10 Summer Squash Varieties: Some You Know, Some You Don't - Modern Farmer

10 Summer Squash Varieties: Some You Know, Some You Don’t

Zephyr? Pattypan? Tinda? What are all of these squashes and what's the difference between them?

summer squash varieties

Summer squash is a peculiar vegetable. For one thing, it’s not any one vegetable, comprising many different cultivars of a few different species of edible plant. For another, it isn’t actually a vegetable. Summer squash is technically a “pepo,” a type of hard-walled berry. (Cucumbers and watermelon are both more accurately described as a pepo as well.) But as a descriptor, “summer squash” very accurate: all fall somewhere within the squash family, and – unlike the butternut squash or pumpkin – they are in season during the summer.

At farmers markets, all the available summer squash varieties are usually piled together and available for the same price. While they have many similarities, the different varieties do differ a bit in their texture, flavor, and ideal use, so it makes sense to learn a little bit about summer squash before just grabbing the zucchini. Here are 10 common and uncommon varieties.

summer squash varieties

Flickr user i love butter

1. Zucchini

You’ll find these in green, mostly, but also yellow and, occasionally, in dark green with pale green stripes. Long, with flattened sides, zucchini is a good average summer squash. Its flavor is of average sweetness and power. Its skin is of average toughness. Its flesh is neither very firm nor very tender. The one thing to note about zucchini is that it grows absurdly big, like baseball-bat sized, and you might be tempted to get the biggest ones. Don’t. Summer squash in general tends to get a bit watery and bland as it gets bigger. Get the smallest, firmest ones you can find.

summer squash varieties

Flickr user csouza_79

2. Pattypan Squash

Sometimes called “UFO squash,” pattypan squash includes any of several related colors and sizes of what’s called a scalloped squash. It’s shaped roughly like a flying saucer, with scalloped sides. Pattypan squash is tougher than most varieties of summer squash, which is good; it’ll hold up to longer cooking and higher temperatures than, say, zucchini. It’s great in stews and chilis. You can find pattypan squash most commonly in yellow or light green colors, which taste pretty much the same.

summer squash varieties

Flickr user graibeard

3. Crookneck Squash

Crookneck squash is bulbous at the bottom and thin and curved at the top. It’s usually yellow, but that doesn’t mean all crooknecks look the same. Some are smooth like zucchini, but often you’ll find warty, bumpy varieties. Crookneck falls on the tougher side of the summer squash spectrum and is also pretty bland.

Plus: Get Victor Albisu’s Grilled Wild Boar with Summer Squash recipe

summer squash varieties

Flickr user pauljill

4. Zephyr Squash

This type of summer squash is easily recognizable for its two-tone coloration: light green on the bottom and yellow on top. It’s about as tough as pattypan squash, which makes it good for longer cooking, but its regular shape makes it a bit easier to cut up.

summer squash varieties

Flickr user sfbaywalk

5. Cousa Squash

Pale, speckled green, a little more bulbous than zucchini but with the same basic shape, cousa is an excellent squash most often found in Middle Eastern cuisines. It’s a bit more tender and sweeter than zucchini and has a very thin skin.

summer squash varieties

Flickr user Jeremy Keith

6. Round Zucchini

These spherical summer squashes, available in dark green, light green, and yellow, are very very similar to zucchini, aside from their grapefruit-like shape. The main reason to opt for these over other squash is for stuffing: lop off the top and use a spoon to dig out the insides and you’ll have, basically, a healthy bread bowl for soup.

summer squash varieties

Flickr user Kurman Photos

7. Tatuma Squash

The tatuma is a Mexican variety. Sometimes the word “calabacita” – which just means small squash – refers to this specific type. It can be either spherical or shaped roughly like the cousa squash, and typically either light or dark green. The way to tell this one apart is that it has many very tiny seeds and a very thin skin.

8. Ronde de Nice (AKA Gourmet Globe)

Typically spherical and a speckled light green, the gourmet globe is a French heirloom squash. It’s sweeter than the round zucchini, but usually more expensive, too.

9. Tinda Squash

This is a weird one: pale green, perfectly smooth, and shaped like a large beefsteak tomato. The tinda squash is not closely related to the zucchini or any other squash, but is the immature fruit of a related squash family plant. It’s white and creamy on the inside, a mild but really delicious variety that you should try if you get a chance.

summer squash varieties

Flickr user Jakukyo Friel

10. Luffa (or Loofah) Squash

The luffa squash (sometimes called the luffa gourd) is a bizarre variety that, if allowed to fully mature, will turn into a loofah. Seriously. It dries out, the skin is cracked away, and the inside is revealed as a latticed, scratchy object that’s well-suited for scrubbing. When young, though, the luffa squash is a ridged squash that tastes pretty similar to a zucchini.

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Halina
3 years ago

You are missing two of my favorites: delicata and patty pan.

Samantha Figueroa Meeks
5 years ago

Thank you so much, I have been trying to identify the patty pan for years! Never see it at the grocery but my friends brother is a chef and he grows it. So delicious!

Mike
4 years ago

Need help identifying the type of squash I planted

Dana
3 years ago

Thank you for making the distinction that the difference between summer and winter squash is when they are “in season”. As anyone who has let a prolific zucchini get out of control van tell you, summer squashes turn into winter squashes just by growing on the vine until mature. At that point they can develop a hard, inedible rind and be cooked just like a winter squash. By the same token, you can pick a winter squash early and treat it just like a summer squash. The flavors develop with time and maturity, though, so just like a summer squash,… Read more »

Andrew Salaman
1 year ago

What is this please?

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