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For the jewelled topping

  • 125g mixed dried fruit
    (we used a mix of cranberries and apricots), roughly chopped
  • 1 orange
    juiced

Nutrition: Per serving (8)

  • kcal170
  • fat4g
    low
  • saturates1g
  • carbs25g
  • sugars16g
  • fibre6g
  • protein5g
  • salt0.1g
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Method

  • step 1

    First, make the topping. Combine the dried fruit and orange juice in a pan, and heat gently over a low heat for 5-10 mins until all the juice has been absorbed and the fruit is plump. Set aside and leave to cool.

  • step 2

    Heat the oven to 200C/180C fan/gas 6. Toss the squash with 1 tbsp oil in a roasting tin. Season and roast for 25-30 mins until soft, stirring after 20 mins to prevent the squash from burning.

  • step 3

    Meanwhile, oil a 24cm bundt or savarin tin. Line the base with baking parchment – this is easier if you cut out smaller rectangular pieces of parchment and overlap them in the base. Heat another 1 tbsp oil in a frying pan over a low heat and cook the onions until tender, about 8 mins. Add the mushrooms, season and cook for another 5-8 mins, or until the mushrooms are soft and any liquid they’ve released has evaporated. Remove from the heat and leave to cool slightly. Mix the flaxseed with 8 tbsp hot water, and leave until the mixture is gel-like.

  • step 4

    Rub a little oil over the whole sage leaves and arrange in the base of the tin. Press the fruit topping over the leaves so the base is fully covered.

  • step 5

    Combine the roasted squash, cooled onion and mushroom mixture, flaxseed, nutmeg, breadcrumbs, chopped sage leaves, rosemary, lentils and chestnuts. Season well, then pack into the tin over the fruit. Cover with foil. The unbaked wreath will keep, covered in the fridge, for two days.

  • step 6

    With the oven still at 200C/180C fan/gas 6, bake the wreath for 45 mins, then remove the foil and bake for another 15 mins. Leave to cool in the tin for a few minutes, then run a cutlery knife around the inner and outer edge to loosen it. Place a plate over the tin, invert, then lift off the tin. Remove the baking parchment and serve.

RECIPE TIPS

COOKING FOR LESS PEOPLE?

If you’re not catering for a large group, you can make single portions of the wreath. Halve the quantities for the topping and filling ingredients, then pack into four dariole moulds or ramekins as instructed in the method. Bake for 30 mins, covered with foil, then uncover and bake for 10 mins more. To freeze any portions, leave to cool completely first, then wrap. They will keep frozen for up to two months.

Recipe from Good Food magazine, Christmas 2020

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Comments, questions and tips (14)

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Overall rating

A star rating of 4.3 out of 5.9 ratings

121foodie

I made these in individual dishes which worked out really well. They came out of the ramekin dishes OK and after halving the mixture ended up with 8 portions so lasted all week. I would make this recipe again and can recommend cooking this.

hannahowen11947153

question

Hello, can you help me adapt this recipe for a single loaf tin please? Is it kind of like a nut roast?

goodfoodteam avatar
goodfoodteam

Hi, yes this could be adapted for a loaf tin as it's similar to a nut loaf.

jenhunter4986810

question

Would it work if I rolled the mixture like a log (or 2 logs) for a smaller product? Would I need to keep the foil on when cooking to keep the shape? Thank you

goodfoodteam avatar
goodfoodteam

Hi, thanks for your question. Yes this would work well - just reduce cooking time accordingly depending on the size you make. Keep the foil on for all but the last 15 mins. We hope this helps. Best wishes, BBC Good Food Team.

LucyMS

question

If I left out the lentils could I replace with more chestnuts and maybe caahews?

goodfoodteam avatar
goodfoodteam

Hi, thanks for your question. We haven't tried this without the lentils but it should be fine to swap them. You'll need to replace them about 270g of other ingredients - more chestnuts and some chopped cashews would work well, and maybe a few extra mushrooms. We hope this helps. Best wishes, BBC…

irenean

question

How deep is the tin. From what I can find online a savarin tin is about half the depth of a Bundt tin.

goodfoodteam avatar
goodfoodteam

Hi, thanks for your question. Yes savarin tins are generally shallower than bundt tins but either is fine. You need a depth of about 8cm minimum. We hope this helps, BBC Good Food Team.

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