Sunday, October 4, 2009

Baking Pumpkins

In October 2005 I bought some pumpkins and attempted to bake and puree them to store in the freezer. It was horrible. I had to keep adding water so the blender wouldn't choke up and then the pumpkin was so watered down it hardly tasted like pumpkin anymore. Needless to say I never tried baking pumpkin again. Until today.

Four years later I'm at the store and see sugar pumpkins for sale. They have this huge sticker on the bottom. I take a peek and it's a sticker telling me how to bake the little suckers! It was a brilliant marketing tool because I bought three. I realize now that I could have looked it up online long ago, but, well, I just didn't.

Baking pumpkin from scratch is no picnic. You have to cut out the stem, slice the thing in half and scoop out the innards. The scooping and scraping is what takes a goodly amount of time and elbow grease. You're probably wondering why I don't just behave like a normal person and get my pumpkin with the maximum effort of cranking a can opener. But let me tell you. After scraping the heck out of those pumpkins, setting them in to bake, having the pumpkiny aroma waft through my house, and then having the satisfaction of mashing the beautiful golden flesh to a happy mushiness was all I needed to tell myself that I would do it all again in a heartbeat; not to mention the delicious side benefit of munching the roasted pumpkin seeds.

So, I share the recipe I used that I should have had all those years ago. I will never be pumpkinless again in the fall. Even if there are backup cans of pumpkin on my shelf. :-)

Baked Pumpkin
Cut pumpkin in half without the stem. Scoop out the seeds and strings. (Easier said than done. HA!) Lightly grease foil or spray with cooking spray. Place cut down on foil lined baking sheets. Cover with foil. (I didn't, but it turned out fine.) Bake 350ºF until tender - 1 1/2 hours. Cool. Scoop out flesh and mash with potato masher until smooth. Drain if too watery.
Mashed pumpkin will hold 5 days in the refrigerator or you can freeze it.

**Note: It's almost impossible to get all the strings off the pumpkin. I scraped until I was too tired for perfection, and then as I mushed it up after baking I kept an eye out for any stringiness. It all turned out fine, so just do your best and don't worry if it's not perfect!

To use in a pie:

1 1/3 c. smooth pumpkin
1 1/3 c. sweetened condensed milk
1 egg
1 1/4 tsp. cinnamon
1/2 tsp. nutmeg
1/2 tsp. ginger
1/4 tsp. cloves
1 c. hot water

Mix all ingredients until well combined. Pour into 9" pie shell. Bake at 375ºF for 55 to 65 minutes. (Center will still move slightly.) Cool and enjoy.

Baked Pumpkin

Scooping out the baked pumpkin flesh.


Mashed pumpkin - isn't it a beautiful color?

1 comment:

janae said...

Dude. You're brave. Seriously. You are.

:)