Squashes & gourds·Established·Year-round

Kabocha squash

Cucurbita maxima

Distinctly sweet with chestnut-like undertones; sweeter than butternut; floral notes when slow-cooked.

Category
Squashes & gourds
Peak form
Tempura battered and fried (Japanese); simmered in dashi; ro
Common uses
5
Cross-refs
8

About Kabocha

Kabocha squash (also Japanese pumpkin) is the dark-green round winter squash with notably dense, dry, sweet orange-yellow flesh — closer in texture to sweet potato than to butternut. The flavor is sweeter than butternut with chestnut-like undertones. Japanese cuisine features kabocha extensively (kabocha tempura, simmered kabocha in dashi), as does Korean and Thai cooking. The skin is thin enough to be edible when cooked — peeling is optional and most Japanese recipes don't peel kabocha. The dense flesh means kabocha takes longer to cook than other squashes and doesn't release water — making it excellent for tempura batter and roasting at high heat.

Variety profile

Botanical
Cucurbita maxima
Flavor
Distinctly sweet with chestnut-like undertones; sweeter than butternut; floral notes when slow-cooked.
Texture
Notably dense and dry — closer to sweet potato than to other winter squashes; doesn't release water.
Peak form
Tempura battered and fried (Japanese); simmered in dashi; roasted whole wedges with skin on.
Season window
Fall through winter peak; stored well; year-round Asian-grocery supply.

Common uses

Editorial notes

Worth knowing

Skin is edible when cooked — most Japanese recipes don't peel kabocha. Dense flesh requires longer roasting time than butternut at the same temperature.

Cross-references

Related categories

Related seasonality