Surprising
facts you didn't know about pumpkins By Angela Carlos Published September 23,
2015.
While
you sip on that pumpkin spice latte, consider these unusual pumpkin facts about
your favorite fall produce. Maybe you want to know why pumpkins fit so
effortlessly into sweet and savory dishes, like pumpkin ravioli and pumpkin
pie. Perhaps you are curious about how early American settlers used this
foreign gourd for cooking, or why we carve faces into pumpkins on Halloween.
Pumpkins haven't always been as popular as they are today. In fact, pumpkins
were hardly eaten by people for a considerable part of the 19th century. Hard
to believe considering pumpkin spice seems take over our taste buds every fall
season. No food is above a little help from pumpkin spice: Pumpkin flavored
yogurt, coffee, candies, and even English muffins are cropping up on our supermarket
shelves. This fall season while you snack on your artisanal pumpkin [insert
food here]; consider the facts about this versatile, tasty treat to discover
how pumpkins went from the bottom to the food chain to the top of fall food
trends over the past several hundred years 1. 45 Different Varieties of
Pumpkins While the round orange pumpkin is the most recognizable pumpkin,
pumpkins come in many different shapes, sizes, and colors. Some of the cleverly
named pumpkin varietals include, Halloween in Paris from France, Cinderella
(the varietal cultivated by the Pilgrims), and Wee-Be-Little a miniature
pumpkin varietal. 2. Irish Jack-O-Lanterns The tradition of carving
pumpkins originated in Ireland. The Irish would carve jack-o-lanterns out of
turnips to scare away evil spirits during the Celtic holiday Samhain, the night
when spirits of the dead would walk the earth. 3. October = Pumpkin Month
80 percent of the pumpkin crop in the U.S. is available during October.
That is roughly 800 million pumpkins out of the 1 billion pumpkins grown in the
U.S. each year. 4. "Pumpkin Capital" of the World Morton,
Illinois is the self-proclaimed pumpkin capital of the world. Illinois is one
of the largest producers of pumpkin in the United States with 90 to 95 percent
of its crop being used for processed pumpkin foods. 5. Pumpkin Seeds
Pumpkin seeds contain more protein than peanuts and are a wonderful
roasted with spices or salt. Sprinkle pumpkin seeds on top of salads or eat as
a snack on their own. 6. Pumpkins are 90 Percent Water Admittedly,
this is less of a surprising fact when you consider that pumpkins come from the
same family as the watermelon and cucumber.
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