Sugar-pie pumpkins; a variety bred for sweet, smooth flesh. |
(This is re-posted from October 2020) Making pumpkin pie from scratch is truly a labor of love! How much easier it is just to open a can of puree. In the spirit of the slow food movement, we start making our pies back in April when we first plant the seeds! The small vines are transplanted into mounds of compost we've made ourselves, mulched, watered and weeded through the summer and harvested by the hundreds of pounds after they get their first kiss of frost.
This year, because of the tremendously hot and dry summer, almost all our winter-squash (the types we use to make pie-filling) finished ripening well before the first frost so we harvested them anyway. They're not as sweet as when they've been frosted but every bit as nutritious.
Provence, Buttercups and Sweetmeats. |
We make many batches of filling at once and freeze them.
If you’re going to mess up the kitchen, you might as well make it worth it! Be
sure you have plenty of all the ingredients you’ll need on hand.
Or, you can also bake the squash and freeze it in 2-cup batches plain,
using it much like you'd use a can of store-bought puree.
Wash pumpkin/squash and dry
skin.
Cut it open: Use a stout, sharp knife on a table or counter low enough that you can use the weight of your upper body to quarter the squash. Doing it on the floor might even be easiest.
Use a strong metal spoon to scrape out seeds and loose pulp/strings. You can put the seeds and pulp outside to feed birds and squirrels or separate the seeds, oil, salt and bake them. You probably won't want to save the seeds for planting, unless you're certain that they haven't "crossed" with other varieties.
Cut it open: Use a stout, sharp knife on a table or counter low enough that you can use the weight of your upper body to quarter the squash. Doing it on the floor might even be easiest.
Use a strong metal spoon to scrape out seeds and loose pulp/strings. You can put the seeds and pulp outside to feed birds and squirrels or separate the seeds, oil, salt and bake them. You probably won't want to save the seeds for planting, unless you're certain that they haven't "crossed" with other varieties.
Cut into smaller pieces: Though it can be quite a
challenge to cut these large, winter squash into smaller pieces for baking, you’ll
be rewarded with a much shorter cooking time.
Orange, sweet flesh, yum!! |
Bake squash/pumpkin for one
hour, or until a fork pokes easily, deep into the flesh.
Once done, allow to cool. If
you’ve chosen one of the juicier squashes, you’ll have best results by putting
the pieces in a large colander over a bowl to drain any excess juice. The juice
makes a delicious soup stock. I used to peel off the skins but found that they
can be food-processed and taste just fine.
If you baked more squash than
you’re prepared to deal with, you can freeze it and thaw to make filling at a
later time. Freeze in 2-cup batches.
Sydney w/ a Provence |
Yummy Natural Pumpkin Pie Filling
YIELD: Filling for one, 9” pie.
Preheat oven to 365
In a food processor (a
blender will not work), combine:
2 eggs (sorry, we haven't perfected a vegan version yet...)
2 cups squash/pumpkin
2/3 cup brown sugar
2 TBSP powdered milk (or soy
protein powder*)
2 tsp pumpkin pie spice
½ tsp salt
½ cup soy milk, cow’s milk,
almond or coconut milk
Begin with eggs, alone. Mix
thoroughly.
Add squash. Puree till smooth. Check to be
sure there are no pumpkin lumps.
Add milk and all dry ingredients making an effort to distribute spices evenly. Mix in well.
Add milk and all dry ingredients making an effort to distribute spices evenly. Mix in well.
* (not soy-flour).
Pour into your favorite pie
shell and bake in preheated oven for 1 hour at 375 or until the pie is
golden-brown, the middle is reasonably firm (it will get firmer as it cools)
and before the crust gets too brown. Cool on wire rack before eating. Cover and
chill to store.
To freeze filling for later:
Combine everything except the eggs. Make one batch at a
time. Each batch is a little less than a quart so you can put it in your
favorite freezer-containers. We use qt-size plastic zip-lock bags. Label them
with blue, painter’s masking tape (it won’t come off in the freezer and you can
peel it off after you empty the bag, wash the bag and re-use it.) I always
write a reminder on the label to add two eggs. Lay the bags flat and you can
easily stack many of them in your freezer.
When you want to make a pie,
thaw the filling, add the eggs and use a blender, a mixer or food processor to
mix it all well. By mixing in the eggs right before baking, you’ll have a
fluffier, more pudding-like pie. Bake as above.
If you run out of any ingredients, before you've used up your squash, just freeze bags of the plain squash puree' and add the other ingredients right before baking. Freeze in 2-cup batches so you can thaw them, one pie at a time.
If you run out of any ingredients, before you've used up your squash, just freeze bags of the plain squash puree' and add the other ingredients right before baking. Freeze in 2-cup batches so you can thaw them, one pie at a time.
James and Jaye holding Buttercups; a drier, sweet, golden squash. |
Flaky Rolled Pie Crust – YIELD: Two 9” pies without top shells
1 ¼ cups unbleached pastry flour
3/4 cup whole wheat pastry flour
1/4 cup coconut flour
3/4 cup whole wheat pastry flour
1/4 cup coconut flour
1 tsp. salt
2/3 cup sunflower oil (chilled is best)
1/3 cup ice water
Mix the flours and salt. Pour
the oil and water into a cup but don’t stir. Mix with the flour. Press into a
ball. Cut into halves. Place between two sheets of 12-inch waxed paper. Dampen
a tabletop to prevent slipping. Roll out until the circle of dough reaches the
edge of the paper. Peel off top paper and place the crust face down in a pie
tin. Peel off the other paper and fit dough into tin. Freeze extra pie crust, in a pie-tin, in
a plastic bag for later use.
Llyn, with Sugar-pie pumpkins. |
Pumpkin Tart
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