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Halloween (November
2009)
Well it was Halloween
yesterday so as you can imagine it was time to do more
stuff with pumpkins. The day before we'd gone out for
the day to a local wildlife attraction where one of
their Halloween themed activities was carving pumpkins.
This could be done for
an additional charge of £2 and most people were getting
stuck in. They had a huge trailer full of pumpkins and
bin loads of pumpkin inners. It is a weird thing when
you stop and think about it to take a huge edible fruit
and to turn it into something completely inedible. With
the pumpkin industry becoming big business, there must
be fields dedicated to growing pumpkins which will all
be thrown away!
But I'm no spoil sport
and I love carving pumpkins for Halloween. Of course, I
may have looked like a spoil sport as I whisked my
children home from the wildlife attraction without a
carved pumpkin each. Instead we went home and selected a
pumpkin each from our homegrown collection.
My
now seven year old daughter decided that this year she
wanted to carve her own pumpkin so I gave her a few
instructions and words of caution and wisdom and let her
get on with it. When she paused long enough from her
hard concentration she asked me how old I had been when
I carved my first pumpkin. I had to confess that I had
been 24! Still, it wasn't the done thing in my day! As
it happens, my daughter turned out to be a natural and
produced a beautiful carving.
This had taken about an
hour longer than I had anticipated and it was dinner
time so we took a break and I resumed pumpkin carving in
the morning for my youngest daughter. She wasn't keen to
carve her own and that was just fine by me so I set
about doing hers. But as soon as I'd got past the gooey
and tiring emptying of the pumpkin stage my eldest
appeared and declared she wanted to carve this one too.
I let her get on with it until the tool blade snapped
and it all became a lot trickier at which point I
finished the job for her. She was also noticeably absent
for the smearing of Vaseline over all the cut edges. She
apparently hates Vaseline on her hands more than pumpkin
goo!
I noticed that our
homegrown pumpkins had much thicker flesh than the ones
being carved the day before. In a way that makes carving
them harder work but it does mean they yield quite a lot
of pumpkin that can be eaten. With the flesh from the
first pumpkin we made some pumpkin cup cakes and
decorated them ready for our Halloween party after dark.
I have steamed the flesh from the other one but have yet
to make it into anything. Where am I now with my 101
things to do with a pumpkin? Number 10 maybe... I'm not
sure I'm ever gonna make it to 101!
Pumpkin Cup Cakes
| 6 oz (175g)
light brown sugar |
| 3 oz (85g)
butter, softened |
| 2 large eggs |
| 8 oz (225g)
plain flour |
| 1 tablespoon
baking powder |
| 1 teaspoon
ground mixed spice |
| Pinch of salt
1/4 teaspoon bicarbonate soda |
| 8 oz of steam,
pureed pumpkin |
| 4oz (110g)
cream cheese |
| 2 oz (55g)
icing sugar |
| 1 oz (25g)
cornflour |
| 1 teaspoon
vanilla essence orange food colouring |
| White chocolate
liquorice wheels |
Preheat oven to 180°C,
gas 4 and put paper cases into a fairy cake tin. Cream
together the butter and sugar then stir in the eggs.
Sift in the dry ingredients then add the pumpkin puree
and stir until mixed well. Spoon into the paper cases
and bake for about 20 minutes until golden and risen.
Cool on a wire rack. Whisk together the cream cheese,
icing sugar, cornflour, vanilla and food colouring to
make the frosting. Once the cakes are cooled, spoon the
frosting on top each cake. To make the chocolate
decorations, melt the chocolate over a pan of boiling
water then pour into Halloween theme ice-cube trays.
Chill overnight until hard then remove from the trays
and stick them into the frosting. To make the liquorice
spiders, unravel a liquorice wheel about half way and
snip the liquorice off. Stick the remaining wheel onto
the frosting then cut some of the remaining length into
8 legs and two claws and stick these on too. Store in
the fridge but eat at room temperature.
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