Pumpkin pie lacks aroma?

Pumpkin pie lacks aroma? - Yummy banana bread served with aromatic black tea

Every year around this time I try to make pumpkin pie. We don't have that many varieties around here so I use a fresh butternut squash that I bake and then puree. However, if the cooked squash is sweet and aromatic, when combined with the other ingredients for a pie, it loses that aroma and turns very bland. Or one of the spices overshadows the whole taste. I have tried a few different pumpkin pie recipes but they all turn out the same. A big disadvantage for me is that I haven't eaten a proper pumpkin pie (because where I live it's not very traditional), so I don't have anything to compare it with.

I would like to know if you had stumbled across similar issues when you made your pies and know how to correct them, or if that's just the way pumpkin pie should taste. I would expect it to taste at least as good as the cooked pumpkin, if not better.



Best Answer

Pumpkin pie where I come from (USA) is made with these big round orange squashes (we call them "pumpkins", but I believe that term is used for different things in some other countries). Unlike butternut squash, or other members of the squash family, our pumpkins aren't considered to be delicious cooked by themselves, and so people here pretty much only use them mixed with other tasty ingredients to make sweet dishes -- especially pies.

So the pies pretty much taste like the custard ingredients they are made with plus cinnamon, nutmeg, and the other "pumpkin pie spices" traditionally included. The moist texture is pretty much the only thing the pumpkin contributes to the finished product. In fact the pumpkin itself is such a minor contributor to the pie, that most people (I mean regular household cooks, not famous chefs or enthusiasts) will use canned pumpkin puree in a "homemade" pumpkin pie. However pumpkin pie is so traditional here, we tend to go on and on about how wonderful it is, and at winter holidays stores try to sell stuff scented with "pumpkin spice".... What that scent really is is just "spice"- mostly cinnamon.

I wonder if your expectations for pumpkin pie are a little too high, especially since all your recipes keep coming out similar, and "one of the spices overshadows the whole taste". I suspect that that's just the way pumpkin pie is supposed to taste. Even some Americans don't really like it.




Pictures about "Pumpkin pie lacks aroma?"

Pumpkin pie lacks aroma? - From above of tasty baked desserts near cup of aromatic espresso on stone table
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How do you enhance pumpkin flavor?

How to Do It
  • \u2153 cup ground cinnamon.
  • 1\xbd tablespoons ground ginger.
  • 1 tablespoon ground nutmeg.
  • 1\xbd teaspoons ground cloves.
  • 1\xbd teaspoons ground allspice.


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    Chowhound reports that Wayne Gisslen, author of Professional Baking, explains in his book, "an overbaked custard becomes watery because the moisture separates from the toughened protein." Unfortunately, you can't go back in time once you've overbaked your pie, but you can ensure the next one is just right by looking ...

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