It is now August and vegetable producers have had a bonanza this year. Growing conditions have been good for vegetables grown outside, but some need a little more nursing. Given a little protection and a couple of courgette plants they will give you an unlimited supply throughout the summer. The problem comes when everybody has the same vegetables and the exchange is the same thing!
The courgette seems to have risen in popularity after the war, probably thanks to the Italians, who call it Zucchini and the publication of cookery books by Elizabeth David about Mediterranean food. Her books inspired my mother and many of her generation to be adventurous with food and to cook simply. She still inspires me today.
Courgettes are believed to have come from America where they grew wild as a climber. Now the plant has been bred to have a bushy habit and is more suitable for growing here. There seems to have been a proliferation of them this year so i thought that it would be a good idea to tempt the taste buds with a few ideas. First perhaps it would be useful to know that these delicious vegetables pack quite a punch with helping to reduce blood pressure, heart rate, constipation, weight loss and much more. They contain potassium, fibre, few calories and plenty of vitamin A and C. To a lesser degree courgettes provide us with the complex B vitamins, thiamin, riboflavin and pyridoxine and minerals such as iron, manganese, phosphorus and zinc.
I use them both raw in salads and cooked, sautéed, steamed, griddled and in baking. I bought some Turriefield courgettes from Scoop and thought that I would make a chocolate and courgette cake. I fiddled around with two recipes and came up with a cake that looked and tasted pretty yummy. The verdict from the Scoop staff was a resounding mmmmmm!