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Index » Eating & Drinking » Recipes
 

Quick Pressure Cooked Pasta Sauce

 

Is your spaghetti tired of seeing red? This creamy yellow butternut squash sauce is a welcome change from the usual red sauce. It cooks quickly with a pressure cooker and the natural sweetness of the squash will please the entire family.

Butternut squash is rich in beta-carotene, well known for its ability to fight inflammation, to protect against cancer and to lower bad LDL cholesterol. Its a good source of folic acid, which most people now know is essential for preventing certain birth defects. Many people dont know that folic acid prevents the accumulation of homocysteine (ho-mo-sis-teen). This toxic product of normal metabolism is linked to heart disease and stroke. So no matter our age or gender, we all have good reason to get plenty of folic acid.

Youll recognize butternut squash by its pear shape and creamy yellow skin. Cut it lengthwise. Scoop out the seeds with a spoon and discard them. Now its ready to use. The peel is edible and a good fiber source. Conventionally produced squash should be peeled however and does so easily with a potato peeler.

This recipe calls for Herbes de Provence, a blend of savory, thyme, marjoram, rosemary, oregano and lavender. While it sounds exotic, youll find it in any spice section.

Creamy Butternut Squash Sauce

3 cups butternut squash cut into about 1 inch chunks
2 cups water
2 cups soy milk
3 tablespoons grape seed oil or ghee
1 large onion, diced
4 cloves garlic, minced
1 cup broccoli florets (the flower-like part)
cup carrots, peeled and thinly sliced
2 tablespoons Herbes de Provence
1 teaspoon salt
Whole grain pasta, about 4 ounces dried per adult

Place 2 cups water and the squash in the pressure cooker. Lock the lid in place. Bring to full pressure over high heat. Lower the heat just enough to maintain high pressure and cook for 2 minutes. Place the cooker under cold running water to reduce the pressure. Turn the release valve away from you to open the cooker. The squash should be fork tender. If not, bring it back to pressure and cook for one minute more. Remove the squash with a slotted spoon. Puree it in a food processor or mash it with a potato masher.

Heat the oil or ghee in a saucepan over medium heat. Saut the onion, garlic, broccoli, carrots and Herbes de Provence until the onions are translucent, about 5 minutes. Add the pureed squash. Slowly add the soy milk, stirring as you pour, until a creamy consistency is reached. Add salt to taste. Spoon over cooked pasta and serve. Serves 6.

Author: Bethany Klug
 
Author Bio:

Bethany Klug

Bethany Klug, DO practices holistic medicine at the Kansas City Holistic Centre. She recovered her own health with whole foods nutrition and has developed extensive expertise in the healing power of whole foods cooking. Dr. Klug founded Heartland Sangha, devoted to the mindfulness meditation practices of Thich Nhat Hanh and teaches regularly. An avid yoga practitioner since the late 1980s, she is currently exploring yoga therapy. Dr. Klug offers bioidentical hormone replacement, whole foods nutrition, nutritional supplementation, homeopathy and biodynamic cranial osteopathic treatment to her patients. She is boarded in family medicine and osteopathic manipulative medicine. The Latin meaning for doctor, ?teacher,? inspires her to write for general audiences to empower them to discover their self-healing ability through holistic health. She writes the monthly column ?The Doctor Cooks? for the Kansas City Wellness Magazine. She lives in Kansas City with her husband David and their Birman cat Shanti.

 
 
 

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