Sunday, October 29, 2023

Pumpkin Mousse Perfect for Fall

 JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: If it's Sunday, it must mean Celia Wakefield with another delicious recipe. Today, she has a showy-looking dessert perfect for your Hallowe'en-Thanksgiving-Christmas dinner menu. As usual, I had the chance to gobble it down as fast as possible try a taste, and I can promise you'll enjoy it - as will your guests, who, let's face it, might be a teensy bit tired of the same old pumpkin pie. As usual, there's a video sharing some of Celia's techniques at the end.

 

 




Good morning dear friends, writers and JRW’s. We are in the season of mists and mellow fruitfulness, surrounded by yellow and orange everywhere we look. Orange is what I have to share today. 
 
 
Although all the writing I do is memoir based or recipe based I do take care to read each JRW blog and post to learn more about improving my writing. Please feel free to chime in here, though with the expert editor, Julia, who checks my writing, hopefully I won’t make too many bloopers. I know it’s important in writing mysteries to have a main theme and several sub themes and I hope I have achieved that. 
 

Pumpkin is the queen of Fall, and pumpkin pie is universally beloved in the USA and is THE quintessential Thanksgiving dessert. Probably not made from the pumpkins your grade schoolers carved and decorated with magic marker. 
 
 
However arriving in the States as an adult, I found many new customs that I might have heard of but didn’t realize that I would adopt. Once Olivia was headed to nursery school I learned that Halloween and Thanksgiving were celebrations I needed to appreciate, understand and get with the program as any good mom would. 
 
 
Luckily, Dad loved to carve pumpkins with daughter as my poor artistic skills were not even up to pumpkin carving. However I did made awesome costumes, and three year old Olivia was a star in the tiger suit I made from fake fur, which may have been eclipsed by the Queen of Hearts a couple of years later. A circular skirt of silver lame embroidered with BIG hot pink lame hearts. Barbie, eat your heart out. 
 

But Thanksgiving - lots of new food to learn to love. I do remember eating squash or something with marshmallows on it served at a friends house, and it turned out that pumpkin pie is not a fav of mine either.  (However, apple crumble is always welcome.)
 
One year, we were invited to Olivia’s favorite babysitters home for Thanksgiving dinner, and I was asked to bring a dessert. Panic on the pie front. How could I turn pumpkin into something I would be proud to serve and eat? 
 
I hunted through my American cook books and Gourmet Magazine, and found in The Everyday Gourmet, published the previous year by my local Junior League, a pumpkin mousse. It looked good, it fitted the brief, and best of all it had rum in it and wasn’t too complex a recipe. 

 
How did I get involved with the Junior League of Northern Westchester? No, I wasn’t a member but I was the British Butler. The Junior League had undertaken a three year project to build and outfit the first house for domestic violence victims in the area. This was a big deal, and part of their fund raising was The Everyday Gourmet with its 400 recipes. It is the epitome of late ’70’s cooking with lots of cream, butter etc.
 
 
I was asked to teach the volunteers to make the dessert for the book launch at a luncheon at the local country club. It was all very upmarket, and I found they wanted me to work with volunteers to create a hundred or so floating island desserts! All I remember from the prep part is sticky. So many egg whites, so much custard made from scratch, so much beating and shaping. But with my volunteers, we were successful, lauded and appreciated. (My cookbook offering from the British Butler was a demo on working with phyllo pastry, which was in demand by my clients.)
 
 
Where better to look for a different pumpkin dessert than the Junior League book? I found a pumpkin mousse submitted by Nancy Hoggson which I successful presented for  the Thanksgiving dinner. I promise it will be welcomed at any Halloween buffet, decorated with candy corn or eyeballs, or at Thanksgiving Dinner, with whipped cream and pecans, chocolate or my fav: crystalized ginger shards.

INGREDIENTS:

2 packets unflavored gelatin
1/2 cup dark rum (substitutions: orange juice or bourbon)
8 eggs
1 1/3 cups sugar (measure 2/3 cup sugar for half recipe)*
2 cups cooked pumpkin (canned works very well)
1 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp ground ginger
1/2 tsp mace
1/2 tsp ground cloves
2 cups heavy cream, whipped

EQUIPMENT:

Double boiler or set a Pyrex bowl on a small saucepan with simmering water in the bottom

Mixing bowl 

Electric hand beater or a stand mixer

Small bowl for measured spices

Chilled bowl for whipping cream

Whisks and spatulas

METHOD:
  • Set double boiler with water in bottom half on stove
  • Place the rum or liquid in the top half and sprinkle on the gelatin. Place over the lower pan and watch as the gelatin melts. Keep the heat low and stir gently. When dissolved remove from heat and allow to cool down.
  • Measure the other ingredients, mixing the spices in the small bowl.
  • Break the eggs into the mixing bowl and start beating. Once they are mixed well increase the speed and add the sugar in a dessert spoon at a time.
  • Beat well till the mix increases in volume.
  • Sprinkle the spice mix over the eggs and sugar and stir in.
  • Add the pumpkin together with the rum-gelatin mixture, and stir with with the electric mixer on low.
  • Add the cream to the chilled bowl and whip till stiff
  • Mix a couple of spoons of the pumpkin egg into the cream
  • Using a spatula fold the cream into the pumpkin mixture till incorporated
  • Spoon into individual bowls or into a serving bowl and refrigerate.
  • To serve decorate with whipped cream and small candies.

I made a half recipe for us to try which certainly made enough for 6 people. Nancy writes that this quantity serves 8-10 but with other desserts it would serve more. 
 

60 comments:

  1. This looks delicious, Celia . . . thanks for sharing the recipe with us.
    Pie, pumpkin or otherwise, is not my favorite dessert . . . this mousse looks like the perfect solution for a delicious dessert for my holiday dinner.

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    1. From Celia: Joan hearing from you is always such a boost to me thank you you so much. I do hope you make the mousse. With my hand held beater it only told a half hour to make.

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  2. The pumpkin mousse looks so yummy. There is only the 2 of us so we usually go to a restaurant for Thanksgiving dinner and we are hoping the one we enjoy the most will finally be re-opened after hurricane Ian damaged it. My husband checked online last night and it sounds like it should be. It's across the street from the beach with a great view from the upstairs dining room.

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    1. From Celia: thanks Paula, I do hope your restaurant is open and all you remembered. There’s only two at my house now so I actually halved the recipe and it was fine. Easy to cut down for a smaller number, just be careful to cut the. Spices too.

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    2. FROM CELIA: APOLOGIES FOR CAPS BUT I WANTED YOUR ATTENTION. JUDY POINTS OUT THAT I WAS NOT SPECIFIC AS TO WHEN TO ADD THE GELATIN! First I do apologize but would it be me if something hadn't been forgotten? Thank you Judy - the gelatin mix goes in with the pumpkin. And to Amanda - Don't let the GBBO put you off trying this. I am slightly embarrassed to say that my gelatin packets are so old it may be a senior. But truthfully I think gelatin just needs to be carefully heated not overheated due to lack of time which is usually the problem on GBBO as well as unrealistic expectations for a towering something. Go on and try gelatin again. Many thanks.

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  3. Célia, I love all your life’s stories and to learn more about you. And your writing grabs my attention and keeps me interested, I like it.

    I’m not a fan of pie crust but I like the interior of a pumpkin pie. So for many years now, I’ve made what I call a pumpkin pudding that is in fact what is in the pie without the crust.

    I’ll certainly try this recipe that seems glamorous and a little too rich but that could be a little pleasure once a year. Thank you,
    Danielle

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    1. From Celia: You are kind, thank you. Well whether I ever get to publishing is another story I think but between Julia and all the JRW's encouragement and the writing from my memoir class I may have something to put together for fam and friends one day. But pumpkin pudding sounds delicious. I am considering if I could half the recipe again for two. I think it's possible. I would weigh the sugar though as that's the only tricky weight to cut down.

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  4. Aha -- it's a mousse! I was playing guess-the-recipe with you on FB, Celia, and I was way off, I see. This sounds delicious; though, ever since seeing disasters on the Great British Bake-Off, working with gelatin scares me. I love how you weave memoir into your recipes, and I'd love to read stories from your days as the British Butler! Happy Halloween to you.

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    1. From Celia: Haha I got you Amanda! But admittedly it's a hard one to imagine. A real 'blast from the past'. Yes looking back on the Brit Butler, I can't help feeling it was like watching a baby start to walk - all movement, no sense of what was what. I learned so much doing it. thanks and Happy Halloween back though we are really off the beaten track for T&T.

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  5. From Celia: Oh Danielle, how kind of you, thank you. These are comments that make a writer so happy. Yes it is a bit rich but no more so than good ice cream. You don’t have to go with the rum, substitute some delicious juice. Even water would work at a punch as it’s just to get the gelatin working. I hope you try it, good luck.

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  6. Celia, the mousse sounds yummy. I read the recipe a few times and am not clear about when the cooled gelatin should be added to the eggs. It's too early to watch the video with the sound on. I could make this mousse for a dinner party.

    We are usually alone on Thanksgiving, too, so I already made a reservation at a restaurant that does a pretty nice job. These days we go out on Halloween, because I don't want to be the chef on my birthday anymore. 🙃

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    1. From Celia: Judy, I am mortified and I can't even blame my editor! But as I can't edit this blog, or rather the last time they gave me permission I made a real mess, so no editing for me. I have put the correction as near to the top as I can get it and just add the rum/gelatin with the pumpkin.

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    2. Don't be embarrassed! You are an inspiration and I love your stories, too!

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  7. Celia, thanks for the recipe, but I will only look at it as I don’t like pumpkin. You did have me drooling at the floating islands though! I thought of you the other day, and was thinking that I should make Celia’s Rice Pudding – didn’t get there yet, but soon. Winter is coming, and dessert will need to be warm.

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    1. From Celia: You're welcome Margo. Yes I am not a pumpkin fan either but needs must for Thanksgiving. Make the rice pudding. In fact that's a brilliant idea for today but I think I am out of the correct rice - rats! As for the floating islands; all I can say is I was young and therefore invincible so never knew when to say no. I can't even remember if I had an electric mixer for the egg whites and real custard is always a challenge.

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  8. Replies
    1. From Celia: Many thanks Roberta, would work well down in the Keys.

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  9. I'm not a fan of pumpkin pie but this looks like a winner!

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    1. From Celia: Thanks Margaret, me neither.

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  10. You're a marvel, Celia. A hundred floating islands! I'd also love to know more about your catering career, including how it came about. Love the name British Butler, very clever.

    We are not especially big pumpkin fans, although all three daughters demand pumpkin pie for Thanksgivings when we are all together. One daughter makes a very complicated layered pumpkin mousse pie that requires baking twice, and I bet she would love this mousse recipe. Her tiny Greek kitchen does not inspire her to cook much right now, but later, for sure. So thank you, my dear.

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    1. From Celia: You're too kind Karen but looking back and it's a fifty year gaze now. I had one of those moments in the '70's when I decided I was a bad mother staying at home and no example to my daughter of 7. So I did an informal inventory of my 'skills' and decided that I cooked well and I sewed well. The sewing story must await another day. But the cooking story started with the Smoked Trout pate. It was our accountant who named my new biz. He was English too. What I didn't know could have covered the State of New York, but I did know how to cook and the basics of running a small, very small, tiny, business followed by trial and error. It was a great experience overall.

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    2. Great story! Maybe we can trade stories about using sewing skills at Crimebake

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    3. From Celia: so glad to know you’ll be at Crime Bake Karen. We are coming in on Thursday night. When do you arrive? My email is wakefieldpro gmail. Do get in touch.

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  11. I love the versatility of this recipe, Celia--googly eyes or elegant toppings! :-) Looks like a winner for any fall occasion! And your writing is great--when an author's voice shines through as yours does, it's a treat for the reader!

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    1. From Celia: Yes, thank you Flora, those eyes would be so great. Get any small one to eat up. Thank you so much for your lovely comments on my writing, that comment means so much to me. Blessings.

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  12. I've given up on pie making since it's just me. I found a great recipe for pear, apple, cranberry tarte tatin years ago. I make the filling and put in puff pastry to make handpies. This mousse recipe looks good but even making half the recipe might be too much for one person. I could make it for a potluck. I could put in a nice bowl and everyone help themselves. Now I just need to copy on to paper so I can put the refrigerator.

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    1. From Celia: I do understand Deana about pie and pastry making. In my case age is getting the better of me and while I read of the grandma's from the past who were still feeding five generations of family as they breathed their last, that's not me I fear. Yes the pumpkin mouse would be great for pot luck and I am going to play around and see if I can do a single or very small serving for those of us whose households have shrunk. I hope you have an opportunity to make it though.

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  13. I always love Celia Sundays! And am raising my hand as a fellow mom who loved to make costumes for her kids. (Aladdin was a big hit one year.)

    This mousse will be perfect for the gluten-free friend who always joins us on Thanksgiving. I'm copying out the recipe.

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    1. From Celia: Oh thank you Edith. Yes costumes may be my first love even before cooking. I need to think about that though. Gluten Free is the new whatever and there I was doing it back in the '80's. See you at NE Crime Bake.

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  14. I love all things pumpkin (except I'm not a fan of pumpkin latte!) Can't wait to try it. With whipped cream, of course.

    I used to love to make Halloween costumes for my son--and for myself. One year we had an adult party with our 3-year-olds so we could take them to just a few houses on the block and have a party. I found myself at one point having a serious conversation with the man who lived across the street. I happened to look past him and saw myself in the mirror, and I burst out laughing. How could he take me seriously when I was wearing a big red fright wig and a clown costume!

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    1. From Celia: You go Terry and if you're on Facebook please find me and let me know how it goes. Great costume stories. I'm sure your neighbor took you seriously red fright wig or not.

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  15. Pumpkin Pie is my favorite, though I am not always a fan of the crust. A relative bakes amazing pumpkin pies and that is the only time I like the crust. Not sure why.

    Your recipe for Pumpkin Mousse looks delicious. Since I cannot have Dairy anymore, I looked for alternatives like Dairy Free Heavy Cream and it looks like Silk offers Dairy Free Heavy Cream.

    Like Edith said, I love Celia Sundays! I love that you have that skill to create Halloween costumes.

    Diana

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    1. From Celia: Diana, I think that pie crust is an art. Probably more than the filling. I don't understand the chemistry behind the flour, fat, water, salt relationship but perhaps I'll learn it on that new 'Cooking with Chemistry' Apple TV show. Not sure I got the name right. But I do know that chilling is key as are cool hands and I think the rest is Carnegie Hall - Practice etc. Also of course, the taste and texture is rules by the fat used. Let me know how the cream alternative goes, I'm most interested. Thanks so much for your comments on the costumes and my offerings. JRW friends mean so much to me.

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  16. Celia - that looks so good. It would be perfect for my husband and grandson who are crazy about pie crust. But, would it work as a filling in a pie crust?

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    1. From Celia: Hello Anonymous, I'm sorry I don't know your name, but many thanks. I don't think you can bake this mousse, at least I would not. I think you might be able to make a crust such as a graham cracker crust. There are no bake recipes available but I haven't used them. I used to make fancy French type fruit tarts for my clients. I would make the sweet pastry, bake it blind till cooked, cool it and then wash it with apricot jam which is melted down and brushed over the pastry to seal it to avoid that dreaded 'soggy bottom'. Cool that and add your filling.

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  17. Oh, this looks delish! May try it for turkey day this year.

    I was startled to discover that pumpkin is an international favorite. My mother by grace was from Australia. When I invited her for a typical American thanksgiving she shared that in Australia, pumpkin is a common vegetable side dish, but never served as a dessert.

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    1. I read a lot of Australian recipes, but I thought their 'pumpkin' was what we would call squash - acorn, butternut, etc., not the big round pumpkin. I could be wrong...

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    2. From Celia: I hope you do try it Kait, and thank you. I don't know much about Australian cooking other than the Barbie, they have great weather and something called Lammingtons, a cookie. I've watched one Australian baking show and loved it. I hoped for another season, it was great fun. But what they do with pumpkins or squash is not in my wheelhouse.

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  18. This is like pumpkin pie without the inevitably soggy crust. I wonder if you could make some crispy crust and sprinkle it on the top? We could start a new line of desserts: pie fillings, hold the crust. Vanilla custard. Apple. And of course Pumpkin.

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    1. From Celia: Great idea Hallie, I did put a couple of notes on my answer to Anonymous about crusts, but I'm with you and GBBO, no soggy bottoms. I would be quite happy without that crust. Other than a tarte Tatin and a couple of other French tarts, none of which I make now, I'm all for off with the crust.

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    2. When I had mine, I had a similar thought, Hallie: you could sprinkle a streusel-style topping. For something sweeter and elegant, white chocolate shavings would be pretty and tasty.

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  19. Oh your posts are always so clever and clear—and so obviously come from your own loving experience. You know I have always said you are the perfect recipe presenter—and I adore your Sundays.
    Plus, this recipe is so wonderfully presented for people who enjoy the cooking journey as much as the results.

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    1. From Celia: Dear Hank, thank you so much, you are good for my soul. I've decided that apparently leaving out something does make for good comments and conversation.

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    1. From Celia: Thankyou so much, April? (Did I get your name right?). I hope you enjoy it if you choose to make it.

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  21. Sounds wonderful, Celia. I make a lot of pumpkin cakes at this time of year. My dad does insist on pumpkin pie for Thanksgiving though.

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    1. From Celia: thanks Jennifer, I think we must appreciate and accept tradition in whatever form. Perhaps you can make it for a different meal.

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  22. Hello, Celia dear, and thanks for telling us about how you adapted to Halloween and Thanksgiving traditions after you arrived in the US. As the person who moved in the other direction and left Halloween and Thanksgiving behind when I arrived in Switzerland, I have never yet found a Swiss who can stand to eat pumpkin pie; they've only just gotten used to winter squash of any kind in the past few years and certainly not as a dessert! But this delicious-sounding mousse may be a way I can get some of my Swiss friends to eat a pumpkin dessert! In any case, I'LL be eating it for sure.

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    1. From Celia: Kim, my dear friend thank you. Yes just replying to Jennifer on tradition. My American grandsons never embraced Christmas pudding other than want to help me set it on fire when I used to make it. I think I might let my fingers do the online walk this year for a pud. There is definitely compromise involved in moving countries and both adapting and adopting. From my reading of your books you have understood your adopted home very well.

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  23. Such fun as always, Celia! I'm not much of a desert maker but this I have to try. And I would definitely love to eat it!

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  24. A fun note: if you've ever tried cooking a pumpkin and wondered why it wasn't as good as the canned stuff, it's because canned pumpkin is not actually pumpkin, but a variety of squash called Dickinson. They are large and tan-colored, not orange.

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    1. From Celia: it is really quite delicious Debs, and I can’t remember if I ever tried to cook a pumpkin. Probably tasted it and went, No thank you. Though I think squashes make great soup.

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  25. Thanks for another fun recipe and lesson, Celia! The mousse looks so good but I doubt I'll ever make it. Frank is such a stick-in-the-mud. He wants his pumpkin in a pie!

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    1. From Celia: you’re welcome Pat, try making it for a different time. I’ll bet if you made some shortbread or bought some and served it with the mousse, you might get a convert

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  26. This sounds delicious. I have a recipe called Sweet Potato Soufflé. It’s ask at every family gathering. I put a little secret ingredient. Julia when I recommend your books I try to express them for readers as myself. You’re a
    sweet writer of mysteries . And I’m sure of other genres. However; I will not give out my recipe that many want until I see another Claire/Russ book. Full stop

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    1. From Celia: hello Anonymous, your sweet potato soufflé sounds delicious. I’ll keep after Julia, she is working very hard.

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  27. As Debs and others mentioned, there are alternatives to the round orange pumpkin. Kershaw/cushaw melon/squash makes a really good alternative to the jack-o'-lantern variety, and I recently discovered a new squash at the farmers market I hear is even better, called a Candy Roaster Squash. The farmer I bought one from says it is sweet and nutty and makes fantastic pies, among other things. Neither of these at all resemble pumpkins!

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    1. From Celia: I must really be a bit more adventurous where squash is concerned. Time to try new ways of prepping.

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  28. I never cared much for pumpkin pie until after I got married, I was introduced to my mother-in-law's recipe. I had always thought pumpkin pie was, well, too pumpkiny. However, my mother-in-law's recipe uses one can of pumpkin, regular size, for two pies. So, for years we enjoyed pumpkin pie for the holidays, with my MIL making them and then I started making them. Now, my daughter makes them.

    Celia, your mousse sounds and looks delicious. I like the idea of no crust.

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    1. From Celia: many thanks. I think most food comes down to its preparation and taste. However you have a real win here. How lovely to see a dish passed through the generations. We’ve been watching the Great American Cooking Show and I’m really impressed with the variety and mix of the people and food being produced.

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