Thoughts on pumpkin

It would be nice in a soup or chili - in fact there’s a Moroccan version of pumpkin soup that’s excellent. I also think it may be good mashed with Caribbean spices, as a side dish, and it works mixed with chickpeas as hummus. Or possibly roasted with other seasonal vegetables on a sheet pan. Mixed and mashed with potatoes would be another option. Many possibilities!

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I love it in a Thai curry. Or with sage + brown butter + Parm/pecorino as a pasta sauce (riffing on emglow). Burmese style with shrimp (Burmese kitchen in SF does a fantastic rendition it, both with and without shrimp). I’ve heard of (but never tried) a Brazilian dish with pumpkin and shrimp.

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First of all, I eat a lot of pumpkins and squashes when in season.

Make a simple squash sauce for pasta every year

If you have dumpling skins lying round somewhere…

Steamed or (steamed-)fried (gyoza style)

You could slice the cubes thinner and make a gratin with the slices. I use big pieces here but small ones take less time to finish.

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There is an Afghan prep called kaddo and an Indian prep called kaddu ki sabji. Similar names but quite different.

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Pumpkin and butternut squash are close enough for me to inspire ingredient swaps in savory dishes, with a very important exception. Pumpkin flesh tends to be more watery and fibrous depending on the type of pumpkin. Sometimes I purée baked pumpkin in a blender to get a smoother texture to use in a pasta dish or a savory galette.

I riff on this butternut squash and caramelized onion galette as a base for squash-based savory tarts. When using pumpkin I will incorporate egg(s) into the filling for a more dense, custard-ish texture. The pumpkins I get have been less dense than other winter squashes and need help in the texture department.

I usually start with pumpkin purée I prepare and freeze. Time in the freezer seems to dry out the purée somewhat. If working with fresh I might need to remove excess moisture by heating carefully in a pot.

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I’ve been wanting to try some of these ideas.

Especially this one

I ended up making this; tasty but sort of rich or maybe heavy.

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Bouncing off emglow’s sage and butter classic, here is a pasta dressing that might fly. One problem is that husband wisely warns “Don’t send good money after bad.” so I hesitate to create a dinner around a dubious ingredient.

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Dubious ingredient, you say? Maybe I overlooked the variety of pumpkin you have?

If it’s a pumpkin meant for display rather than eating, I agree. I have fought the losing battle of trying to convert one of those stringy, watery pumpkins into something appealing. The local wildlife get those now.

Having fought and lost that good fight before, these days I focus my efforts on varieties grown to be good eating, like a sugar pumpkin or a cheese pumpkin.

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This was a Cinderella/fairy tale pumpkin which is sold all fall and winter at our farmer’s market and eagerly bought up.

“Dubious ingredient” is one that neither of us particularly enjoys. Neither of us likes pumpkin/butternut squash and friends in spiced dishes. Nor pumpkin soup. The one way I’ve “sold” winter squash is with butter, garlic and herbs. But this was a large one, so after tossing half, I still have several quarts of 2" cubes (in freezer) and over a quart of puree, half in freezer. After a 5 minute drain, the puree is quite thick, not watery. This is about all I know at this point.

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I get it now. Yeah, so it’s more of a thing that neither of you are fans of the great pumpkin. I can appreciate that (beets are my veggie nemesis).

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The linked Calabrian sausage and pumpkin pasta was a winner. Will repeat.


Shallot, garlic and gentle sage enhancing pumpkin and spinach.

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Maybe sub the pumpkin cubes in for the sweet potatoes. I found it years ago on a Usenet board and have made it as a side dish for chicken.

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Stir-fried pumpkin is awesome. Esp with scrambled eggs, if that’s how you roll. And that is how I roll.

Stir-fired pumpkins, no eggs this time.

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I like this savory pumpkin cake that used to be on the Gourmet Traveller site. Obviously it’s very rich, but delicious!

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I used to love it with eggs from Khao Kang in Elmhurst:

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Toss roasted roasted cubes with garlic herb butter (sage and thyme are good here) and serve with burrata and toasted bread. Either as a bruschetta or as a tartine (or just on a platter and folks can build their own in front of the tv, probably what would happen here).

If burrata is not available, ricotta would work too. Or Boursin.

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Some Caribbean cultures add pumpkin to their curries and stews.

I’ve enjoyed this type of German Cream of Pumpkin soup a few times, often topped with pepitas.

From a Canadian expat blogger living in Switzerland

Pumpkin Alpine-style Mac & Cheese

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