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The Rural Voice, 2000-10, Page 41pumpkins, Grandmother set about drying off and roasting the seeds. Grandpa's jack-o'-lanterns always wore scary faces while I'd do mine up in toothless smiles. By the time we finished, the kitchen would be filled with a warm nutty aroma. Grandmother would powder some salt in her pestle and mortar and sprinkle it over the roasted seeds. Paired up with a mug of spicy, hot cider, "pumpkin nuts" were one of my favourite autumn treats. Come Halloween night when the back porch was lit by our two carefully carved jack-o'-lanterns, Grandpa and I took as much pride in the pumpkin patch offerings as Grandmother did. After our two special pumpkins had been put to good use, Grandmother would harvest the remaining heads when "the time was right." This meant somewhere between nippy nights and early frost. The "greener" ones from shady corners of the patch would make their way to the root cellar for fresh use over the winter months. These were the best `savers', according to Grandmother, as they would get a chance to ripen slowly on their own. Root cellar pumpkins would enliven winter meals by making their way into creamy nutmeg scented pies, moist quick breads, thick soups or smothered in garlic butter and baked in squash fashion. Grandmother had recipes ranging from dried sugar coated pumpkin rings to spicy pumpkin relish that made her fresh roast of pork a dish well worth mentioning. We ate pumpkins that masqueraded as fruit in puddings, cakes and cookies. We also indulged in pumpkins that were disguised as vegetables, dressing up stews and pot pies. And from every pumpkin used, the seeds were saved for roasting. All winter long, the pantry offered a tin of salty roasted pumpkin nuts. These were readily available when snacks were called for during evening games of Chinese Checkers or as a recess pocket treat for toting to school. Then, of course, there was a very special sack full of seeds that were hand selected by Grandmother which got stored away as the next season's Pick an extra pumpkin for dinner. "planters". I still have a special fondness for pumpkins and although my backyard garden is nowhere near the one my grandparents' farm proudly boasted, I always make room for at least a couple of pumpkin plants in my tiny patch. And using Grandmother's carefully preserved recipes, I still enjoy pumpkins today as much as I did way back when I was a girl. I'd like to share a few of Grandmother's recipes with you. I have copied them from her old scribblers just as she had jotted them down — in the way of the day. ROASTED PUMPKIN Slice pumpkin into wedges and place on baking sheet. Spread with fat (Grandmother rendered down pork fat for use in all her baking and cooking recipes) or butter and sprinkle with some salt, pepper and chopped garlic, if you like. Bake in hot oven until tender. This is very good with cheese melted on top. Spoon off and eat right down to the rind. PUMPKIN NUTS (Roasted pumpkin seeds) Remove string and pulp from seeds. Dry off well. Grease baking sheet with fat or oil. Spread seeds one layer thick. Get the fire cracking hot (of course, she was using a wood stove!) Preheat oven to 375°F. and roast until light golden. Powder some salt and sprinkle while hot. When cold, store in tightly covered tin. WILL'S FAVOURITE PUMPKIN COOKIES (Grandpa and I just loved these cookies and could hardly wait for them to get out of the oven. The recipe states that they save very well but at the rate they get eaten, I doubt this was ever proven!) 1/2 cup of butter 1 cup brown sugar 1/2 cup molasses 3 cups flour 2 teaspoons baking powder a shake each of salt, cinnamon, nutmeg and cloves 2 eggs a taste of vanilla (by this Grandmother would likely mean just enough to flavour, I have whittled this down to 2 teaspoonsful), 11/2 cups of fresh cooked, mashed pumpkin. You can add some chopped nuts if you like or some dried berries such as currants or cranberries. "Will", she has it written, "likes this cookie done with chopped dates". Do up in the manner as you would any cookie. (She means creaming the butter first, then adding the moist ingredients and pumpkin. Then folding in the dry ingredients, lastly the nuts or fruit). Bake until done. (I always giggle when this shows up in Grandmother's books. When one bakes in a wood stove oven such as Grandmother did, there wasn't a thermometer or timer so you simply "baked until done", keeping a close eye upon the oven all the while.) After you choose your jack-o'- lantern this fall, don't forget to pick a couple of special pumpkins to have for dinner, too!O OCTOBER 2000 37