Pumpkin pie has Indigenous roots. |
U.S. History |
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Pumpkin in all its many forms proved popular with the English, who eventually began cooking pies in the form we know today. And though pumpkin pie was not served at the first Thanksgiving, it has been a staple of the holiday for centuries; the town of Colchester, Connecticut, went so far as to delay the holiday by a week in 1705 because there wasn't enough molasses to prepare the dessert. As with much else in America, including Thanksgiving itself, none of this would be possible without the contributions of Indigenous people. The autumn treat remains popular to this day, with 36% of Americans citing it as their favorite Thanksgiving pie — more than twice the number that opt for pecan pie (17%) or apple pie (14%) instead. | |
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No one's sure how big pumpkins can get. | |||||||||
Pumpkins keep getting bigger, with new records set every few years. The current record holder, a pumpkin known as Michael Jordan, weighed 2,749 pounds and was grown in 2023; it dethroned a 2,702-pounder that was grown in Italy two years earlier, which beat a previous 2,624-pound Belgian pumpkin. This could be seen as an example of the Bannister Effect, which suggests that, once a seemingly unbreakable record is broken by one person, it becomes easier for other people to break it as well. But the trend is also evidence that no one actually knows how big pumpkins can get. At the first edition of the Half Moon Bay Safeway World Championship Pumpkin Weigh-Off, which was held in 1974, the winner was 132 pounds. That number seems positively puny now, and it's possible that the current record holder will likewise be eclipsed before too long — growers are already working on surpassing 3,000 pounds. | |||||||||
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