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Pumpkins at Morning and Noon
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18154 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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| Issue
Date : |
11 / 1990 |
1,583 Words |
| Author
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Kay Shaw Nelson Food and travel writer Kay Shaw Nelson has written for
numerous magazines and newspapers, including Gourmet, House
and Garden, Washingtonian, and the New York Times. The author
of thirteen cookbooks, she most recently published A Bonnie
Scottish Cookbook. |
Americans forget about the humble pumpkin until the nippy days of autumn herald the harvest holidays. It is one of our best known cultural symbols. Can anyone imagine Halloween without jack-o'-lanterns or Thanksgiving without aromatic pumpkin pies? And yet the pumpkin is one of our least appreciated culinary delights.
The pumpkin evokes nostalgia for colonial days. The English settlers of Jamestown and Plymouth saw the various Algonquian tribes growing pumpkins but were confused as to exactly what they were. Thinking them a variant of the squash, a vegetable known in Europe, they called them pompions, a French word derived form the Greek pepon, meaning sun-ripened.
Probably indigenous to South America and first cultivated by the ancient Peruvians, the pumpkin was a staple food for natives of the Western Hemisphere, ranking next to maize or corn and beans in importance. It is a member of the gourd family, which also includes melons, cucumbers, and squash.
A Colonial Treat
Although its taste did not appeal to the early settlers at first, they soon discovered the pumpkin was easy to grow and provided badly needed nourishment during the long, cold winter. It grew in such abundance that one writer of the time thought he saw a hundred pumpkins springing form a single seed.
Pumpkins became a necessity for pioneers pushing inland from the eastern seaboard. The first settlers cooked them as the Indians did - boiled with beans and corn: included in
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