RatCreature (
ratcreature) wrote2011-09-25 03:11 pm
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.
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.

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Here through the network page of my reading circle. Hope you don't mind me chiming in.
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The only preserved pumpkin you can buy here is pickled chunks for some reason. I have no idea why people eat it *pickled*, but then the same is true for beets, which for years I thought were horrible because I had only encountered them pickled, which I don't like, even though I eat them raw, cooked or baked and like the taste.
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Freezing is what I'll be doing with my pumpkin at some point. I cut it up, roast it until it's soft, puree it in the food processor, and freeze it in containers. It keeps really well that way so you should be fine. :)
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I like cucumbers pickled, and I also eat the pickled salad thing where you have root vegetables in juliennes (like carrots and celery root) pickled, but that's about it. Some things that are pickled I've never even tried, like pickled eggs.
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1. Put the whole pumpkin in the oven until it's cooked through. This means I don't have to cut it up while it's hard. I can't believe the effort I used to go to peeling and chopping before cooking!
2. Let it cool down until it's comfortable to deal with.
3. Chop up (often with a spoon) and puree the flesh. Dispose of the skin and seeds.
4. Put the puree into flexible silicone icecube/mini-muffin trays and freeze until solid.
5. Move the puree-cubes to a freezer bag or sealed container in the freezer.
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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.
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http://debbie-henthorn.suite101.com/how-to-make-homemade-pumpkin-puree-a74195
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