The Kusa is back :) Thanks to our dear friend @ananzahr for sharing seeds for her Palestinian Kusa w
The Kusa is back :) Thanks to our dear friend @ananzahr for sharing seeds for her Palestinian Kusa with us years ago. We have a limited run back in the catalog thanks to the seed keeping work of @phillyorchards at @woodlandsphila. Here’s the description: Stuff or grill this tender summer squash with your favorite Middle Eastern and Mediterranean recipes. Also known as Grey Squash, this type is beloved in Palestine, Lebanon, Syria, Egypt and most Arabic nations. The most common kusa dish is known as kousa mahshi (simply: “stuffed zucchini”), in which you remove the seeds and core of the kusa, and stuff it with rice and/or lamb, plus herbs and spices, boil, and serve as a main or side dish. Think stuffed peppers, but with kusa. Kusa means zucchini in Arabic. Zucchini is plural for zucchino, the Italian word for small squash. Squash is short for askutasquash, the Narragansett word for “eaten green or raw.” So what is the story of this cultivar? This species, Cucurbita pepo, originates in Mexico and Central America and now includes many types such as the New England pumpkin, acorn, scallop, straight neck, crook neck, and vegetable marrow. It is said that Christopher Columbus introduced this species to Europe and the Mediterranean region. In the mid-19th century, Italians developed the zucchini, perhaps by selecting cultivars of the vegetable marrow type for cylindrical, green fruits that were tasty in their immature stage. It is difficult to determine which came first, the zucchini or the modern kusa. In his fairly thorough 1794 book “The Natural History of Aleppo,” Alexander Russell describes an “orange-shaped pumpion” (Kusa Siffer - Cucurbita) and “several varieties of gourd” (Kurrah - Cucurbita pepo). In 1901, the Encyclopædia Biblica mentioned “various gourds are included [in the] Mishna, among them perhaps the favourite kusa or vegetable-marrow,” however, the Mishna was written from oral tradition around 200AD, so his conjecture is almost definitely wrong, yet illuminating. From these two sources, we can see that the much adored kusa probably emerged in the 19th century Middle East around the same time the zucchini emerged in Italy. #seedkeeping #kusa (at The Woodlands) https://www.instagram.com/seedkeeping/p/CYsahJFtT43/?utm_medium=tumblr -- source link
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