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Butternut, Goat Cheese, and Walnut Spread

Cooking Light
Butternut, Goat Cheese, and Walnut Spread
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Worthy of a Special Occasion

Pungent goat cheese, sweet butternut squash, and slightly bitter walnuts create an unusual spread for crostini. Toast the baguette slices a day ahead, and store at room temperature in a zip-top plastic bag. Prepare and chill the spread up to a day ahead; serve at room temperature.

Yield: 12 servings (serving size: about 2 1/2 tablespoons spread and 3 baguette slices)

Ingredients

  • 1  medium butternut squash (about 1 1/2 pounds)
  • Cooking spray
  • 1  whole garlic head
  • 2  tablespoons  fresh lemon juice
  • 1/2  teaspoon  salt
  • 1  (3-ounce) package goat cheese
  • 1/4  cup  chopped walnuts, toasted
  • 36  (1/2-inch-thick) slices French bread baguette, toasted (about 8 ounces)

Preparation

Preheat oven to 400°.

Cut the squash in half lengthwise; remove and discard seeds. Place squash halves, cut sides down, on a foil-lined jelly roll pan coated with cooking spray. Remove white papery skin from the garlic head (do not peel or separate the cloves). Wrap garlic head in foil. Place garlic on pan with squash. Bake at 400° for 30 minutes or until squash is tender. Cool slightly. Scoop out the pulp from squash, and discard skins. Separate garlic cloves; squeeze to extract garlic pulp. Discard skins.

Place squash, garlic, juice, salt, and cheese in a food processor; process until smooth. Spoon mixture into a bowl, and sprinkle evenly with nuts. Serve with baguette slices.

Nutritional Information

Calories:
114 (28% from fat)
Fat:
3.5g (sat 1.3g,mono 0.8g,poly 1.2g)
Protein:
4.1g
Carbohydrate:
17.5g
Fiber:
2.4g
Cholesterol:
3mg
Iron:
1.1mg
Sodium:
251mg
Calcium:
54mg
Lorrie Hulston Corvin, Cooking Light, NOVEMBER 2003

Member Ratings and Reviews

5 stars
Natalie
This recipe is easy to make and always a hit. I like garlic, so I always include the full head. Leftovers make a great sandwich spread!02/02/08

5 stars

Took the advice of others and only used about 3/4 of a head of garlic. Initially, I thought even that was still too garlicky. But when I served it the next day, the garlic seemed to have settled down a bit (still very present, but not at all overpowering) and this appetizer got rave reviews from everyone! Maybe the trick is to make it a day ahead? I did get requests to make it again for the next gathering. I personally liked it a lot, but I wasn't totally awed by it, so I'd probably have more fun trying something new before repeating this again... 12/26/06