Pumpkins are a New World food, but they were quickly adopted
in the Old World whose citizens were familiar with other members of the Curcurbitaceae family such as melons and
cucumbers. In anticipation of an increase in the flood of recipes for pumpkin
pie appearing in the media in this week of Thanksgiving, I thought a glance at
the English cousins of this traditional American dish might provide a nice
counterpoint.
Firstly, from
the marvellous Hertfordshire agriculturalist and writer William Ellis, from his
Country Housewife’s Family Companion,
(1750):-
Pumkin Pye.
We pare and cut the Pumkins in Slices,
then lay the Slices in a glazed ea[r]then Pot with Salt between each Layer of
them, all Night, for extracting out their watry Juice: Then chop them with the
like Quantity or less of Apples, and with Sugar put them into a Crust and bake.
The Pumkins save Apples, and by some are liked better than Apples alone.
And an interesting American insight into old-style English
pumpkin/apple pie from Reports on the
Herbaceous Plants and on the Quadrupeds of Massachusetts (1840):-
In England the pumpkin is cultivated to
a considerable extent. “When the fruit is ripe, they cut a hole on one side, and
having taken out the seeds, fill the void space with sliced apples, adding a
little sugar and spice, and then, having baked the whole, eat it with butter,
under the name of pumpkin pie.” Loudon.
This English pie is very different from the pumpkin pie of New England, so
necessary to Thanksgiving, that a Yankee, it is said, cannot be without it, and
that in one town, the good people actually postponed the day of Thanksgiving
until the needed molasses should arrive for its composition.
And a
compare-and contrast from The Ladies' New
Book of Cookery (Philadelphia, 1852), by Sarah Josepha Buell Hale:-
Pumpkin
Pie (American).—Take out the seeds, and pare the pumpkin or squash ; but in
taking out the seeds do not scrape the inside of the pumpkin ; the part nearest
the seed is the sweetest; then stew the pumpkin, and strain it through a sieve
or cullender. To a quart of milk, for a family pie, 3 eggs are sufficient. Stir
in the stewed pumpkin with your milk and beaten-up eggs, till it is as thick as
you can stir round rapidly and easily. If the pie is wanted richer make it
thinner, and add sweet cream or another egg or two; but even 1 egg co a quart
of milk makes " very decent pies." Sweeten with molasses or sugar;
add 2 tea-spoonsful of salt, 2 tnble-spoonsful of sifted cinnamon, and 1 of
powdered ginger; but allspice may be used, or any other spiec that may be
preferred. The peel of a lemon grated in gives it a pleasant flavor. The more
eggs, says an American authority, the better the pie. Some put 1 egg to a gill
of milk. Bake about an hour in deep plates, or shallow dishes, without an upper
crust, in a hot oven.
Pumpkin Pie (English).—Take out the seeds, and grate the pumpkin
till you come to the outside skin. Sweeten the pulp; add a little ground
allspice, lemon peel and lemon juice; in short, flavor it to the taste. Bake
without an upper crust.
2 comments:
Hmmm...I'd be curious on doing a twist on the two versions. Apple sauce - or, really, boiled apples that are then smashed and mashed- are a common egg replacer. Using apple sauce, rather than eggs, for the American recipe might be an interesting combination of the two.
So which one shall we try first?
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