(The following post was contributed by rycamor, my long-time friend and fellow homesteader. Pumpkins are often not recommended for Florida… but he’s found the right variety and the right way to grow ’em. Read on! -DTG)
Pumpkin Summer – Growing Pumpkins in Florida
What kind of person eats pumpkin pie in July? Why, my kind, of course! I don’t need Thanksgiving or Christmas as an excuse to eat this great fruit, and neither should you. Pumpkin is one of the world’s most mysteriously subtle, deep yet simple flavors. It deserves wider exposure.
I had always thought of pumpkin as one of those classic Northern crops, but you might be surprised how well it can grow in our Central Florida Summer Sauna. After noticing it in the Southern Exposure Seed Exchange website, I chose the Tan Cheese pumpkin for a testbed, since it gets great reviews as a pie pumpkin.
It doesn’t look like your classic orange Jack-O-Lantern pumpkin. It is actually rather shaped like a wheel of cheese, and the skin even looks like cheese. Better yet, the texture of the fruit inside is decidedly more smooth and cheese-like than the classic orange pumpkin.
Here is a pumpkin in the making.
Here is the author’s little pumpkin holding a big pumpkin (silly face is bonus).
Here is a pumpkin being turned into pumpkin pie (prepared with a fresh milled grain crust by the author’s teenage daughter).
This was actually enough for 3 pies. |
And here is the Pavlovian result. I know your mouth just watered a little.
Genius! Pure genius. |
Yes, it was delicious. But one does not have to stop at pie. There is pumpkin soup, pumpkin bread, pumpkin muffins, iced pumpkin milkshakes or smoothies (hey, don’t knock it, try it), and I have even heard that it makes a tasty replacement for mashed potatoes (See many other recipes at the pie recipe link above). Now, for those of you Paleo-, Atkins-, gluten-free or otherwise diet-modified people, don’t worry. You can make pumpkin pie without a bread crust. Try using a bed of sliced almonds, for example. Or no crust. And pumpkin pie tastes great even if you cut the sugar down by half (as I prefer) and use unsweetened whipped cream on top. That, plus the eggs and milk turn it into anything but a carb bomb in your stomach.
And pumpkin is actually a natural appetite suppressant. Eat something with pumpkin in it and you get a pleasant, full feeling that stays with you for hours. Also, not to be forgotten are the seeds. Pumpkin seeds are one of the world’s healthiest snacks. The Tan Cheese pumpkin doesn’t produce the largest seeds, but the good news is that they are so soft you don’t have to hull them to enjoy them. Eaten raw, the hull is soft enough to chew easily, and if you roast them with a bit of salt (and maybe butter or olive oil), they will crunch like potato chips.
The rich orange color should clue you in that pumpkin provides a great combination of beta carotene and other vitamins.
Pumpkins are a great cover crop if you have chickens
Pumpkins are low maintenance
weeds, pests, or over-eager lawn maintenance personnel.
Pumpkins can be stored
Pumpkins can be stored for months, unlike most other crops. Also, you can save the cooked pumpkin innards in the freezer. Just thaw and puree when needed.
Pumpkins make great gifts
Notes on Growing Pumpkins in Florida
We want to be free! |
3 comments
[…] year I was really hoping to beat rycamor the pumpkin king in an epic pumpkin patch […]
Please can you tell me where I can purchase the seeds for these pumpkins? I can’t seem to find them anywhere… thank you!
Hi, I’ve planted my pumpkins in a raised bed. Should I move them I’m a little concerned that maybe they don’t have enough room. This is the first time I’ve ever tried to grow a vegetable or anything.
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