pour mixture into the prepared pan and level with a spatula, pressing slightly.

Make the bread crumb topping: Melt margarine or heat oil in a heavy-bottomed skillet over medium heat. Stir in the bread crumbs, dried herbs, and paprika and season with salt and pepper. Stir constantly until the mixture is lightly coated, 3 to 4 minutes. Remove from heat and spread over pasta mixture.

Bake 28 to 30 minutes, until the top of the ziti is golden brown. Cool for 10 minutes before slicing and serving.

I had it with baby spinach sauteed in olive oil with garlic:

delicious


9 thoughts on Food blogging: Pumpkin baked ziti with caramelized onions and sage crumb topping

  1. I was a vegetarian for a period in middle school, but my parents couldn’t afford anything that didn’t violate my diet and I ended up starving for long periods. They were pretty strictly meat and potatoes, and my step father is a hunter (for meat, not sport). I really enjoy most vegan cuisine and that looks positively delicious. I always said when I moved out I’d be free to eat less meat.

    So hungry.

  2. I had no idea that feministe also had vegans on staff (new subscriber.) *delight* I have been itching to buy Veganomicon for a while now. It looks so good! Rock on!

  3. This post incited me to put Veganomicon on my Amazon wishlist (really as a reminder for me to get it when I can). I’m not vegan — not even vegetarian — but I love to eat mostly-vegetarian, and because I’m trying to avoid dairy, vegan recipes are often great choices for me.

  4. Exciting! I didn’t know there were (like Laura said) vegans on staff. I recently got Veganomicon! (All the cookbooks from Isa and Terry are amazing!)

  5. Cola Johnson says:

    my parents couldn’t afford anything that didn’t violate my diet and I ended up starving for long periods. They were pretty strictly meat and potatoes,

    You need never starve as long as you have potatoes!

    There is ordinary food, and then there is the potato: the superfood. It grows at the altitude of Mont Blanc, or at sea level. It survives in the arid lands, it flourishes in the glacial north, it runs wild in the rainforest. Each tuber contains all the vitamins, minerals, proteins, calories and cellulose necessary for life: a healthy adult could survive indefinitely, though perhaps unenthusiastically, on potatoes alone.

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