Once you’re done with pumpkin carving and pie baking, you’re left with the seeds, which not only taste nutty and rich but happen to be abundant in vitamin E, iron, and good fats. Roast your own (remove the stringy pulp and rinse well, dry, season with salt and olive oil, and roast until they begin to brown), or take a shortcut and use pre-hulled pepitas, like Deborah Snyder does in her pumpkin-seed brittle at Park Slope’s Bussaco. -- Robin Raisfeld & Rob Patronite
Ingredients
2 cups pepitas
1 tablespoon salt, divided
2 tablespoons light corn syrup
3 tablespoons butter
1 cup and 4 tablespoons of sugar
2 grinds with a pepper mill of white or black pepper
Pinch ground cinnamon
Instructions
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Toss the pumpkin seeds with 2
teaspoons of the salt and toast them on a parchment- or Silpat-lined
cookie sheet until lightly colored and fragrant, about 10 minutes. To
prepare the caramel, put the corn syrup and butter in a heavy
medium-size pot. (1) Add the sugar and about ¼ cup of
water to just moisten it. Melt the sugar over medium-high heat.
Continue to cook until the mixture takes on a hint of color, then add
the remaining salt and the pepper and cinnamon. Cook the caramel until
it turns a deep amber color and registers about 290 degrees on a candy
thermometer. (2) Remove pot from heat and add the seeds. (3) Stir
well with a lightly sprayed kitchen spoon or rubber spatula. Pour the
brittle out on a silicone pan liner or well-sprayed piece of parchment,
then slowly work the brittle thin with a greased or sprayed rolling
pin. Gently roll over the same sections until the brittle spreads and
thins to about 1/8 inch. Once the brittle has cooled and completely
hardened, break it into small pieces and store in airtight containers
for up to 2 weeks.
(Published 2008)
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