Article 6GK8A Preparing a Historic ‘Pumpion’ Pie Recipe From 1670

Preparing a Historic ‘Pumpion’ Pie Recipe From 1670

by
Lori Dorn
from Laughing Squid on (#6GK8A)
Story Image

Max MillerofTasting History, who previously shared a 1796 recipe for pompkin" pie, reached back further into history to find the earliest version of the dessert known as a pumpion pie from 1670. The recipe comes from The Queene-like Closet" by Hannah Wolley.

So today we are making one of the first recipes for that dessert: pumpion pie. That's right, a recipe so old that they hadn't even added the k' yet. Pumpion pie...Today's recipe comes from the 1670 cookbook The Queene-like Closet" by Hannah Wolley.

Miller also shared the interesting history of pumpkin pie.

Now the first recipes that I could find for pumpkinpie' came from the Opera di Bartolomeo Scappi from 1570....Anyway Scappi has several different recipes forpumpkin torts or cakes or pies the meaning is kind of nebulous at that point. One of them has pumpkin and onions so kind of savory, and then one of them is made with pumpkin and creamy cheeses, and eggs and sugar and kind of sounds like an early pumpkincheesecake.

He also breaks down why there couldn't be pumpkin pie at the first Thanksgiving feast.

... All I'll say for now is that they were definitely not eating pumpkin pies or any pies at that first Thanksgiving because they didn't haveany flour for crust, they didn't have any sugar for filling and they didn't have ovens for baking. In fact, they were rather woefully unprepared for their trip to the New World. But while they didn't eat pumpkin pie, they did eat pumpkin because the Wampanoag/Wopanaak had been growing them in the area for centuries, and they not only ate the pumpkin, but they used the pumpkin itself as a serving vessel. Kind oflike a pumpkin bowl,

External Content
Source RSS or Atom Feed
Feed Location http://laughingsquid.com/feed/
Feed Title Laughing Squid
Feed Link https://laughingsquid.com/
Reply 0 comments