Butternut Squash
Cucurbita moschata
Butternut Squash (Cucurbita moschata) is a versatile winter squash with a distinctive bell-shaped fruit featuring a sweet, nutty, deep orange flesh. C. moschata is also the species that includes the Dickinson pumpkin (the variety used for canned pumpkin in the US), cheese pumpkins, and many tropical squash varieties — making it one of the most commercially important Cucurbita species.
• The species C. moschata includes butternut squash, cheese pumpkins, Dickinson pumpkin (commercial canned pumpkin), calabaza, and many tropical squash varieties
• Butternut squash was developed in the 1940s by Charles Leggett of Waltham, Massachusetts — one of the newest major vegetable varieties
• The species epithet "moschata" means "musky," referring to the characteristic musky-sweet aroma of the ripe fruit
• Extremely long storage life — butternuts can keep for 6 months or more in cool, dry conditions
• One of the most widely adapted squash species, thriving from temperate to tropical climates
Taxonomía
• Originated in the lowland tropical and subtropical regions of Mexico and Central America
• Archaeological evidence from the Oaxaca Valley and Yucatán Peninsula shows cultivation from approximately 4000 BCE
• Spread throughout tropical America and the Caribbean in pre-Columbian times
• Introduced to Europe and Asia after 1500, where it thrived in warm climates
• The butternut variety specifically was bred in the 1940s from a cross between a gooseneck squash and other C. moschata varieties
• Now grown worldwide in warm-temperate to tropical regions
• The species shows excellent heat tolerance and disease resistance compared to other Cucurbita species
Vines:
• Long, trailing, 3 to 10 meters, with soft, rounded stems and moderate pubescence
• Produce branched tendrils for climbing
• Often develop adventitious roots at nodes
Leaves:
• Large, broadly ovate to suborbicular, 20 to 35 cm across
• Shallowly to deeply lobed (typically 5 lobes)
• Dark green, often mottled with white or silver between veins
• Rough-textured with soft hairs
Fruit:
• Butternut types: bell-shaped or bottle-shaped, 15 to 30 cm long, 8 to 15 cm in diameter
• Smooth, beige to tan rind, thin and edible when young but hardening at maturity
• Deep orange, dense, sweet, moist flesh with small seed cavity in the bulbous end
• Weight typically 0.5 to 2 kg
• Other C. moschata types vary enormously — round, cylindrical, or flattened fruits in various colors
Seeds:
• Medium-sized, oval, cream to tan, 1.5 to 2 cm long
• Edible, nutritious, with a nutty flavor
Per 100 g baked butternut squash:
• Energy: approximately 40 kcal
• Carbohydrates: 10.5 g (including 1.5 to 3 g fiber)
• Protein: 0.9 g
• Vitamin A: 11155 IU (557 mcg RAE, 223% DV) — one of the best vegetable sources
• Vitamin C: 15.1 mg (25% DV)
• Vitamin E: 1.3 mg
• Potassium: 284 mg
• Manganese: 0.2 mg
• Magnesium: 19 mg
• Extremely rich in beta-carotene and alpha-carotene
• Contains significant lutein and zeaxanthin
• Provides complex carbohydrates, B vitamins, and essential minerals
• Low glycemic index relative to other starchy vegetables
Planting:
• Direct-seed after all frost danger when soil is 18 to 21°C
• Plant in hills with 2 to 3 seeds per hill, thinned to 1 to 2 plants
• Space hills 90 to 120 cm apart in rows 1.5 to 2 meters apart
Care:
• Full sun, fertile, well-drained soil
• Consistent watering throughout the growing season
• Mulch to conserve moisture and control weeds
• More heat-tolerant and disease-resistant than C. maxima or C. pepo
Harvest:
• Harvest when skin is hard and cannot be pierced with a fingernail
• Fruit color changes from green to uniform tan/beige
• Leave 5 cm of stem attached
• Cure for 10 to 14 days at 24 to 30°C
• Stores for 3 to 6+ months at 10 to 15°C
• Roasted: cubed and roasted with olive oil, salt, and herbs — the most popular preparation
• Soup: creamy butternut squash soup with nutmeg and cream — an autumn classic
• Puréed: as a side dish, baby food, or ravioli filling
• In risotto, pasta sauces, and gratins
• Baked into pies, breads, muffins, and pancakes
• Spiralized into squash noodles
• Stuffed and baked whole
• As a substitute for canned pumpkin in pies (and commercially, most "pumpkin" pie filling is actually C. moschata)
• In curries, stews, and tagines
• Seeds roasted as a snack
• In South and Central American cuisine: used in stews, drinks, and desserts
Dato curioso
Most canned "pumpkin" sold in the United States is actually made from Dickinson pumpkin, a variety of Cucurbita moschata — not the C. pepo field pumpkins carved for Halloween. So your Thanksgiving pumpkin pie has almost certainly never contained a true pumpkin.
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