No-waste pumpkin curry
- Published: 25 Sep 23
- Updated: 25 Mar 24
This clever no-waste recipe uses pumpkin flesh in a delicious curry, and the pumpkin seeds in a coconutty chutney.
The recipe comes from Anshu and Renee of DabbaDrop, a London delivery service offering South Asian meals in reusable tins called dabbas. They say: “We have a soft spot for pumpkins. Their pink-orange flesh is nutrient dense and soaks up flavours beautifully. We use the skin, flesh and seeds for this sweet and tangy, zero-waste curry with creamy coconut and tomatoes.”
Find other energy-efficient recipes in our sustainable recipes collection here.
Ingredients
- 1kg pumpkin or squash
- 2-3 kokum (or 2-3 tbsp tamarind pulp, see tip)
- 2 tbsp vegetable oil
- ¼ tsp fenugreek seeds
- ¼ tsp black mustard seeds
- 5-6 curry leaves
- 2-3 green finger chillies
- 1 onion, finely sliced
- 2 tbsp ginger-garlic paste
- 1 small ripe tomato, chopped
- 1 tsp salt
- ½ tsp ground turmeric
- 1 tbsp ground coriander
- 1½ tsp kashmiri or byadgi red chili powder (use more or less depending on your preference for spice)
- 400g tin coconut milk
- 2 tbsp chopped coriander
For the pumpkin chips
- Olive oil to drizzle
- Pinch ground cumin
- Pinch chilli powder
For the chutrney
- 50g unsweetened desiccated coconut
- 6 garlic cloves
- 25 curry leaves
- 5 dried whole red chillies
- 1 tsp cumin seeds
- 1 tsp red chilli powder
- ¼ tsp asafoetida
Method
- Heat the oven to 200°C fan/gas 7. Prepare the pumpkin by peeling off the skin using a strong Y-peeler or a sharp knife. Slice the skin into smaller strips. Spread them out on a baking tray, give them a generous coating of olive oil and use your hands to make sure they are coated properly. Roast for 30 minutes, then dust liberally with salt, cumin and chilli powder.
- Meanwhile, remove the seeds from the pumpkin, then put them a bowl of water to rinse off any flesh. Drain, then pat dry (you want about 50g of seeds in total). For the chutney, dry roast the seeds on a tray below the pumpkin skins for about 12 minutes. Toast the coconut in a dry pan over a medium heat until golden. Tip out into a bowl, then toast the garlic, curry leaves and whole dried chillies for a few minutes. Let the garlic, curry leaves and chillies cool, then put in a food processor with the cumin, chilli powder and asafoetida. Whizz into a rubble, then mix with the toasted coconut and roasted seeds. Season to taste with salt and set aside.
- While the pumpkin skin and seeds cook, soak the kokum or tamarind in about 50ml of warm water for 15 minutes (you can skip this step if using tamarind paste). Cut the pumpkin into bite-size chunks. Squeeze the kokum or tamarind fruit to release any liquid, adding that to the soaking water. Reserve the soaking water and discard the fruit.
- Heat the oil in a medium frying pan over a medium-high heat. Add the fenugreek seeds, black mustard seeds and curry leaves. Once the leaves start to splutter, add the green chillies and onion and cook, stirring occasionally, until the onion is soft and translucent (about 5 minutes).
- Add the ginger-garlic paste and tomato and cook, stirring occasionally, for another 2-3 minutes. Stir in the salt, turmeric, coriander and chilli powder and cook, stirring constantly, for another 1-2 minutes.
- Add the pumpkin along with the kokum or tamarind soaking water, cover with a lid, reduce the heat to low and cook for 7-10 minutes until the pumpkin is cooked through.
- Finally, add the coconut milk (and the tamarind paste if substituting for the kokum/tamarind) and let the curry simmer for a few more minutes. Serve with the coriander scattered over, plus the pumpkin skin chips and the chutney on the side.
- Recipe from October 2023 Issue
Nutrition
- Calories
- 508kcals
- Fat
- 38g (25g saturated),
- Protein
- 5.9g
- Carbohydrates
- 30g (19g sugars)
- Fibre
- 12g
- Salt
- 2.9g
delicious. tips
If you don’t have kokum, you can substitute 2-3 tbsp tamarind pulp, soaked and squeezed as described for the kokum, or 2 tbsp tamarind paste. If using the paste, add it later in step 7.
The pumpkin seed chutney can be sprinkled on just about anything. It can also be used as a condiment when mixed with sesame oil or a neutral oil – just like making your own chilli oil.
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