When Mama doesn’t blog, Mama doesn’t eat well. Without Friday deadlines and recipes to tackle, I’ve lost my way. The fridge looks forlorn. The pantry? Forgettaboutit. My solitary banana is brown and there are no overs to left. Eight weeks. Enough. Time to take the foot off the brake. Plus, I’ve missed you.
As you’re reading this post, I’m flying back to Colorado after a week in Washington D.C. I had the opportunity to spend 3 days at the newly-opened National Museum of African American History and Culture and stretched my trip to include other museums. My carefully scripted itinerary did not include being questioned by the Secret Service. That happened and was unnerving.
THANKSGIVING FARE
First, however, let’s add some sparkle to your holiday menus. The staff at The Gant worried I’d hit a bad patch and were quite relieved to see this Pumpkin Spice Bundt Cake with Buttermilk Icing walk through their door. Although Gourmet Magazine ceased publication in 2009, this spectacular Fall creation from a 2005 issue is mine forever.
Why not let David Lebovitz’s Cook the Book Friday’s recipe, Butternut Squash Crumble, be a part of your Thanksgiving this year. What first sounds like a dessert tilts toward savory. Roasted squash is infused with chicken stock and seasoned with thyme and shallots. The topping is a mixture of bread crumbs, Parmesan and sage, glued together by butter and eggs. Ditch your classic green bean casserole for this tasty dish with a sweet punch.
Look for the recipes and my tips at the end of this post.
A CAPITOL VISIT
In 1913 on the 50th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg, black civil war veterans lobbied for a museum to honor the African American journey. That dream gathered dust for decades until Congressmen John Lewis and Mickey Leland resurrected the idea in the 1980s. Winning approval from Congress was a prolonged and bruising battle. In 2003 an ebullient George W. Bush signed a bill creating the 19th Smithsonian museum. It opened in late September 2016 and cost $540 million with half of that coming from private donors.
Designed by Tanzanian-born British architect, David Adjaye, the dazzling 400,000 square-foot bronze-colored building sits on a 5-acre site located directly across from the Washington Monument. (Adjaye also designed Denver’s Museum of Contemporary Art).
Because no Smithsonian museum had ever been conceived without having its own permanent collection, Director Lonnie Bunch and his team collected the artifacts themselves. Using the “Antiques Roadshow” format to generate publicity in 15 American cities the museum now possesses 37,000 objects. Every Smithsonian museum is spectacular and the NMAAHC, the last to be built on the Mall, stands proudly with the others.
I also spent several hours at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum which Michael and I first visited after it opened in 1993. Although not a member of the Smithsonian group, it is located nearby and recently was renovated. Walking through those doors is a sobering experience and, 23 years later, still not easy.
THE SECRET SERVICE
It was on my way to the Holocaust Museum that I crossed paths with the Secret Service. Charged with protecting the President, Vice President and Treasury, ubiquitous is the watchword. On bikes. In cars. With German Shepherds. Manning security booths. Guarding entrances. I spotted an agent on her bike with a dog chatting with another agent guarding an entrance. A perfect photo, I thought.
As you can see by my picture the minute I focused the camera, Man Agent turned and began walking towards me. I consciously decided NOT to say I was a blogger and just snapping a photo for an upcoming post. So when he asked me why I was taking pictures (I took only 1), that’s exactly what I blurted out! He lectured me on freedom, that it had costs! I replied that I was also on Team Freedom, would show him all my photos if he wished and I was not the enemy (which he already knew, of course). Still, it was unsettling, that gun and all. I remember thinking, “Well, if this goes south, I look good, am wearing a nice outfit and my pearls are real!”
And, Readers, don’t forget to VOTE.
BUTTERNUT SQUASH CRUMBLE by David Lebovitz, My Paris Kitchen
Serves 6-8
INGREDIENTS:
SQUASH FILLING
2 Tbs butter
2 Tbs olive oil
4 pounds. butternut squash, peeled, seeded, and diced into ¾-inch cubes
2 tsp minced fresh thyme leaves
Kosher salt and black pepper
½ cup peeled and thinly sliced shallots
1 cup chicken stock
2 Tbs finely chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley
TOPPING
¾ cup fresh or dried bread crumbs
½ cup coarse-ground yellow cornmeal
½ cup grated Parmesan cheese
1 Tbs minced fresh sage leaves
1 tsp granulated sugar
½ tsp kosher salt
4 Tbs unsalted butter, chilled and cubed
1 large egg, room temperature
DIRECTIONS:
1. Preheat your oven to 375 F. Grease a shallow 3-quart baking dish. Set aside.
2. To make the squash filling, heat 1 Tbs butter and 1 Tbs olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add half the squash and half the thyme. Season with salt and pepper and sauté, stirring occasionally, until the squash pieces begin to brown on several sides.
3. Add half the shallots and cook another few minutes, until they’re softened. Add ½ cup stock and cook about 30 seconds, stirring, to reduce the stock a bit and heat everything through. Scrape the squash mixture into the prepared baking dish.
4. Wipe the pan clean and heat the remaining 1 tbs butter and olive oil in the pan over medium-high heat. Cook the rest of the squash and thyme the same way, seasoning it with salt and pepper and adding the remaining shallots and ½ cup stock, stirring.
5. Scrape the cooked squash mixture into the baking dish, stir in the parsley, then press the mixture into a relatively even layer. Cover the dish snugly with aluminum foil and bake for 30 minutes, until the squash is pretty soft, but not mushy when you poke it with a sharp paring knife.
6. While the squash bakes, make the topping. Combine the bread crumbs, cornmeal, Parmesan, sage, sugar, salt and black pepper in your food processor. Add the chilled butter and pulse until the mixture is crumbly and the butter is completely incorporated. Add the egg and pulse a few more times until the mixture just starts clumping together in bits.
7. Remove the squash from the oven, remove the aluminum foil, and cover evenly with the bread crumb topping. Decrease the oven temperature to 350 F and return the dish to the oven. Bake about 20 minutes, until the topping is golden brown, then serve.
PUMPKIN SPICE BUNDT CAKE with BUTTERMILK ICING
Adapted from Gourmet Magazine, 2005
Serves 12
Special equipment: a 10-inch nonstick bundt pan (3 quart)
CAKE
1 1/2 sticks (3/4 cup) unsalted butter, softened,
2 additional Tbs butter for greasing bundt pan*
2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour plus additional for dusting pan
2 additional Tbs flour for dusting pan*
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
2 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon ground allspice
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 1/4 cups canned solid-pack pumpkin PUREE from a 15-ounce can (not pie filling)
3/4 cup well-shaken buttermilk
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 1/4 cups granulated sugar
3 large eggs, room temperature
ICING
2 tablespoons plus 2 teaspoons well-shaken buttermilk
1 1/2 cups confectioners sugar
DIRECTIONS:
1. Put oven rack in middle position and preheat oven to 350°F.
2. Butter bundt pan generously, then dust with flour, knocking out excess.
3. Whisk together flour (2 1/4 cups), baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon, allspice, and salt in a bowl.
4. Whisk together pumpkin, 3/4 cup buttermilk, and vanilla in another bowl.
5. Beat butter (1 1/2 sticks) and granulated sugar in a large bowl with an electric mixer at medium-high speed until pale and fluffy, 3 to 5 minutes, then add eggs and beat 1 minute. Reduce speed to low and add flour and pumpkin mixtures alternately in batches, beginning and ending with flour mixture and mixing until batter is just smooth.
6. Spoon batter into pan, smoothing top, then bake until a wooden pick or skewer inserted in center of cake comes out clean, 45 to 50 minutes. Cool cake in pan on a rack 15 minutes, then invert rack over cake and re-invert cake onto rack. Cool 10 minutes more.
ICING DIRECTIONS:
1. While cake is cooling, whisk together buttermilk and confectioners sugar until smooth. Drizzle icing over warm cake, then cool cake completely. Icing will harden slightly.
TIPS:
Cake can be made 3 days ahead and kept in an airtight container at room temperature.
2. I use Pam with Flour spray instead of a butter/flour combination for a no-stick remedy. My cakes have always dropped from the pan beautifully.
3. Fill your bundt pan to 3/4 full. I used the 10-cup bundt pan suggested but if you use a smaller bundt pan, just make muffins with the extra mixture.
Welcome back, Mary! We missed you.
Well Mary…what a story. Didn’t you tell the SS that you and Susan Rice are buddies. AND dId you tell him you were a volunteer with a partner of the Department of Agriculture?? Geez…. Just think if the Donald gets elected. You are gonna be on a list.
Anyway, good to hear about your Long Time buddy John Lewis being a driver in the creation of the museum. I cannot wait to see it.
AND…I am salivating about the recipes now.
Hugs, Rocks
Gosh, Mary. It looks like you’re already on a list, thanks to the Obama Administration! President Trump will thank you for not bashing those officers. White Blogger Lives Matter.
Good to hear your voice, Mary. Mine too has been silent in the blogosphere of late. Busy, busy, busy. but I hope to get back soon. Glad the SS did not through you in the brig!
Welcome back Mary! Sounds like you had a really interesting time away!
Forget the food, which is great by the way, your whole post had me in stitches. I love that you went to Washington, which, incidentally, I have never been, but the story of the Secret Service had me laughing so hard. I could just picture you getting your gander up, forget your real pearls…. they will not work.
Welcome back Mary I have missed you. Looks like a fun trip to D.C. I wish I could again. My son gets to go this year for 8th grade. The food looks yummy.
Hooray you are back! Welcome and so happy to see you Mary! As always full of interesting adventures and perspectives, those always said gained wherever we travel. The food… happy you are back to cooking too and look forward to your latest preparations in the upcoming weeks ahead! Yay.
So glad to see you post! I’ve missed you and have been meaning to email you to say hi. Glad to know I’m not alone as I took a photo of the cute drug sniffing dogs going through customs and totally embarrassed the family when I got scolded! We better not travel together!!! Your cake looks scrumptious—lucky Gant folks!!!!
Hi Mary,
Both your cake and the crumble looks wonderful! You have been a busy gal! Glad to see you’re back!
The world would be tuning it see the results of the vote!
Hard to decide what part of this post I like better. So let’s settle with a few. Starting with how great it is to see you switching the light back on. Agreeing that food blogging helps filling up the fridge and pantry with goodies. (The routine of blog is keeping me rooted in ways I missed while I was on the road in the last few weeks and months.) The secret service story is seriously hilarious. Actually more serious than hilarious. I have to visit the new museum next time I go to DC. Thanks for the review. Love the pumpkin spice bundt cake too!
Oh Mary! Welcome back!! That cake looks delicious! I actually make a Dorie Greenspan cranberry spice one as my go-to fall cake – but yours looks wonderful too! Can’t give up on a recipe just because the magazine stops publishing! I didn’t make the butternut squash gratin. Roasted squash, my favorite butternut squash gallette – all yes, I just couldn’t bring myself. Maybe one of these days!!
Love the photos of your trip to Washington DC. It’s been a few years, so I need to go back. Love that you went to the new African American Museum. Looks incredibly interesting. The Holocaust Museum… one of my great friends works there (teaching teachers around the world to teach about this and other issues like it), and I was fortunate to get a personally guided tour. It’s haunting. Glad you got past the Secret Service guys – I think you would be ok – but hey, they are on the job.
Wonderful to have you back my friend. I always love your posts. And I bet the folks at the Gant are too! 🙂
Great blog Mary! What a trip!
Glad you’re up and at em again! So much great info…going back to read again….
Love you!
That cake looks fabulous! We loved the butternut squash dish too. Sounds like you had an adventurous time in D.C. I would love to go to both museums some day.
Mary, Thanks for sharing your DC adventures. Only you would get scolded by the Secret Service… I look forward to visiting the new museum during a future trip to my sister’s. I’m so glad to hear your voice again. I missed my weekly dose of Mary. Welcome back!
You’re back! We’ve all missed you! Loved reading about your adventures in Washington – I’ve only ever spent one day there and hardly saw anything but it’s on my list to go back (once my book deadlines are behind me!). Welcome back!
Welcome back! We’ve been in need of cooking inspiration for the upcoming holidays and just happen to have several butternut squashes waiting to be harvested from our garden. The casserole recipe will be part of the feast at our son’s house this year. Loved your travelogue of our beautiful Capitol…Ooohhhh, those touchy secret service folks must be on high alert these days.
Your trip sounds wonderful. I am going to try some of your recipes for Thanksgiving.
I love your blog. Carol
Welcome back, Mary! You’ve been missed!! Glad you enjoyed the butternut squash crumble so much; it sure is a wonderful dish, eh? That cake also sounds divine and I may convince Alaia to make it with me sometime. As for the secret service, the way you describe it irritates me. I mean, what the heck?!? Once he realized you were not a problem why the lecture? Sigh. I can’t wait until the election is over.
Yeahhhh! You are back on! A Big Welcome Back and so delighted with your latest posting. The cake is awesome, the squash and crumble Big Yums! Do remember to pamper oneself with a decadent breakfast now and then!
Yes, I am so proud of Ro getting this week’s linky working 100%
ps: David did say to serve it hot!
I´m glad you are back. We missed you. Your posts are always so informative/educational not sure what word to use but you know what I mean.
Hi, Mary, glad you’re back. I always enjoy your blogs; so beautifully done!
I’m so glad you’re back, Mary. I missed reading your posts. Your trip to Washington looked fabulous, and I’m glad the incident with the Secret Service was a minor one. 🙂
That cake is appropriately celebratory, I think, for your return. And wasn’t that crumble amazing? I am tempted to make another, even though there are no more holidays meals in the offing until December.
Welcome Back!!! Sounds like a very interesting trip. Thank you for the bundt cake recipe, looks great!