| Yield | 4 cups |
Because pumpkins are about 90 percent water, the initial purée in this recipe is quite wet. Canned pumpkin has most of that water removed, leaving a very concentrated purée. To achieve the same consistency yourself, don’t skip the oven-drying step at the end of the recipe. This step is important, especially if you plan to use fresh pumpkin purée in recipes that call for canned solid-pack pumpkin; otherwise, the excess moisture of your homemade purée will throw the recipe results off.
| 2 | Tbsp. vegetable oil | |
| 1 | medium pumpkin or 2 small sugar pumpkins (about 8 pounds total) |
Read more about cooking with pumpkins in Keri Fisher’s “The great pumpkin.”
This content is from the Keri Fisher collection.
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1. by ruth_117 on Oct 15, 2008 at 12:02 PM PDT
I just made pumpkin puree for the first time this weekend and used it for pumpkin pies (Canadian Thanksgiving was this past weekend) It turned out great and was so easy! The only thing I did differently was to strain the pumpkin in the fridge overnight instead of baking it a second time.
2. by R on Oct 3, 2011 at 6:12 AM PDT
Is there any reason that the cut winter squash shouldn’t be cooked “cut side up”? All the recipes that I have read cook it with cut side down. I cook it cut side up for 40-45 minutes to evaporate some of the water while baking. Once pureed in blender, the puree is similar to that of canned pumpkin. I have used it for side dishes and it makes great soup but I haven’t used it to bake a cake or a pie.
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