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Pumpkins Sweet & Savory
The Quintessential Fall Flavor
Pumpkins Sweet & Savory
Soyer's Standard Cookery; A Complete Gui...
(by
Soyer, Nicolas
)
Mrs. Lincoln's Boston Cook Book : What t...
(by
Lincoln, Mary J. (Mary Johnson)
)
Standard Cyclopedia of Recipes, Includin...
(by
Brown, Charles Walter
)
The Boston Cooking School Magazine of Cu...
(by
Mass Boston Cooking School Boston, Boston Cooking ...
)
Immigrants to the New World brought with them an ancient Irish tradition of carving turnips and transferred it to a uniquely American fruit: the
pumpkin
. In modern times, society’s fascination with all things pumpkin goes beyond
jack-o-lanterns
to coffee, ice cream, and just about everything else flavored with “pumpkin spice” (a combination of cinnamon, nutmeg, and cloves) which is used to flavor
pumpkin pie
.
Pumpkins have a long and respectable history in the kitchen and elsewhere, from
Jacques Pépin
to
Martha Stewart
, various chefs featured on the Food Network, and such household staples as
Good Housekeeping
magazine. The fruit, the seeds (roasted or pressed for
oil
), the leaves, and the flowers are all edible. The indigenous peoples of North America also dried flattened strips of pumpkin and wove them into mats. Persuaded by the plant’s hardiness, taste, and nutritional value (they’re a good source of potassium and vitamin A) travelers quickly carried it across oceans and continents. Today, only Antarctica has no pumpkins.
Many cultures prize pumpkin’s versatility. Ripe pumpkin can be boiled, steamed, or roasted. Small, unripe pumpkins are edible, too, with the same culinary applications as zucchini or other summer squashes. Middle Eastern, Indian, and Burmese cooks use pumpkin for sweet dishes and desserts; the Chinese and Koreans consume pumpkin leaves in soups and the flesh as a cooked vegetable; In Australia and New Zealand, pumpkin roasted with other vegetables occupies a favored place on dining room tables. The Japanese and French prefer savory applications of pumpkin. Thais snack on the seeds and Italians incorporate
mashed pumpkin
as a stuffing for ravioli. In Kenya, people enjoy boiled or steamed pumpkin, and in Zambia, folks cook the leaves with groundnut paste for a tasty side dish.
Pumpkin use doesn’t stop there. Veterinarians recommend canned pumpkin--without the added spices--as a high-fiber dietary supplement for dogs and cats that suffer from constipation, diarrhea, or hairballs. Farmers feed pumpkin to chickens in the winter to maintain egg production. The flesh and seeds have also found use among Native American, Chinese, and European medicine to treat intestinal worms and urinary ailments. Native Americans also used mashed pumpkin as a poultice.
Find sweet and savory recipes for pumpkin in the following cookbooks:
Soyer’s Standard Cookery; A Complete Guide to the Art of Cooking Dainty, Varied, and Economical Dishes for the Household
by Nicolas Soyer
Mrs. Lincoln’s Boston Cook Book: What to Do and What Not to Do in Cooking
by Mary J. Lincoln
Standard Cyclopedia of Recipes, Including Valuable Gauging Tables
by Charles Walter Brown
The Boston Cooking School Magazine Volume IX
by Massachusetts Boston Cooking School
By Karen M. Smith
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