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Twice-Roasted Squash With Vanilla, Maple, and Chile

TwiceRoasted Squash With Vanilla Maple and Chile recipe
Photograph by Emma Fishman, food styling by Susie Theodorou, prop styling by Sophie Leng

The undisputed worst part of roasting squash is laboriously hacking apart a rock-hard gourd. Skip that entire process by roasting a kabocha squash whole, then tearing the cooked flesh into pieces to roast again under a fragrant and slightly spicy glaze. The result is tender squash with a sticky-sweet sheen in boats of crispy skin. If you want to work ahead, roast the whole squash a day before you need it and store it in your refrigerator; before serving, simply tear the squash, drizzle it with glaze, and pop it back into the oven for the final roast.

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What you’ll need

Recipe information

  • Yield

    8 Servings

Ingredients

2 2½–3½-lb. kabocha squash
2–3 Fresno chiles, thinly sliced
½ cup pure maple syrup
1 Tbsp. vanilla extract
Kosher salt
⅓ cup extra-virgin olive oil
3 Tbsp. toasted sesame seeds

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Preheat oven to 425°. Poke each squash a few times with a sharp knife, then place on a foil-lined rimmed baking sheet. Roast until a fork easily pierces through skin, about 1 hour. Let sit until cool enough to handle, then cut each squash in half. Scoop out and discard seeds. Tear squash into large pieces and arrange, flesh side up, on same baking sheet.

    Step 2

    Increase oven temperature to 450°. Bring chiles, maple syrup, vanilla, and a big pinch of salt to a boil in a small saucepan; reduce heat and simmer until thickened, 8–10 minutes. Remove from heat and stir in oil.

    Step 3

    Generously season squash with salt, then spoon maple syrup mixture over each piece. Roast squash until darkened slightly and jammy in spots, 20–25 minutes.

    Step 4

    Transfer squash to a platter and sprinkle sesame seeds over.

    Do ahead: Squash can be roasted 1 day ahead. Let cool. Wrap in foil (leave whole) and chill.

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