ratcreature: RatCreature as Linus: Dear Great Pumpkin,... (halloween)
RatCreature ([personal profile] ratcreature) wrote2011-09-25 03:11 pm
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a pumpkin related question

Can you freeze pureed pumpkin okay? Because buying a whole pumpkin is much cheaper than buying pumpkin segments per kilo, I now have to deal with something of a pumpkin surplus, and it would be convenient if it was possible to freeze it in manageable portions once I pureed it. Last year when I bought a whole pumpkin I just had two very much pumpkin-themed weeks, but this year I'm wondering whether I couldn't freeze some. (I don't use my freezer much beyond storing vegetables I bought frozen, so I have no experience with freezing fresh vegetables.) I like pumpkin pie, and also soup and such, but not necessarily all pumpkin all week, and you can't buy pureed pumpkin in cans here (at least I have yet to see it offered anywhere), so if it froze well, that would solve two problems.

Also, I need to dust more diligently (or at all really *embarrassed look*). I'm working on a painting and dust motes keep sticking to my wet paint. Yikes.
vehemently: (Default)

[personal profile] vehemently 2011-09-26 04:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Here via network. I roasted a pumpkin this weekend too! And am saving the seeds to roast, probably tonight, with salt and cinnamon. They're just delightfully crunchy.

FWIW, I don't think it's necessary to puree pumpkin before freezing, unless you intend to use it for something puree-oriented later. I roasted the pumpkin in chunks, peeled it after roasting, and then just mashed it enough to make sure it was cooked through before decanting it into serving-sized Tupperwares, which went into the freezer. I usually use pumpkin in things like quiche or risotto or white bean soup, so puree consistency is unnecessary.

This early in the season (for us), I was roasting a pumpkin no bigger than two man's fists together, so got only 3 cups of flesh from it. They'll be considerably bigger two weeks from now, and I agree, too much pumpkin to use up all at once without freezing at least some of it.