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Recipes/Cooking Title: Canned Pumpkin Isn’t Pumpkin My favorite season is closing in on us (and by closing in, I mean temperatures here in Alabama are still in the 90s, but Im sure fall is coming anyyy day now). Autumn, I love youyour cool weather, your clothes, your football players, oh, and especially your food. But... I know you think youve been counting down to PSL-season for what feels like a lifetime, but I assure you that, as an editor for one of the largest food websites in the country, Ive been prepping for much, much longer. We work well ahead (at least 4-6 months) creating seasonal packages and researching to spot upcoming trends before they hit, so Im pretty sure I was celebrating Thanksgiving on July 4. With months of researching and preparing for the fall, youd think I would have discovered what Im about to tell you before last week. Heck, as someone who spends the entirety of her workweek studying food, I should just innately know all of the thingsright? Not so, my friends, not so. Okay, Ill get to the point. I found out something extremely disappointing and concerning this week that has made me rethink most everything in my life, so Id like to share a little PSA with the class: Pumpkin puree is not pumpkin. Its squash. Pumpkin puree: You know, the canned orange stuff thats lining the supermarket walls right now? The stuff you use to make all your favorite fall desserts thats labeled 100% pumpkin?! Yes, well, its actually made from 100% not pumpkin. The mix is made from a variety of winter squash (think butternut, Golden Delicious, Hubbard, and more). Libbys, the brand that produces about 85% of the countrys canned pumpkin filling, has actually developed a certain variety of squash that they grow, package, and distribute to supermarkets across the countryall the while fooling innocent, trusting consumers into believing theyre eating a pumpkin. As it turns out, pumpkins can be fairly stringy and watery; certain varieties of winter squash make a richer, sweeter puree that works way better for packing the now-ambiguous flavor we all love into our favorite fall dishes. Additionally, the USDA is fairly lenient with gourd terminology in general, which is why its perfectly legal to label a food product as pumpkin when, in reality, its made from a different variety of squash. So its all good now that theres an explanation, right? NO. Its not. What Im telling you is, youve basically been eating butternut squash pie, squash bread, and drinking SQUASH FREAKING SPICE LATTES this entire time. Heres my thing: When all the gourd execs sat around the boardroom table and came to the conclusion that, Dang, pumpkin just isnt going to work, why didnt they just come right out with it and announce, SQUASH IS THE NEW PUMPKIN! just like when Neiman Marcus told us gingham was the new stripe?! (P.S. It wasnt. That was also a lie, and I looked like I was wearing a tablecloth.) This is my hangup on the whole issue. Not that all of my favorite pumpkin things suddenly taste gross now that I know what theyre really made ofbut Im a trusting girl, and I was deceived. Is nothing sacred? If its no big deal to call a blend of squashes pumpkin, whos to say anything is what it says it is? Thats something for you to chew on. This article originally appeared on MyRecipes.com. With that being said, if you want to discuss this further, you can find me brooding over marketing deception and my skewed perception of reality with a squash latte. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 4.
#1. To: Willie Green (#0)
A pumpkin is a type of squash.
The GREAT Pumpkin is going to get ya for that type of comment.
There are no replies to Comment # 4. End Trace Mode for Comment # 4.
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