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The Rural Voice, 2003-10, Page 45pan. Bake for 40-45 minutes or until wooden pick inserted in the cake comes out clean. Cool in pan on wire rack for 25 minutes; invert onto wire rack to cool completely. Drizzle half of the glaze over cake; serve with remaining glaze. Glaze: Heat 3 tbsp evaporated milk in small, heavy-duty saucepan over medium heat just to a boil; remove from heat. Add 1 cup white chocolate morsels; stir until smooth. Stir in 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon. CARAMEL SQUASH FLAN 1 1/4 cup (300 mL)granulated sugar 1/4 cup (50 mL) water a few drops lemon juice 1 1/2 cups (375 mL) cooked, pureed squash, preferably butternut 3 eggs 1 egg yolk 1 tsp (5 mL) vanilla 1/2 tsp (2 mL) each cinnamon and ground ginger 1/4 tsp (1 mL) each ground nutmeg and salt 1 cup(250 mL) each milk and whipping cream In small saucepan, stir together 3/4 cup (175 mL) of the sugar, water and lemon juice; bring to boil over medium-high heat, stirring occasionally. Boil without stirring, until deep amber colour, about 5 minutes, watching carefully because sugar burns very quickly. Immediately pour into ungreased 10 - inch (25 cm) pie plate, tilting to coat bottom. (Caramel sets very quickly) In large bowl, whisk together Squash, remaining 1/2 cup (125 mL) sugar, eggs, egg yolk, vanilla, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg and salt. In small saucepan, heat milk with cream until hot; gradually whisk into squash mixture. Pour over caramel in pie plate. Place in large baking pan. Fill baking pan with enough hot water to come halfway up sides of pie plate. Bake in 225°F (160°C) oven until flan is set but centre jiggles slightly and knife inserted in custard comes out clean, about 1 hour. Remove from water and let cool completely. Refrigerate, loosely covered, for 4 hours but preferably overnight. To unmould, run knife around edge of custard. Invert large flat plate with shallow sides on pie plate. Holding tightly against pie plate, carefully turn over and invert flan onto plate. Serve in wedges with caramel sauce spooned over top. *For this recipe you'll need a squash weighing 3-3 1/2 Ib (1.5 to 1.75 kg). Pierce squash in several places, then bake in the oven or microwave until very tender. Cut in half and discard seeds. Scrape squash from peel. Puree in a food processor fitted with metal blade. Strain in sieve for 30 minutes to remove excess water. Measure out 1 1/2 cups (375 mL). Any remaining squash can be frozen and used in soup, muffins, pie or bread.0 Gardening IPM Integrated Pest Management Common Sense approach to pest control Rhea Hamilton - Seeger and her husband live near Auburn. She is a skilled cook and gardener. By Rhea Hamilton -Seeger Every year Master Gardeners across Ontario organize and attend technical workshops to improve their horticultural skills to aid them in answering your many questions. This year's workshop was held at the Royal Botanical Gardens in Burlington. What a fabulous setting. Among the interesting speakers was Randy Harden of Woodstream Canada (of the "Safers Soap Company") who spoke on environmentally friendly pesticides. The fact that he represented a company that promoted pesticide use caused some cynics in the audience to grumble. There is a prevalent attitude among many Master Gardeners that gardeners should divorce themselves from chemical dependency in their gardens and find more environmentally benign approaches to pests. But Randy presented a very practical, common sense approach that started right off with integrated pest management (IPM), a wonderful strategy for dealing with pests and diseases in the garden. I first heard about IPM through the Ministry of Agriculture in their Gardener's Handbook. Integrated pest management is a series of steps that help in the decision-making process. Key points involve (a) planning and managing garden eco systems to prevent organisms fiom becoming pests; (b) properly identifying pests; (c) monitoring the pest population and beneficial insects, damage and environmental conditions; (d) using an injury threshold level; (e) reducing the pest population to acceptable levels using a combination of strategies that involve biological, physical, and environmental tactics; and (f) using the least toxic solution when the injury threshold is too great for the plant. The term injury threshold was a new one to me. This is where you determine how much damage a plant can handle before it begins to suffer — or more likely how much damage can you stand looking at before you opt to do something. Strange but true, some plants can withstand quite a bit of mutilation before they suffer to the point of keeling over. There are safe- guards in place to warn us against pesticides that are detrimental to our environment. With the easy flow of information between countries many gardeners believe that solutions found in the USA will also be available on our shelves here. Not OCTOBER 2003 41