Summer Squash Casserole
This recipe makes great use of your summer squash. This recipe is adapted from The Southern Junior League Cookbook: The Best Recipes from the Junior Leagues of the American South.
This recipe makes great use of your summer squash. This recipe is adapted from The Southern Junior League Cookbook: The Best Recipes from the Junior Leagues of the American South.
A delicious way to use up your summer squash. Baked stuffed squash with spinach and flavored with anise.
Squash blossoms are a visual treat in the garden – they are bright, beautiful, and come in both male and female versions. The female flowers are the ones that produce the summer squash. The male flowers are on long stems, and while the produce no squash, their flowers can be stuffed and fried for a delicious meal.
Typically, nature does it’s thing with bees and insects doing their job in pollination. In some areas, though, the squash vine borer (SVB) becomes difficult to control other than actually covering the plants for protection. Then, hand pollination becomes necessary.
These steps are from the Aggie Horticulture site, from the horticultural sciences department of Texas A&M. They have an excellent way to distinguish the male and female flowers apart:
Male flowers grow on a long narrow stem. You can also tell the two apart by looking at the reproductive organs found in the center of the flower. The female flowers contain the stigma. The stigma generally looks like a flower in its own right. It has several “bumpy structures” that cluster around a central opening. Anthers (male parts) look a lot like… [an eye shadow applicator].