Repurposing those Ornamental Pumpkins into Pumpkin Bread Pudding

I have talked about this before, the difficulty I have throwing anything away. I have been gradually weaning myself away from my attachment to clothes I will never wear again, toys that my children loved (but I probably loved more) which will be completely obsolete when and if I ever have grandchildren, and books that are worn out and dog eared.

But food is a whole different matter.

I still find myself forcing that last piece of food down rather than scrapping it. I find it hard to appreciate a finely carved Jack-o-lantern. All I can think about is the fact that a big huge pumpkin will go uneaten! Carved pumpkins start rotting and growing fungus almost immediately, so putting them to any reuse beyond composting is not an option.

So this year I was very pleased with myself when I hit upon the idea of cooking with the ornamental miniature pumpkins I always buy around Halloween. This idea struck me when I ordered pumpkin bread pudding at a restaurant a few weeks ago. I dislike pie crusts, so eating pumpkin pie (or any pie) in public is usually an ordeal for me. I love the filling but have to agonize over wasting the crust and being seen as a boor and wasting food, or eating the crust and risking gagging in public and insulting the chef.

My mother used to make bread pudding very regularly when we were growing up and it has a very special place in my heart.The bread pudding at the restaurant that day was delicious, so making pumpkin bread pudding was my perfect Thanksgiving alternative. Plus, I had saved all these bread crusts I had cut off the bread when I served stuffed grilled sandwiches a few weeks back. I had planned to make them into breadcrumbs, but this was even better. 

Once I had decided that I was going to repurpose my ornamental pumpkins after Halloween, I consciously chose the larger ornamental pumpkins for my decorations.

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The smaller ones might work, but I suspect that it would be so much work getting any flesh out of them, that they are best consigned to the compost heap. The good news is that our compost heap has been giving us so many volunteer squashes and pumpkins that we have been well supplied with food from that pile all through this fall.

So here is a delicious pumpkin bread pudding I made with ornamental pumpkins and leftover bread crusts and heels.

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Pumpkin Bread Pudding

1 cup cooked mashed pumpkin (you can use the canned variety)
3 eggs lightly beaten
1 cup pure heavy cream
½ cup milk
½ cup sugar
A generous pinch of salt
½ tsp ginger
½ tsp Cardamom powder
½ tsp Cinnamon powder
¼ tsp ground cloves

5-6 cups cubed white bread crusts and heels, or cubed heavy bread like sour dough
¼ cup chopped dates (optional)
3 oz melted butter

Preheat the oven to 350°.

Gently mix the bread cubes (and dates if used) with the butter in a 9 or 10 inch rectangle oven proof dish and spread them out. Don’t press the cubes down too firmly. You want some pieces sticking up for a beautiful look and some crisp pieces for texture.

Blend the rest of the ingredients together well and pour over the bread making sure you get some of the mixture on the cubes, even those sticking up.

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Bake in the center of the oven for 35-40 minutes or till the top is golden and an inserted toothpick comes out clean.

Serve warm or at room temperature with unsweetened or very lightly sweetened whipped cream.

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Cooking your pumpkins.

Preheat the oven to 375°.

Cut the pumpkins in half and scrape out the seeds and any fibrous bits clinging to the inside.

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Place the pumpkins cut side up in a pan with ½” of water. Cook for 10 minutes and then flip the pumpkins over. Cook for another 15 minutes or until the pumpkins begin to look translucent and cooked.

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Take the pumpkins out and let them drain for about 5 minutes.

Scrape the flesh out of the pumpkin shells with a teaspoon.

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If you leave about 1/8-1/6” of pumpkin flesh in the shells you have beautiful bowls to serve a pumpkin soup in.  But you may need to use pruning shears to clip the pumpkin stems prior to cooking so they stay flat.

Enjoy the fine art of living the good life!

Efficiency is the enemy of weight loss

Week 47
135.5

Efficiency is the enemy of weight loss
or
The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree

Though Thanksgiving is a holiday that is built almost entirely around food, and though I love to eat, somehow Thanksgiving food has always been less than thrilling for me.
Turkey? I’ll pass, thank you.
Dressing/stuffing? What’s the point?
Pumpkin pie? Just the filling please.
Mushy sweet potatoes? Okay. I’ll concede that’s pretty good.
Green bean casserole? Don’t ever feed an Indian blandly cooked vegetables.

Actually food flavors are always taken up a notch in our family (and that includes my in-laws), so I can’t really complain. We always have fun pushing ourselves to make the food taste more interesting.  My mother-in-law makes a great dressing, but we hadn’t had it in a couple years, so this year I decided I would try my hand at it.

One of the ingredients of dressing is dry (but not stale!) bread. So on the assumption that lightly toasted bread would be a good option, off to work I went using the toaster-oven to dry out some bread.

I was getting the next batch of bread ready for the oven, when I heard my daughter ask incredulously, “Do you have the bread on top of the oven?”

“Well it’s really hot on the top and I thought it would save time” I mumbled. (And more importantly, “Why waste the heat?” I said in my head.)

“We do have a toaster also, you know,” pointed out my ever practical daughter.

Very true. I moved across the kitchen and tried to fit three slices of toast into the one (large) slice toaster slot.

And suddenly, the realization. I am turning into my father!

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Breakfast in our house while growing up almost always included toast. And my father was always in charge of the toast. My father, who never met a broken toaster he couldn’t fix with a bit of wire or piece of scrap metal. No neighbor or relative was ever allowed to throw away a broken toaster. Give him a few hours and my father would have it working like new. And at breakfast time my father would have our toaster humming and popping out toast at a rate worthy of a Guinness Record.

At breakfast time my mother was in charge of the porridge, the half-boiled eggs, the sliced fruit and cheese, and buttering the toast. My father made the toast. He cut up the slices of bread so the slot that was supposed to accommodate one (large) slice of bread would be filled with one and a half slices next to each other, and additional half slices balanced on top so no heat was wasted and so that the largest number of pieces of toast were delivered warm to the table at the same time. A pretty good system actually.

When I was in the 5th grade my father went out of town for a work study course. “Work study” nowadays refers to a semester of practical work related to your college major. In those days, it was the expression used for efficiency.

Back in the sixties, India was still recovering from colonial rule and there was much effort to prove Indians could do just as well as, or better than, the British. All kinds of innovative programs were being tried out. The training program my father was attending was a military program, and being the military, they didn’t do anything in half measures. It was a three-month course! Who on earth does a three-month course in efficiency?

Maybe it was just an opportunity for a wonderful holiday getaway for the bright stars of the Indian civil service. Or, more likely, for the organizers, since the class was held in the beautiful Himalayan foothills in a town called Mussourie. (Only near the Himalayas would you say that a place at an altitude of over 6,000 feet is in the “foothills”. But I digress.)

The Indian government was working hard to improve standards all around and my father left my mom in charge of the household, the four girls, the dog, the cows, the chickens, the garden, and the household help, and went off for this work study/efficiency class. The course was followed by a practicum at a munitions factory in Dehradun, another gorgeous resort town in the foothills. He came home three months later with three beautiful traditional dancing dolls for my sisters, and a cute wooden bobble headed doll for me that I immediately named Little Eva. He also brought home a whole set of newfangled ideas.

Suddenly, my father,  who in the past had spent almost every minute at home with his nose in a book (he rereads Moby Dick about once every other year), was keeping a close eye on what we were doing at home with the exacting fastidiousness of the nuns in my school.

Clearing the table after dinner? Make sure you pile as much as you can together so you don’t have to make three trips. Waiting for the water to boil for a cup of tea? Do something while you are waiting. Always use the shortest route and most productive path! Minimize the effort required to do a job.  Park as close as you can to your destination. Don’t ever go from one spot to the next empty handed. And so it went. To this day, almost 50 years later, my father will catch one of us doing something inefficiently and say, “Work study, my dear. Work study.”

Perhaps these exhortations struck a chord with me more than anyone else at home, but I took them to heart. This efficiency goal got pretty well ingrained into me. Maybe it appealed to my innate laziness, or my ADD which my daughter often points out, but I became an expert at minimizing the energy used for any job. I am completely adept at picking things up with my toes so I don’t have to bend. A pencil, a book, dirty laundry.  I can slip my shoes off, pick them both up and place them on the top shelf of the shoe rack in one fluid motion using just my toes with monkey-like grace.

I also find it almost impossible to sit still and wait. Waiting for food to warm up in the microwave, even for a minute or two can be agony. At work, I always time my coffee cup refills with the need to go to the bathroom so I don’t have to wait and watch the water drip into my mug. Before a party, I will pop something under the broiler to brown, and rather than just stand there for just the 3 minutes it takes, I feel obliged to run and check my e-mail, or start unloading the dishwasher. Often with very bad results.

 

As a new immigrant early in the 1980s, I was struck by how devoid the streets and roads in the US were of people walking. Every once in a while, I would see someone running, seemingly aimlessly. I asked my more seasoned immigrant husband why they were running. “They’re jogging,” he said. “”Where to?” I asked in all my irritating innocence.

I soon came to understand that jogging was a form of exercise. I understood, but didn’t quite understand it. In India, sometimes you ran on the playing field. But generally when you ran, you were trying to catch a bus or escaped poultry. When you ran, you were running from an angry dog or a charging bull.  When you ran, you were trying to escape a sudden cloudburst of pouring rain. Why would anyone need to just run for exercise, and then jump in the car to go 5 blocks to go to the store to pick up some eggs?

But I when in Rome….

Soon, I was walking nowhere if I could drive. I took the elevator when there were perfectly good stairs around. While I can’t normally stand still, I would get on an escalator and just stand there instead of continuing to climb them while moving. This worked well for the first 25 years. But suddenly menopause and cellulite began to creep into my life. I watched the needle climb on the bathroom scale. I had been a steady 100 lbs. from my teenage years through my children’s teenage years, with a couple of swings upwards during my two pregnancies.

Now suddenly my weight was no longer my weight, but that of some chubby visitor to my house. But I still am not about to take up some aimless jogging. I have decided to use the opportunities that daily life presents; with the exception of vacuuming — because I am culturally unable to vacuum. Feminist or no, in our house vacuuming is a man’s job. Or rather, the job of the person who grew up with vacuum cleaners around him from his childhood.

But truly. As someone serious about losing weight, I have missed some great opportunities to keep moving and exercising in the house.

At some point, I had become 150% of my earlier weight. I was a woman and a half! Expressed like that, it gave me some real incentive to try to improve.

With a little conscious effort, I can walk 2-3 miles a day just doing my everyday work So here are some tips to myself:

– Stop trying to park in the spot closest to the store. The problem is, I can hardly help myself. If I park far away from the entrance at the grocery store, I find myself strategically parking the car near the cart return. But that’s okay I suppose – because I always make a point of returning carts to the cart corral. No free range carts in parking lots because of me, ever.

– Use the networked printer at work, so I have to walk to retrieve my printouts.

– At home, I remind myself that it is a good thing to bring the fresh laundry up the stairs in two or three trips, instead of piling the clean clothes and linen so high that I can’t see where I am going.

– And stop berating myself for somethings I will never be able to change. It will always be hard to sit still and watch TV or a movie at home. I feel obliged to be doing something while I watch – ironing, cutting vegetables, cooking, sorting through junk mail. Anything. But that’s okay. It fits neatly with my health-without-too-much-effort plan.

– And best of all, I make a point of always bending down to pick up my shoes when putting them away. This may mean distancing myself from my simian ancestors and a certain loss of prehensile skills with my toes, but it is helping with the weight loss goal.

So.  Sorry, dad. There are some times, when I am going to occasionally be inefficient and ignore that childhood mantra that pops up in my head every so often, “Work study, my dear. Work study.”

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