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Butternut Squash

Butternut Squash

Cucurbita moschata

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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

분류학

Plantae
Tracheophyta
Magnoliopsida
Cucurbitales
Cucurbitaceae
Cucurbita
Species Cucurbita moschata
Cucurbita moschata was domesticated in Mexico or Central America approximately 5,000 to 8,000 years ago.

• 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
Cucurbita moschata is a vigorous, annual, monoecious vine.

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
Butternut squash is one of the most nutritious winter vegetables.

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
Butternut squash requires a warm, long growing season.

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
Culinary uses:
• 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

재미있는 사실

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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