Sunday 25 October 2020

Pumpkin Varieties


We've reached that point in the year when pumpkins start to fill the house; real ones, crochet ones, bread ones. It's not a Halloween thing, it's an autumn thing. I'm sure I've talked about Halloween here before; I've nothing against it, but it's not a holiday or tradition that I get excited about. Neither John or I celebrated it growing up so I'm not really very invested in it, and we have two children who never liked fancy dress. Also, I am shallow, and the aesthetics don't appeal - all that neon and witches hats and fake cobwebs.


But I do like pumpkins and squashes. I like the different varieties in the shops, the colour of their skins, their potential for cooking. Favourite recipes include:
  • pancakes (normal fluffy pancakes but with the addition of some pureed pumpkin, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg and allspice)
  • baked risotto with squash, pancetta and pea 
  • roasted pumpkin or squash soup with coconut milk and some curry paste - I often add sweet potatoes and red pepper to this.
  • Roasted in chunks and eaten in a warm salad with bulgar wheat, pine nuts and feta cheese
I would like to make a pumpkin pie, a proper American style one, but I don't know if anyone would eat it apart from me.

Angus asked if he could carve a pumpkin this year. Given what a year it's been, I couldn't really think of a reason to say no, so we bought one and he spent ages scraping out the flesh (which I steamed in the microwave and then pureed and added to pancakes yesterday morning) and carefully pulling all the seeds away from the stringy bits. I showed him how to roast them with olive oil, salt and pepper. It was a lovely afternoon. We haven't actually started to carve the pumpkin yet - he ran out of steam a bit when he realised quite what an effort the whole thing was.



I experimented with my first pumpkin shaped loaf of sourdough. Baking sourdough loaves has been one of the few good things to come out of 2020 for me. I bake them weekly and am starting to get more of a feel for how they work. I might even pluck up the courage to make sourdough pizza or pancakes. For this loaf, you just tie string around the dough before it goes into the oven. The loaf rises around the string, creating the ridges, although this loaf didn't rise as impressively as the one I saw in the youtube video. (You can even add a bread stick for a stalk for extra pumpkin-y effect.)

My crochet pumpkins have come out of hibernation. They will get in the way of the remote control on the coffee table for another month at least before my thoughts turn to decorations more.....sparkly.

I finished my crochet socks and think they might be the most successful crochet sock pattern I've found yet, through my extensive research of three whole patterns. The diamond pattern gives them a nice tension up and down the foot so they hug really nicely when you put them on, plus they work up quite quickly.



I deliberately chose autumnal colours with yarn left over from this jumper.


I have already started another pair with other sock yarn scraps from leftover projects. This one is coming along nicely.


I tried a new recipe - chocolate and cardamon biscuits. They weren't overly sweet so I loved them but the kids less so. The leaf shapes were just to please me.


The sedum I picked from the garden a couple of weeks ago is still going strong. I need to spend some time out there this week - there are bulbs to be planted.


I have had the odd day at home over the last three weeks while I've been at university. I closeted myself away with my books and laptop up in the spare room, away from distractions, with this one for company. He's quite distracting. This stare very clearly meant "walk me".


Our local paths have been made extra pretty by the leaves falling all around us. I think the leaf colour has been extra bright this autumn - the result of a dry, warm summer perhaps?



The clocks went back last night. and it seemed earlier in the year than usual. I wasn't quite ready for it and my body clock has been a bit off all day. It's half past five now and quite dark. The fire is lit. John is cooking sausages and mash. Once I get my hands on the remote control, Midsomer Murders will be on the TV. Next week is half term and we have nothing particularly to do  - plans to see family and freinds have all been cancelled due to covid - although I do have an assignment to write and a few other jobs to do. But for now I am just enjoying the brief pause in the rushing about, time to appreciate autumn.

21 comments:

  1. I recently used your blog as an example of an inspiration home where you cozy things up for colder weather but do not decorate for Fall...my own efforts seemed wildly over the top in comparison. That said, one can decorate for our American holidays of Halloween and Thanksgiving without using neon or faux spiderwebs! I hope your son got to carve a jackolantern in the end.
    PS You do not need to scrape out the pumpkin flesh, just the strings and seeds.

    lizzy gone to the beach x

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  2. Great fun throwing bright Autumn leaves in the air.
    I am definately a fan of Midsomer Murders too. Just hang on to that remote control Gillian x

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  3. I once put sedum in a vase of water and they all rooted and I got free plants. Happy half term.

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  4. I was surprised about the clocks too as I think it always happens at the end of the October half term not the beginning. Pumpkin pie is absolutely delicious. I first made it in Canada so my recipe is very authentic and the secret is lots and lots of spices. Unfortunately I am the only one who likes it now so I never make it or I would get very overweight, very quickly.

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  5. You turned your clocks back already? We're changing ours on November 1. You have a beautiful home. I've never been one to decorate for the seasons (except Christmas) but I've been given a few fall things so I've been putting them on the mantel. It's kind of fun to have the inside of the house reflect what's happening on the outside!

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  6. I feel the same about Halloween and fall decorating! No childhood attachments there, but I do like pumpkins and mums.

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  7. As a fellow teacher, I hope your course is going well and that you can rest and recharge your batteries this week. Love reading your blog and so glad that you still manage to find the time to post, in between studying and living life!!

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  8. Yes, with turning back the clock, it felt very much like night very early yesterday - pitch black by half five here, too. I wonder how I will fare a few weeks from now, when my daily after-work walks across sunlit fields won't be possible.
    Love those pumpkin-coloured socks, and the sourdough loaf looking like a pumpkin! Like you, I like pumpkin because of autumn, not because of Halloween. And also like you, I like making (and eating!) pumpkin soup with a bit of a "Thai" twist - coconut fat and hot spices such as red curry and ginger.

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  9. Enjoyed your post and just have to ask where did you get those slippers with the leaf? I'm just about to shop for those kind of lovely slippers!
    And to use all of the pumpkin scooping the flesh out is good but most people just do the seeds and string and carve right into the flesh...lasts a bit longer that way too!

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    1. They were a Christmas present - they were from The Small Home. Not cheap but I wear my slippers to death and these are just starting to get a bit tatty after three years of pretty solid wear.

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  10. I completely agree with you about Halloween, but do enjoy all things fall. Where we live in the eastern US, it is so hard to get away from all the gruesome decorations. As I was reading this, I'm watching Midsomer Murders. It's probably my favorite show ever!

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  11. Halloween isn't a thing here too, though some people grap any excuse to party (pre COVID) I love the pumpkins colours and shapes, made some crocheted ones, it's to brighten up for what the weather and light dims. They use the bigger orange pumpkins as they're way easier to make hollow than the smaller ones. Poor Angus. Tough work. Love the socks, can't bare a pattern under my foot though. Excellent you've some time to relax, education needs to be witt little spots of relaxation to keep going. ;>p

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  12. Lovely post, Gillian. I’m glad your studies are going well (retired university teacher, here). I was delighted when I read you were ready to make the jump from assistant to teacher. As to the pumpkin pie ... that is pretty much hands-down, one of all my children and grandchildren’s favorite plus my husband. You might try mini pies/tarts and then if they didn’t like it, you could freeze the others. They do freeze well. I also like pumpkin chocolate chip cookies, pumpkin bread (quick bread), and a pumpkin bar cookie (American term) with walnuts and a cream cheese frosting. Enjoy your break and stay well.

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  13. Your sourdough loaf looks like a work of art! We love Halloween here and it has been a big thing in my upbringing and passed on to my sons, but like you what I like best about it is actually the pumpkins, colours, autumnal backdrop, it always makes me feel creative and content - I'm not so much for the witches and broomsticks side of things these days :)

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  14. Oh, thank goodness there is another person not liking all that plastic tat (that ends up in landfill) that is now hallowe'en ... the cobwebs, witches hats, bats, etc. Like you, I never celebrated this as a child in the 1950s, nor did our sons in the 1970s/1980s. Pumpkins look pretty, but it's a waste of good agricultural land unless, as you do, you put them to culinary use. A lot will just be varved and wasted. Mind you, we could say the same about Christmas trees, but we alway have a real tree! I don't know what will happen to Trick-or-Treat this year, we've always opened the door to children and given them sweets and even 5p and 10p pieces, but not this year as we are shielding (that's if they are allowed to go knocking on doors this year). Have a lovely half-term, Gillian. Your home looks lovely as always, and I do love those socks! I can neither knit nor sew, so am envious of your talents there! Well done!
    Margaret P
    www.margaretpowling.com

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  15. I meant 'carved' and wasted. Silly me. I would also like to add that I change some ornaments around in autumn, so that the house feels just slightly different from spring. And at Christmas I will change a few things again, but we don't decorate over-much. Husband would think I'd become a girlie again if I started putting up fairy lights and stars and such like at any other time of the year other than Christmas.
    Margaret P

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  16. I love all of your pumpkin things! Pumpkin pie is one of my very favorite pies (don't forget to top your slice with whipped cream!). The crocheted socks are so cute - wish I knew how to do that! My son has carved our jack-o-lantern and we even roasted the pumpkin seeds - yummy! We will put out individual baggies of candy on a long table in our driveway so trick-or-treaters can safely grab some candy on Halloween. With COVID cases surging, I am not sure how many we will get but we are ready!

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  17. It was lovely having the clocks go back at the beginning of half term instead of the end! I was talking to my mum about it while we were doing a litter picking walk, & she says they change on the last Sunday of October.

    No Hallowe'en celebrating here either - I'm old enough to remember when it wasn't a celebratory thing in England (though I read in books about people in Scotland guising).

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  18. I don‘t really decorate for autumn but I do rotate the pieces I have and adjust the colour focus of the things I use a lot, as I have inherited quite a bit and like to concentrate on different pieces as the year goes by. Even as a child I loved craft and activity books that went through the seasons!

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  19. I really want to make those socks. Aren't they fab? and it is just like you to have them matching all of your other photos. we don't celebrate Halloween either for all the same reasons as you but we did make a lantern like a cat and made soup with lots of other veggies because try as I might, I just don't like pumpkin. Jo x

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  20. Oh those socks look mighty nice. I'm very tempted! I'm so with you on Halloween. It's crossed over the waters. It was never something that was celebrated much in the UK when I was young. It was actually all about Guy Fawkes. Making the guy out of old clothes and wheeling him about in an old wheelbarrow! Also, like you, I have never liked the aesthetics of Halloween. Orange and black are my two worst colours, and I never had kids that remotely liked dressing up. It's only recently that I've introduced pumpkins into my house, like you say, as an autumnal thing. Pastel pumpkins are making more of an appearance in shops each year and that thrills me no end! I'm slightly sad like that! I am trying more recipes with pumpkin though, just to justify how many I am buying! ha ha!!!!!!!

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