Eat your pumpkin...

ABSTRUSE

Cirque du Freak
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the fruit, not your SO.

Pumpkins: Not Just for Pie Anymore!

This fall, pumpkins will be spending less time on the front porch and more on dinner menus, thanks to their new-found superfood status (see below). Plus they're amazingly versatile: Pureed, mashed, or cubed, pumpkins' mildly sweet taste can go even sweeter or savory, depending on how you spice it.

At restaurants, look for pumpkin soups, bread, muffins, pumpkin-flavored pasta dishes (think gnocchi or ravioli), and decadent desserts, from cheesecake to gelato.
At home, keep a few cans of pumpkin puree on hand and stir a big spoonful into almost anything: soups, stews, yogurt, curries, pancakes, even meatball mixtures.
In fact, there may be nothing you can't pump up with pumpkin -- including coffee: Starbucks' pumpkin spice latte boosted the chain's sales 11% when it debuted! Need an extra prod to try pumpkin in something besides pie? Here are a half-dozen reasons to go for the gourd.

1. It gives your immune system a pre-flu season boost. A ½ cup serving of pumpkin delivers a war chest of immune-boosting vitamins and nutrients, including alpha and beta-carotene, vitamin C, iron, and enough vitamin A to last you three days!

2. It fills you up for very few calories. A ½ cup of Libby's canned 100% pumpkin puree packs in 5g of stomach-satisfying fiber (20% of your daily intake) for only 40 calories. By comparison, a slice of whole-wheat bread has 2g of fiber and costs you 70 calories.

3. It's got the goods to protect your vision. Pumpkin delivers a duo of sight-saving carotenoid antioxidants (lutein and beta-cryptoxanthin) that reduce the risk of age-related cataracts and sight-stealing macular degeneration.

4. It keeps your body humming. Pumpkin is a great source of potassium, which keeps your cells, nerves, and muscles running smoothly. Healthy potassium levels also help keep blood pressure in check and can lower the odds of stroke and heart disease.

5. It could cut your cancer risk. A diet high in carotenoids can lower the risk of breast cancer, and beta-cryptoxanthin, a carotenoid that's particularly plentiful in pumpkin, may help protect against lung cancer. Aim to get your beta-carotene from foods like pumpkin, since supplements don't offer the same cancer protection.

6. It gives your bones a little extra love. You'll also pick up a little extra bone-building calcium with each serving. Plus beta-cryptoxanthin defends against joint-destroying rheumatoid arthritis.

P.S. Wondering about canned versus fresh pumpkin? Canned is a little less sweet but, surprisingly, it's a little more nutritious. It has more fiber, beta-carotene, potassium, iron, and folate than fresh. It also wins huge points for convenience! And all that filling fiber pays off in more ways than appetite control: Eating a high-fiber diet can make your RealAge up to 3.5 years younger.


:nana:
 
ABSTRUSE said:
the fruit, not your SO.

Pumpkins: Not Just for Pie Anymore!


P.S. Wondering about canned versus fresh pumpkin? Canned is a little less sweet but, surprisingly, it's a little more nutritious. It has more fiber, beta-carotene, potassium, iron, and folate than fresh. It also wins huge points for convenience! And all that filling fiber pays off in more ways than appetite control: Eating a high-fiber diet can make your RealAge up to 3.5 years younger.


:nana:
I don't know about the UK, Abs, but in the U.S. Canned pumpkin pie filling is made mostly from Squash, not pumpkin.
 
Jenny_Jackson said:
I don't know about the UK, Abs, but in the U.S. Canned pumpkin pie filling is made mostly from Squash, not pumpkin.
She's not talking about the pie filling Jenny ... Libby's has 100 percent pumpkin in cans. The pie filling has a lot of added sugars and spices. Just have to be careful which can you're grabbing, as they usually look pretty similar.

And there's a Libby's plant not too far away from me in Morton, IL ... and trust me, with the piles and piles of pumpkins they have there, that's what they're using.
 
I eat loads of butternut squash in the autumn but the size of pumpkins always put me off -they're heavy buggers to carry home with my weekly shopping (no car) but I do want to try pumpkin pie so maybe this year...
 
My mother makes her pies from actual pumpkins, mushed up, boiled and processed right there in our own kitchen.
 
TheeGoatPig said:
My mother makes her pies from actual pumpkins, mushed up, boiled and processed right there in our own kitchen.

Yep. No pumpkin filling in Mexico. My wife does the same. And you haven't had one till ya've had the real thing made the right way.

:nana:
 
TheeGoatPig said:
My mother makes her pies from actual pumpkins, mushed up, boiled and processed right there in our own kitchen.

My Dad could make "pumpkin pie" from almost anything: Zuchinni/Carrot was his favorite fake pumkin recipe.
 
Maybe we won't have punkins this year guys :(

http://www.thisgardenisillegal.com/2006/10/pumpkin-panic-pumpkin-shortage.html

October
5thPumpkin Panic! Pumpkin Shortage Predicted for Halloween
Published by Hanna | Filed Under: Umm... Yeah
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How important are pumpkins to your Halloween festivities? For me, they are utterly crucial to the celebration.

Halloween without a jack-o’-lantern is like Christmas without a pine tree, Easter without any eggs and election day without any smear ads. It just doesn’t happen.

But this year, it just might be a pumpkinless holiday for many pumpkin procrastinators. Between heavy rains rotting seeds in the ground, harsh summer temps reducing fruiting blossoms and two mysterious pumpkin rots attacking pumpkins in the field, a significant portion of the pumpkin harvest this year has been ruined.

The question is, does these problems really affect the small end consumers (that would be you and me) in shopping for a Halloween pumpkin?

Maybe yes, maybe no. Depends on who you talk to.

The ever reliable news says that you should worry and that the pumpkin end of the world as we know it is nigh. I think they have said the same thing about West Nile Virus, Killer Bees and Bird Flu too, but this could be the time they get it right.

People who really know, like farmers and farm bureaus, say there is not much to worry about when it comes to buying that uber-necessary Halloween pumpkin.

Yes, there has been a significant reduction in the number of pumpkins that have been harvested, but the Halloween Pumpkin Market makes up only a portion of the overall pumpkin economy. I mean, where do you think they get the pumpkin for all those tasty Thanksgiving pumpkin pies (or cans of pumpkin for those of you who make your own tasty pumpkin treats)?

Halloween pumpkins also demand a higher premium, so chances are the pumpkin food market will suffer before the Halloween market does.

You may see a slight increase in the price of pumpkin pies and other pumpkin products. You may even see a rise in the prices of your Halloween pumpkins, but that is only because the pumpkins for sale at your local market may have had to be imported from another state due to a local shortage but this happens almost every year.

Pumpkins are tricky to grow and every year there are always a few areas that are short on pumpkins due to crop failures. Every year, there are always localities who have to import their pumpkins from another state.

Will there really be a nationwide pumpkin shortage this year? Probably not. Does it hurt to go buy your pumpkin early? Probably not. Of course, it is way cooler if you can just grow your own.
 
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