I've heard people describe it as "meaty", but I definitely never got that impression. But then, I made my mind up not to like it when I was a kid, and you know how that turns out a few years down the road....I still need to try it with a fresh mind.
But if you still have little kid tastes you'll find it to be squishy, squashy (duh), a little stringy, too yellow, and just really gourd-y.
But I've heard proponents of eating squash describe it as meaty as in savory and maybe also in texture, as I said, and surely buttery as it must be so aptly named, but I'm not the most reputable source since I haven't dared eat it for several years.
Really though if you want to know you should just cook some up and try it. Because describing a sensation and especially your own perception is difficult at best, even for a poet, and always misleading to someone or another.
On second thought, have someone else cook it for you. Someone who's done it before...because if you f|_|ck (sorry, had to do that because this c|_|nt of a website is afraid of something as silly as words) it up and end up hating it, it might not be the squash's fault at all!
For taste, old, dirty, unwashed jockstrap. For texture I would try Yellow and green squash. If you are doing something like lasagna, slice the squash thick and longways.
Because acorns taste nasty just like lemons!
It doesn't who told u it did ? BTW it taste's nice :P
squash
I believe Glutamic and Ascorbic acids are in yellow squash as well as other squash.
No, it does not. I'm on warfarin and i have yellow squash often.
The name of a yellow plant in the gourd family is the yellow crookneck squash.
Squash.
yellow squash :P
yellow squash :P
The homograph for "to press flat" and a yellow vegetable is "squash."
can yellow squash be used as recipe substitute for zucchini