Friday, December 3, 2010

Pumpkin pie

I can't believe we haven't posted this until now! Here's my favorite version: 

  • 2 c canned pumpkin or squash puree 
  • 1.5 c heavy whipping cream 
  • 3/4 c sugar (or honey) 
  • 3 large or 4 small eggs 
  • generous amounts of: cinnamon, ginger dashes of: cloves, nutmeg, bourbon vanilla, salt 
  • pie crust 
  • additional whipped cream for topping 

Preheat oven to 425 F / 220 C 
Prepare crust and lay carefully into pie pan. 
Beat all ingredients together in a large bowl, and pour into crust. 
Bake for 15 minutes; reduce heat to 350 F / 175 C and bake for another 40 - 50 minutes, or until center of pie is no longer jiggly and liquid (but before too much browned). 
Completely cool before serving. Serve topped with whipped cream.



Winter squash puree

For making pumpkin-based desserts, when you can't get cans! 

1. Obtain: a medium-sized winter squash with orange flesh. Hokkaido or butternut are excellent for this and really easy to find, though any of the winter squashes will do. 

Real pumpkin -- even sugar pie pumpkin -- is certainly also doable, but it's actually more stringy and watery than the other squashes, so may not be worth the extra effort. Even the Libby's canned pumpkin is not all pumpkin, but mostly other squashes! If you do use a sugar pie pumpkin, be sure to do the extra step of straining the puree on a cheesecloth in the fridge overnight, before using (or freezing) it, or you'll get a watery pie. 

2. Steam: use a large, heavy knife (samurai sword would be excellent) to carefully slice the squash in half. Scoop out the seeds and other guts. Place the halves skin-side down (may need to cut into quarters or eighths, actually) in a steamer basket, and steam until the flesh is entirely soft and cooked, maybe 20 mins.  

3. Mash: when squash is cool enough to handle, scoop the flesh out of the skins. For some varieties, you can just leave the skin right on, no problem: hokkaido, for example. Puree the flesh with a food processor or immersion blender. I've used just a potato masher, before, and it made a slightly chunkier pie, but wasn't bad. You can get it really smooth with the right equipment, though. Can be used immediately, or frozen for later.

Homemade cranberry sauce

So easy, and so yum! Never again will I use the canned gel...
1 c ruby port
3/4 c orange juice
frozen cranberries (frozen raspberries + frozen cherries are a delicious substitute in a pinch)
approx 1/4 c sugar, brown or white (use more for cranberries, less for other fruit)
cinnamon
cloves
Bring port and o.j. to a boil. Turn down to simmer, add fruit, and add spices and sugar to taste. Simmer until fruit is mushy and sauce is reduced to desired thickness, maybe 20 mins or so. Sauce will also thicken as it cools.