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    Home • Recipes • Vegetarian Recipes

    Butternut Walnut Gratin

    Published: Dec 4, 2018 · Modified: Nov 7, 2024 by Jill Colonna14 Comments · This post may contain affiliate links. Read our disclosure policy

    Jump to Recipe

    Butternut Squash and Walnut Gratin, French family comfort food in one dish. Healthy veggies of leeks and squash are topped with toasted walnuts, parsley. It's all topped with bubbling melted cheese which forms a delicious cheesy crust that the family end up fighting for!

    gratin dish with spoon taking out colourful butternut squash, toasted walnuts, chestnuts

    This is my form of playing squash in Autumn and Winter - with delicious butternut. This Butternut Walnut Gratin is so simple, it's not even much of a recipe. When my French family is craving cheesy comfort food, this is one of our favourites. A healthy meal in just one dish, it's a perfectly easy French dinner recipe for all the family.

    Great Leftover Pumpkin Recipe

    This gratin is also ideal for Hallowe'en leftover pumpkins, after carving lanterns. Butternut squash is great for this dish but any other kind of your favourite pumpkin will do.

    how to prepare butternut

    How To Prepare Butternut Squash

    For this butternut walnut gratin recipe, I'm lazy and find it too difficult to cut it up raw as it's far too hard. Perhaps I don't have good enough knives but my lazy method is to just prick the skin with a fork and pre-roast the butternut on a baking tray in a medium oven for up to 15 minutes.

    This makes it much easier to remove the skin and cut into chunks for the dish (which will end up being cooked again to perfection with the other flavours). However, you could (to save time) prick the skin and place on a microwaveable dish for about 10 minutes and continue with the recipe below.

    What to do with Butternut or Pumpkin Seeds?

    Don't discard the seeds, as you can toast them with spices, salt and pepper and serve with drinks before the meal! The French are particularly into no waste (myself included), so never throw them out and make your own toasted pumpkin seeds.

    pumpkin soup and cooked chestnuts, a French speciality

    Chestnuts - the French's Festive Favourite

    As you can tell from many recipes here, the family love the association of pumpkin and leeks - and above all, chestnuts! Just try them in this pumpkin soup and in a savoury pumpkin tart. The French are so mad about chestnuts during the festive season, I've created their own chestnut market page.

    Instead of chestnut flour, I'm adding vacuum-packed pre-cooked whole chestnuts (I keep a store of them like a squirrel, as there's no need to keep in the fridge). If you can't find them, replace with mushrooms.

    To top it all off, toasted walnuts add that essential crunchy texture, clinging and adding some earthiness to the cheese. I have added smoked paprika but if you prefer the real non-vegetarian thing, then if you're a bacon lover, add some pre-fried smoked bacon slivers or lardons (bacon bits or cubes of poitrine fumé).

    Butternut walnut gratin
    gratin dish with spoon taking out colourful butternut squash, toasted walnuts, chestnuts

    Butternut or Pumpkin Walnut Gratin

    Jill Colonna
    French family comfort food recipe for Autumn or Winter. Roasted butternut squash or pumpkin, leeks, ready prepared chestnuts, a subtle warming sprinkle of smoked paprika - all topped with toasted walnuts and bubbling melted cheese.
    4.80 from 5 votes
    Print Recipe Pin Recipe
    Prep Time 20 minutes mins
    Cook Time 35 minutes mins
    Precook 15 minutes mins
    Total Time 55 minutes mins
    Course Main, Main Course, Supper
    Cuisine French
    Servings 4 people
    Calories 400 kcal

    Ingredients
      

    • 500 g (18oz / 3½ cups) butternut squash or pumpkin (weight with seeds removed), cut into rough cubes
    • 1 tablespoon olive oil
    • 2 leeks cut into slices
    • 200 g (7oz / 1½ cups) pre-cooked chestnuts I use vacuum-packed but in jars or tins are good too *
    • 110 g (4oz/ ½ cup) half fat thick crème fraîche 12% fat (or Greek yoghurt)
    • 175 g (6oz/ 2 cups ) Emmental cheese grated**
    • 50 g (2oz/ 3 tbsp) walnuts
    • 1 tablespoon fresh parsley finely chopped
    • salt & pepper to taste
    • ½ teaspoon smoked paprika

    Instructions
     

    • Preheat the oven to 200°C/180°C fan/400°F/Gas 6.
      Prick the butternut squash's skin and roast it whole (or pumpkin) in the oven for 15 minutes until the skin starts blistering. Remove and leave to cool slightly. Alternatively, prick the skin and put on high in the microwave for 10 minutes.
    • Heat the olive oil in a large non-stick frying pan and gently sauté the sliced leeks for about 10 minutes until softened. Set aside.
    • When the squash is easier to handle, peel off the skin and cut in 2 using a good knife. Remove the seeds with a spoon (don't discard) and cut the softened squash into rough chunks.
    • In a gratin dish, throw in the slightly softened squash chunks, the leeks and cooked chestnut. 
    • Top with the crème fraîche by dolloping on some spoonfuls in regular intervals, add a touch of salt and pepper to taste and sprinkle lightly and evenly the smoked paprika. 
    • Top the lot with the cheese, walnuts and parsley. 
    • Bake in the oven for 30-35 minutes or until the cheese is bubbling and golden and forms a slight crust. If you prefer yours without the crispiness, then bake for slightly less.

    Notes

    Serve with a good French baguette and a chilled white such as a Riesling from Alsace. If you can't find chestnuts, replace with fresh mushrooms that have been dry fried separately until they lose their juices (to concentrate their flavour).
    ** Emmental Cheese: if following a strict vegetarian diet, ensure it's a vegetarian version.
    I've added smoked paprika but if you prefer, add 100g of pre-fried lardons or bacon bits.
    Butternut walnut gratin

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    Jill Colonna standing in a French patisserie lab holding a giant whisk over an oversized mixer bowl

    Bonjour - I'm Jill

    Author and home cook in Paris. Scottish and French, I've spent 30+ years in Paris sharing lighter, flavour-forward recipes with less sugar and no fuss. No fancy techniques - just real food we eat at home. You'll also find my travel tips to help you taste France like a local.

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    1. Susanne

      December 30, 2022 at 11:59 pm

      4 stars
      Made this tonight with substitutes...mushrooms for chestnuts and beets greens and scallions for leeks. It made a delicious flavor profile. I look forward to trying again with the original ingredients.
      I do have a question: the cheese hardened and became like a crust. I assume that it shouldn’t have. Any suggestions?
      I really like your website and look forward to visiting Paris in the future,

      Reply
      • Jill Colonna

        December 31, 2022 at 11:18 am

        This is the whole point of this French gratin is having the cheese crust - my family fight for the best crispy cheese bits stuck to the sides! Is this why I only got 4 stars for the review? What a giggle. As a result, I shall update the post to explain that it's the whole point.
        I'm glad you liked it, though and look forward to hearing you making it with the ingredients in the recipe - it's lovely with them.

        Reply
    2. June S

      January 09, 2022 at 7:17 pm

      5 stars
      A perfect recipe after Halloween to cook the pumpkins. Printed it out to keep in my boook.

      Reply
      • Jill Colonna

        January 10, 2022 at 9:17 am

        Goody - thanks for that.

        Reply
    3. Mimi

      December 09, 2018 at 1:37 pm

      The only thing I ever knew about chestnuts were the stories of my French grandmother’s attempts at roasting them and the subsequent sound of gunfire. She had a weekend home in Charmes la Cote that I remember well. An ancient stove but she was the only one with a modern toilet! In any case, I’m grown up now and know that if I ever get my hands on fresh chestnuts that I will carve an X into them before roasting!

      Reply
      • Jill Colonna

        December 09, 2018 at 5:27 pm

        That sounds idyllic, Mimi. These are such precious memories. I love the smell of the guys selling roasted chestnuts at the top of the metro entrances in winter - but much better if they're roasted over an open fire, sitting by the fireplace. Much more romantic!

        Reply
    4. Christina | Christina's Cucina

      December 07, 2018 at 6:16 am

      5 stars
      Not a chestnut fan (Mum loves them), but walnuts are more my cup of tea! And of course leeks! YUM! You've got so many fabulous recipes here, Jill! Thank you for sharing them all!

      Reply
      • Jill Colonna

        December 07, 2018 at 8:59 am

        Thanks so much, Christina. Glad you like it!

        Reply
    5. Thomasina

      December 07, 2018 at 12:17 am

      This looks a wonderful winter comforter Jill. Thank you for the inspiration. Thank you also for how to roast pumpkin seeds. Will sus out the cheese for a vegetarian friend coming to stay. And I love chestnuts at Christmas time.

      Reply
      • Jill Colonna

        December 07, 2018 at 8:58 am

        Glad you also love the chestnuts! In France, it's not Christmas without them. Not all vegetarians are strict on the cheese, however, as most of them use animal rennet but goats cheese is a good bet for strict vegetarians and many supermarkets have vegetarian cheeses. I know many vegetarians that turn a deaf ear to that, as bubbling cheese on a gratin is too good.

        Reply
    6. Sarah

      December 05, 2018 at 4:17 pm

      I adore chestnuts and my husband too! This looks so delicious Jill - look forward to making this soon. I can see this as a Christmas dish for our 2 vegetarians, although we'll need to check on the cheese.

      Reply
      • Jill Colonna

        December 05, 2018 at 9:49 pm

        Great idea for a vegetarian Christmas, Sarah. I'm not sure of the cheeses since I'm not a full vegetarian myself (although don't eat red meat or lamb anymore). So glad you'll make it. Enjoy!

        Reply

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    Bonjour - I'm Jill

    Author and home cook in Paris. Scottish and French, I've spent 30+ years in Paris sharing lighter, flavour-forward recipes with less sugar and no fuss. No fancy techniques - just real food we eat at home. You'll also find my travel tips to help you taste France like a local.

    Meet Jill
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