I was at work the other day I saw the most beautiful
butternut squash! I had no plan for it, I just had to own it. Now its a few days later and the question remains… What to make into for dinner… Looking in my fridge – I found
some old wanton wrappers I bought a few weeks ago at the Asian market, some
second-hand ricotta cheese (my friend bought it, and hated it! Score for me!)
and some wilty spinach. Hmmmm…. RAVIOLI!
After web searching a bunch of butternut squash ravioli
recipe – I looked in my fridge again, pulled out even more stuff, and made up
my own. Here it is:
Butternut Squash
Ravioli
Ingredients:
- 1 cup mashed, roasted butternut squash
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper
- 1 pinch chili powder
- 1/2 cup ricotta cheese
- about 1/4 cup squash soup (or omit… though read below)
- 1 egg (yolk and white separated)
- 1/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese
- about a 2/3 (14 ounce) package wonton wrappers
- 3 tablespoons butter
- 1 clove garlic, cut in quarters
- chopped fresh or 1/2 tsp of dried sage
- 1 cup baby spinach, chopped
Directions:
- Mush
together the butternut squash, salt, black pepper, chili powder, ricotta,
soup, egg yolk, and Parmesan cheese. Mixing until the filling is well
combined.
- Get the
wonton wrappers, the egg white and a cutting board. Put a wrapper on the
cutting board, wet your finger with the egg white, and run it all along
the outer edge of the wonton skin to moisten. Place about 1 teaspoon of
filling in the center of the wonton. Then fold the wonton in half,
matching up the tips, and press the edges to seal. Do over and over again
until you run out of something (if it’s the egg white, use water instead).
- When all
the ravioli are made, put a pot of water on to boil, then put a frying pan
over medium heat, with the butter and garlic. Add the sage to the pan just
as the butter completely melts. As the butter turns golden add the spinach,
as soon as it wilts take the pan off the heat.
- Drop the
raviolis into the boiling water, a few at a time, and cook until they
float to the top, then plus a minute, about 3 minutes total. Drain the
raviolis, then put them in the pan with the butter. Turn the heat up to
medium-high, and sauté the raviolis for about a minute a side.
- Put
everything on a plate and swoon at your great use of fridge contents!

Substitutions: use any kind of squash (if using spaghetti
squash, just blend it first). Use mascarpone or greek yogurt instead of
ricotta. Omit the egg if necessary and use water to seal the wrappers. Use any
(or no) greens at the end. If the filling seems a little dry, and you don’t
have soup, try a dash of cinnamon (a VERY SMALL AMOUNT) and a splash of milk.
Ok... the downside (for me anyways) – this recipe makes like
26 ravioli AND only used half the squash… I personally can only eat 8 ravioli
at a time – so I froze the rest. Just put all the fresh leftovers (uncooked) in
one layer, on a pan lined with parchment paper, and freeze. Once frozen solid,
move them to an airtight bag. To re-cook,
just take out the number you want an half hour or so before dinner, let them thaw,
then cook as above, plus maybe a minute.
I’ll figure out what to do with the leftover squash a little
later… I’m thinking soup. OH! The soup addition! Its amazing! The Pacific soup
I used is really thin and has a hint of cinnamon and sweetness. It was a
delicious addition. I actually got the idea because the carton of soup
suggested it (and it was a good way to use up just a little more of the carton).
Until next time! Chow! Heheh.