previous
  • Top Brownie Recipes
    Top Brownie Recipes
  • 10 Ways to Eat Less Meat
    10 Ways to Eat Less Meat
  • Roast Chicken Redux
    Roast Chicken Redux
  • The Perfect Menu for Picnic Season
    The Perfect Menu for Picnic Season
  • Gluten-Free Baked Treats
    Gluten-Free Baked Treats
  • Homemade Applewood-Smoked Bacon
    Homemade Applewood-Smoked Bacon
  • Spring Vegetable Ragout with Fresh Pasta
    Spring Vegetable Ragout with Fresh Pasta
  • Classic Lattice-Top Blueberry Pie
    Classic Lattice-Top Blueberry Pie
  • Giveaway! Win Bruce Aidells’s Must-Have Grill Tools
    Giveaway! Win Bruce Aidells’s Must-Have Grill Tools
  • Summertime Sangria
    Summertime Sangria
  • Potato Salad Recipe: Create Your Own
    Potato Salad Recipe: Create Your Own
  • Macaroni and Cheese Recipe: Create Your Own
    Macaroni and Cheese Recipe: Create Your Own
  • Best Burgers On the Block
    Best Burgers On the Block
  • Southern Buttermilk Biscuits
    Southern Buttermilk Biscuits
  • Grow & Cook Your Own Fresh Peas
    Grow & Cook Your Own Fresh Peas
  • Fresh & Healthy Recipes
    Fresh & Healthy Recipes
  • Baconize It!
    Baconize It!
  • Cheesecake Recipe: Create Your Own
    Cheesecake Recipe: Create Your Own
  • Garden Party Cocktail
    Garden Party Cocktail
  • Sweet Strawberry Desserts
    Sweet Strawberry Desserts
next

Great Pumpkin Desserts

For warm flavor and velvety texture in cheesecake, bread pudding, cake (and pie, of course), look to pumpkin

Spiced Pumpkin Cheesecake.

Pumpkin is more than an ingredient. It’s a color, a shape, a memory of holidays and crisp leaves and cool air laced with wood smoke. Few vegetables have the power to evoke in our minds a whole season, an experience of time and history, of feasts and family and warmth. It’s just not the same with, say, celery.  

There are obvious reasons for pumpkin’s unique stature, not the least of which is that it makes a darn fine pie. The flavor—a luscious bite of the very essence of fall—is so connected to that season, in fact, that most of us don’t even consider it the other nine months of the year. But I love pumpkin all though the year, and at any time of day, from breakfast to dessert.  

The recipes that follow are four of my favorite ways to cook with pumpkin: bread pudding, cake, cheesecake, and pie. And while I’m all for seasonal eating, pumpkin is so good that you might just find yourself sneaking it into desserts and baked goods all through the year.

Pumpkin Bread Pudding.
Pumpkin & Cornmeal Cake with Orange Syrup.

What's in the can?

The recipes here call for canned pumpkin as opposed to fresh. Why? Because pumpkin is one of the few foods that’s actually better from a can. It’s virtually impossible to get a purée from a sugar pumpkin at home that’s as smooth, as consistently flavorful, and as dry as it is from that can in the supermarket. Look for labels that say “pure solid-pack pumpkin.” Don’t buy canned pumpkin pie filling, which is sweetened, seasoned, and often contains additives.

Photos: Scott Phillips
From Fine Cooking 60 , pp. 74-79
October 1, 2003