08 September 2019

Zucchini boats with a goat-cheese filling

You could make it your life's work, or at least a multi-year project, to study and understand all the laws and regulations concerning visas and residence requirements for foreigners wanting to come into Europe and stay for a while. This guy seems to have done so. It's not something I want to do. I'm retired. I just want to live my life peacefully. And cook (and eat).


Last week, in our daily struggle to keep up with the zucchini crop, I made zucchini "boats" as they can be called. Courgettes farcies — stuffed zucchini, in other words. I happened to have some fresh goat cheese in the refrigerator (can't remember why I bought two or three logs of it the week before) and a big basket of unshelled walnuts from last year's crop. My thanks to the Couffy friends down the road who gave them to us. No, that's not an insult...


  1. Crack and shell some walnuts, saving whole pieces to use as decoration.
  2. Cut zucchini squashes lengthwise and, using a curved grapefruit knife and a spoon, scoop the seeds and pulp out of them. 
  3. Cook the pulp with diced onion and minced garlic in olive oil. Let it cool.
  4. Mash some fresh goat cheese with the cooked pulp-and-onion and fresh herbs.
  5. Grate hard, aged goat cheese into the mixture for flavor, along with toasted, chopped walnut pieces.
  6. Stir an egg or two and salt and pepper into the stuffing mixture.
  7. Stuff the zucchini boats with the mixture and bake them in the oven until they just start to turn golden brown. Pour a little water or wine into the oiled pan to steam the zucchini boats.
  8. Take the partially baked boats out of the oven and press whole walnut pieces onto the surface of the stuffing.
  9. Finish baking until golden brown.


    8 comments:

    1. I love your cooking posts! They always inspire me to try something new. I think I should use nuts and seeds more often in stuffings.

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      Replies
      1. I always put either walnuts or pecans in poultry stuffings.

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    2. I've got a question. I think I crack walnuts the wrong way. I always end up with morsels, not whole pieces. How do you do it?

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      Replies
      1. I just use a regular nutcracker and crack them carefully. I get a lot more broken halves than whole halves (oxymoron?), that's for sure. To my taste buds, walnuts are not as good as pecans but they are a lot less expensive here than pecans. In this case, they were free.

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      2. Thanks. I guess I'm just not careful enough. We get our walnuts free, too. Our daughter has a couple of walnut trees on her property. She's found the trees along the road produce bigger nuts, so this year she's going to collect more from the road.

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      3. Have you ever tried making vin de noix? I tasted some a few months ago -- very nice.

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    3. I think if you had invited the ladies in Blois over for wine and a meal, you'd both be citoyens d'or. Even the challenging receptionist; you'd have won her over. ;-)

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    4. Ken, any updates about the situation in North Carolina? Interesting to learn more about the damage. Roderick

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