pie pumpkin - Glossary Search
Top 15 glossary terms found
Displaying 1-15
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Term Name |
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Small in size, this variety of winter squash is grown to make homemade pumpkin pies and a variety of foods containing the flesh of this squash.
A premixed blend of spices, generally including cinnamon, allspice, nutmeg, ginger powder, mace and cloves, which is used to enhance the flavor of pumpkin pie.
A type of winter squash that develops an orange outer skin with a golden inner flesh. The sizes of Pumpkins can range from very small to very large weighing close to 1000 lbs when exceptionally large.
A condiment or an ingredient that is most often served to accompany fall or winter foods, but is certainly enjoyed year around.
Pumpkin seed oil, which is dark, opaque, and has a thick consistency, is obtained from roasted pumpkin seeds.
An unusual bread prepared with a dough made of bread flour and flavored with roasted pumpkin seeds. The bread features a soft, flaky crust, and a soft and slightly spongy interior....
A sweet quick bread usually prepared with all-purpose flour and flavored with pumpkin and a variety of spices including, cinnamon, nutmeg, and cloves.
The edible seeds found in a pumpkin, which are available with or without the hulls, in a raw, roasted, and salted form.
A member of the pumpkin family, this vegetable is a thick-skinned pumpkin-shaped squash that ranges in diameter from 8 to 12 inches with an average weight of 3 to 4 pounds.
A round pumpkin-shaped squash that is found in a variety of sizes ranging from a few inches in diameter, similar to a small canteloupe up to two feet.
A winter squash, typically weighing 5 to 7 pounds, that is round in shape and grows with a very distinctive protruding ring around the flower end opposite the stem end.
Similar in appearance to a pumpkin, this variety of squash is a Kabocha winter squash that has a bright reddish-orange skin.
A winter squash with a thick bumpy skin that may range in color from grayish-blue (Baby-blue and blue hubbard) to green (Green hubbard) to bright orange (Golden hubbard).
A type of vegetable considered to be a pumpkin and squash heirloom variety that is often used as a decorative squash rather than an eating squash.
A winter squash that has a long, pear-shape covered with a smooth tan skin that surrounds a golden-orange, somewhat fiberous flesh.
Top 15 glossary terms found
Displaying 1-15