A Step-by-Step Guide to Cutting Butternut Squash (for Both Your Safety and Your Sanity)

The tools and techniques you'll need to prep this delicious symbol of the fall.

By
Daniel Gritzer
Daniel Gritzer
Editorial Director
Daniel joined the Serious Eats culinary team in 2014 and writes recipes, equipment reviews, articles on cooking techniques. Prior to that he was a food editor at Food & Wine magazine, and the staff writer for Time Out New York's restaurant and bars section.
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Updated September 19, 2024

For some, the start of football and hockey season marks the transition from summer to fall. For me, it's the butternut squash I've taken home from the market. Of all the winter squashes, butternut is one of the most common and also one of the most versatile. It's firm enough to hold its shape in some dishes, yet purées beautifully in others. It has enough sweetness and flavor to be very appealing, but not so much that it tastes like dessert.

Butternut squash flesh being cut into cubes on a cutting board.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

I had some fun playing with butternut squash for the pressure cooker risotto recipe I developed recently, but cutting it up into all different sizes reminded me that its firmness and odd shape can make it a more difficult vegetable to prepare than many others.

Shopping and Storage

Because they're hard to the touch and covered in a thick, durable skin, the art of gauging the ripeness of a butternut squash comes down to some subtle clues. First, you want to pick squash that are free of any punctures or surface wounds, since a compromised skin can lead to rotten spots pretty quickly. Beyond that, look for squash that feel heavy for their size, and avoid any that have a greenish cast to their beige skin.

I've never put squash to the types of tests I subjected tomatoes to over the summer, but I've always found that they do very well at room temperature, which is also how I usually find them stored at supermarkets. You can thank that thick skin—it's responsible for their shelf stability by providing an incredibly effective protective layer that traps in moisture and keeps out microorganisms.

At root-cellar temperatures (around 55°F/13°C or so), butternut squash can keep for several months. In heated homes, you're safe holding them at room temperature for many days and possibly weeks, though I can't think of a good reason to find out just how many weeks a squash will hold up on your counter before it starts to break down—eat it, that's why it's there.

When you're ready to cook a butternut, just give it a rinse to wash off any surface dirt, and you're all set.

Butternut Butchery: How to Cut Up a Butternut Squash

The Right Knife

The first step is making sure you have the right tools. As with most cooking tasks, the main thing that makes cutting up butternut squash difficult is not having a good knife available. Because of the squash's firmness and thick skin, I've always found that smaller, lighter-weight knives make the job more difficult. Instead, I reach for a knife that's not just sharp, but also has some weight to it—that heft will do some of the work for me.

A (roughly) 10-inch chef's knife, like the one here, will do the trick.

If there isn't a hefty knife around, the next one I'll grab is a serrated knife: Those teeth on the blade will make up for whatever mass the knife itself lacks. As Kenji has pointed out in his own writings on knives, a serrated (a.k.a. bread) knife needn't be an expensive purchase. They're not easy to sharpen, so you'll have to replace them from time to time.

As I'll show below, I often peel my squash with whatever knife I'm using, but a peeler can be useful, too. And when I use a peeler, I'm really only interested in one kind: a razor-sharp Y-peeler. If you're not used to using one, it can seem awkward and difficult at first, but with a little practice, I doubt you'll go back to the other kind. I don't think I've ever seen a professional chef use anything but one of these.

You'll also need a spoon for removing the seeds.

Cut Off the Stem End

The first thing I do is cut right below the stem of the squash to remove it.

Cut Off the Blossom End

A knife trimming the bottom off of a butternut squash, with a hand firmly gripping the squash by the nedk.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

Next, I rotate the squash and slice off the very bottom of the other, more bulbous end, where the flower once grew on the fruit (it's not anatomically accurate, but let's call it the belly button). I try not to cut off too much here, erring on the side of not quite getting enough of that belly button on my first pass—if I need to take more off, I can always cut again. Once I've fully removed that bottom belly button, I'm good to go.

Divide in Half Widthwise

A hand firmly gripping a butternut squash, with a knife slicing off its neck.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

Butternut squash has two sections: The top section on the stem-end side is narrower and filled with solid flesh. The more bulbous section on the flower end (where that belly button was) is hollow and contains the seeds.

I line the knife up right where the narrow section meets the bulbous section and split the squash in half there.

The neck of a butternut squash separating from the base thanks to a knife cut.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

You should now have two sections of squash: the top portion and the bulbous seed section.

Peel

Two hands peeling a butternut squash using a Y-peeler.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

If you have a peeler, go ahead and strip the skin off with it. You want to peel down to the orange flesh, cutting away any white or light-colored flesh directly below the skin, as well as any green veins that run lengthwise under the skin.

A knife trimming the hard, remaining pieces of skin off of the body of a butternut squash.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

If you're not using a peeler, set each section of squash on a flat end and slice around it, with either a sharp knife or a serrated blade (my photos here show both) to remove the skin.

Also, can we stop and appreciate my freakishly double-jointed thumb in the photo above?

A slicing knife removing the skin from an unpeeled butternut squash.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

Repeat the peeling for both the top section and the bulbous seed section of the squash.

A slicing knife trimming the edges of a peeled butternut squash.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

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A slicing knife trimming the skin from the neck of a butternut squash.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

Split the Seed Section

A knife about to cut the body of a butternut squash in half so that the seeds can be removed.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

Next, I stand the seed section on a flat side and slice it in half lengthwise.

A butternut squash, being cut in half, on a cutting board. There are a pair of hands, one holding half of the squash and another holding the knife.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

A butternut squash, cut in half, on a cutting board.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

Remove the Seeds

A pair of hands removing the seeds from the body of a butternut squash with a spoon.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

Using a spoon, I scrape out the seeds and any of the fibrous flesh that's attached to them.

20141008-knife-skills-butternut-squash-daniel-gritzer17.jpg

If you like to eat pumpkin seeds, don't throw these away: They can be toasted and enjoyed as a snack. (I'm not so crazy about pumpkin seeds, so I usually toss 'em.)

A pair of hands over a bowl, with one hand scraping out the cavity of a butternut squash, and the other holding the squash half.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

Slice and Dice the Seed Section

The body of a butternut squash being cut into slices on a cutting board.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

I take each hollowed seed section half, set it hollow side down on the cutting board, and slice it lengthwise into sections. You can go as thin or as thick as you want here—that will determine the size of your pieces. You can cook these curved slices as they are, or dice them.

Slices of butternut squash being cut into even chunks.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

To dice them, just cut each slice into chunks of your desired size. Because these curved pieces of squash are not perfectly regular in shape, you won't get perfect cubes here, but that's okay. Nature doesn't grow too many things with flawless right angles.

Slice and Dice the Top Section

The neck of a butternut squash, about to be cut with a knife.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

If the top section of the squash is particularly long, I'll split it in half widthwise to make it more manageable.

A knife slicing into the neck of a butternut squash. There is a pile of squash chunks on the left side of the image.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

A round slice of butternut squash with a knife over it, indicating it's about to be cut up.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

Then I stand it on end and slice down in even intervals to form slabs. Here, I'm doing a roughly three-quarter-inch dice, so that's the width of each of my slabs. You can go thicker or thinner, depending on your specific need.

The neck of a butternut squash being cut into thick planks.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

Rectangles of butternut squash being cut.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

Once I've cut it into slabs, I cross-cut those slabs into batons.

A hand cutting the neck of a butternut squash into chunks.

Then I rotate those batons and cut them into dice.

Alternate Cut: Circles

A hand holding a round slice of butternut squash neck.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

The top section of the squash can also be sliced into rounds.

Cutting the neck of a butternut squash into thin slices.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

To do so, I turn it on its side and slice through it widthwise.

A thin, round slice of butternut squash being cut from the neck of a squash.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

Again, you can go as thick or as thin as you want here.

Take Two: Small Dice

The neck of a butternut squash being cut into thin planks so that it can then be cut into small cubes.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

If you want smaller dice, all you need to do is make thinner cuts on both the seed end and the stem end. Here, I'm demonstrating on the stem end.

Start with the stem section of the squash on its end, and cut down through it lengthwise, making your slices much closer together.

The thin planks of butternut squash being cut into thin strips.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

Then slice those thinner slabs into much thinner matchsticks.

The thin strips of butternut squash being cut into small cubes.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

And cross-cut those matchsticks into tiny cubes. These are roughly an eighth of an inch. Aren't they cute?

Small cubes of butternut squash on a cutting board.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

October 2014

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