Pumpkin Quick Bread

Easier to make than fully from-scratch pumpkin pie and easy to store and transport, two-loaf quick bread recipes let you enjoy one loaf and gift the other. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
While most people of think of pumpkins for pie late in the year—I shared each homemade component over several weeks last year in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon—many of my homegrown sugar pumpkins end up in less labor-intensive dishes, like the quick bread recipe I share this week. I explain in my column how “quick” can be a bit misleading, since it still takes time to put the recipe together and an hour for the bread to bake, but compared with a yeast or sourdough bread or an all-scratch pie, it’s a speedy creation.

Quick breads have lots of advantages over other baked goods: they’re easy to store and transport, and I generally create two-loaf recipes so that I can slice and then freeze one to enjoy later, piece by piece. This time of year, the extra loaf also makes an easy holiday gift.
Learn to make Pumpkin Quick Bread

Creamy Roasted Pumpkin Pie

Here’s my favorite pumpkin pie recipe and all of the homemade components I put in it. Learn to make Creamy Roasted Pumpkin Pie. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
This week, I share my favorite pumpkin pie recipe in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon. It seems fitting not just for the season but also because the introduction to my first column a year ago began with Mike Kordenbrock’s story and Hunter D’Antuono’s photos of another family favorite: Crumble-Top Deep-Dish Apple Pie.

I almost always make one or both of these pies for Thanksgiving gatherings, and they’re delicious for other winter holiday feasts, birthday parties, family meals, and more. If you’re just now stumbling on this recipe, don’t worry: read it completely, decide how many of the components you want to make from scratch, and then remember it for a future holiday.
Learn to make Creamy Roasted Pumpkin Pie

Spiced and Roasted Pumpkin Seeds

You can spice pumpkin seeds with so many seasonings and can even roast the seeds of other winter squash in the same way. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
Roasted pumpkin seeds feature among my favorite homegrown, homemade snacks, not just because they’re delicious but also because they’re easy. You can spice them with so many seasonings and can even roast the seeds of other winter squash in the same way, as I explain this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon.

The hardest part of roasting pumpkin and other winter squash seeds is getting the stringy mess out of the squash—which you need to do anyway when you want to use the flesh. As you scrape out the seeds and soft center of the squash, pull off any large pieces of membrane, dump everything else in a bowl of warm water, and let it sit for a couple of minutes. I’ve found it easiest to clean the seeds by plunging my hands into the bowl, rubbing the seeds free of the warmed stringy bits, and then plopping the seeds into a large-holed colander to drain.
Learn to make Spiced and Roasted Pumpkin Seeds