The Original Pumpkin Pie The Way The Pilgrims Made It (2024)

· 126 Comments

Jump to Recipe

I am SO excited about this recipe!! I just love it when an idea comes to fruition! This recipe for The Original Pumpkin Pie, the way the Pilgrims made it, is one I hope you will try and make it a new Thanksgiving tradition. This Thanksgiving pumpkin pie history is interesting to me.

The Original Pumpkin Pie The Way The Pilgrims Made It (1)

Table of Contents

I may not have been at the original Thanksgiving in America, however, the Pumpkin Pie recipe as we know it was not always the way it is made today.

The history when it comes to early American food and recipes can be traced to a handful of documents. Right or wrong, early America and its history did happen. All we can do is learn from it, and its mistakes, and hopefully always strive to be better.

What was the original Pumpkin Pie recipe?

  • 400-ish years ago at what we think of as the first Thanksgiving, in Plymouth (Massachusetts), the Pilgrims did not yet have flour and butter to make a pie crust for a traditional pumpkin pie recipe we know and love.
  • It was impossible to make any sort of pie crust.Plus, settlershadn'tyet come up with an oven for baking as we know it today.
  • American Indians used corn, acorns, cattails, seeds, nuts and a few other things to ground into flour. The first documented wheat harvest wasn't until 1839 in Kansas.

So where does Pumpkin Pie come from?

  • According tosome accounts, early English settlers in North America improvised by hollowing out pumpkins (which were plentiful), filling the shells with goat's milk, honey, and spices to make a custard, then they roasted the filled pumpkins whole in hot ash from the fire.
  • It is thought that after the custard had set/chilled, the pumpkin was then cut into wedges to enjoy, as food was not wasted.

The British have always liked their custard desserts.

This is a spectacular Thanksgiving dessert recipe as well as a Christmas dessert recipe. It's actually perfect for a fall dessert recipe in general. Especially after pumpkin picking, yum!

The Original Pumpkin Pie The Way The Pilgrims Made It (2)

A Pumpkin pie recipe as we know it didn't appear in an American cookbook until the early 19th century After finding this out years ago, in a blurb of historical text, I set out to try and replicate what the original Thanksgiving Pumpkin Pie, the way the pilgrims made it with ingredients available today. And of course an oven, lol!

Watch my 1 minute video of how to make this recipe on my TikTok.

It had been written a number of times that the American Indians did not eat any form of dairy. Indigenous peoples primarily fed themselves through a combination of hunting, fishing, foraging, and agriculture of corn, beans and squash.

I published this recipe back in 2013, since then SO many have made this for Thanksgiving and Christmas. LOVE that! I have even had teacher tell me they had their kids make it in Home Economics classes and cooking classes.

The idea of making pie in a pumpkin is super appealing to make even thought its actually custard baked in a pumpkin. Call it what you want, its delicious!!

Ingredients

  • sugar pumpkin (smaller pumpkins meant for baking about 5-6 inched high and approx 23 inches measured around the widest part. Circumference).
  • sugar
  • eggs
  • vanilla
  • heavy cream
  • cornstarch
  • salt
The Original Pumpkin Pie The Way The Pilgrims Made It (3)

Tips

  • First select small pumpkin4-5 inches in height and 20-23 inches or so in circumference (often referred to as a sugar pumpkin or pie pumpkin)
  • Carefully use a sharp knife to cut away an opening. Pumpkins are tough skinned, be careful when doing this. It does not have to be a perfect circle.
  • Be careful to not puncture the pumpkin down low to prevent leaks
  • Use a spoon to scrape away send and guts of the pumpkin.
  • Optional: reserve the top of the pumpkin to place alongside the dessert if you like (you can add it to roasting sheet the last 15 minutes if you wish.
  • Don't fill pumpkin to the brim, leave some headspace for custard to expand. It will puff up and then settle down lower as it cools.
  • Bake on a baking sheet. That is a must. Line the pan with parchment to make cleanup easier.
  • If it overflows, just let it go.
  • It doesn't need to have a browned top to be "done". If you want it a bit browned carefully broil for a few minutes, watching as it goes.
  • You can use smaller pumpkins for individual desserts, like those that fit in your palm, they are just difficult to cut open. Be careful You can microwave mini pumpkins for 60 seconds, and then in a couple 30 second bursts to make slicing tops off easier. Must be in small increments or pumpkin will burst.

Chef Tip

My TOP TIP is practice this before the big day, make it once before a holiday meal. This is the only recipe out of 700 on my blog I would say this about. It really is easy, however a test run before a holiday meal is recommended.

This delicious Thanksgiving dessert recipe is a beautiful centerpiece, and an edible history lesson.

This custard filled pumpkin is easy to make. It tastes a bit like crème brulee and the wonderful part is as you scrape out the custard to serve it you get bits of the roasted pumpkin mingling in. Yummy!!

Bonus! Since the pumpkin is the vessel for this Thanksgiving dessert recipe, no dished to clean!

Variations

  • To rush things you could begin to cook the custard stove top a bit and then pour into pumpkin(s) and finish in the oven.
  • Add seasonings to your custard like nutmeg, vanilla bean, cinnamon or pumpkin pie spice.
  • Choose to make as mini's for individual servings, a bit more work opening and cleaning the mini pumpkins but super cute!
The Original Pumpkin Pie The Way The Pilgrims Made It (5)

I hope you enjoy this fun and tasty recipe for dessert idea!!

Many teacher have written or messaged me the last 10 or so years saying they made this with their classroom as a Thanksgiving recipe. As well as so many people across the country and from Canada say they now have this pumpkin custard as a part of their annual family meal. Love that!

Enjoy your Thanksgiving with your family and/or friends! XO Colleen

Thanksgiving recipes to try

  • Nantucket Pie aka Cranberry Pie - This will be a new Thanksgiving and Christmas favorite!
  • Sweet Potato Stacks - A lighter take on sweet potatoes.
  • Sweet Potato Bread - If you have never had this prepare to fall in love!
  • Leftover Thanksgiving Balls - The reason WHY I make sure we have leftovers whenever there is turkey!!
  • Fall Mule co*cktail - Easy & delicious, if you like a Moscow Mule, you'll dig this!
  • Cranberry Pie aka Nantucket Pie
  • Maple Butter Sweet Potato Stacks
  • Leftover Turkey Stuffing Balls
  • Applejack Mule

This unique pumpkin recipe is just so fun and delicious to make, as well as an amazing Thanksgiving dessert idea. Make it with the kids when sugar pumpkins are available in the fall, just because 🙂 XO - Colleen

Recipe originally published 2013, updated 2023 with images and additional text.

The Original Pumpkin Pie The Way The Pilgrims Made It (10)

The Original Pumpkin Pie - The Way The Pilgrims Made It

Colleen Kennedy

The Original Pumpkin Pie recipe the way the pilgrims made it. Try making pumpkin pie the way it was first made by early Americans. A pumpkin with a custard filling. So delicious & different for a holiday dessert.

4.53 from 23 votes

Prep Time 15 minutes mins

Cook Time 1 hour hr

Total Time 1 hour hr 15 minutes mins

Course Dessert, Thanksgiving

Cuisine American

Servings 6 servings

Calories 402 kcal

Ingredients

  • 1 small pumpkin 4-5 inches in height and 20-23 inches in circumference (sugar pumpkin) You can also use a number of smaller pumpkins. They are just a little harder to cut out. I have done with success.
  • ¾ cup sugar
  • 3 large eggs plus 4 egg yolks
  • ½ TBS vanilla bean paste or vanilla extract
  • 2 cups heavy cream
  • 1 teaspoon of cornstarch
  • Pinch of salt

Instructions

  • Prepare your pumpkin by scooping out the seeds and pulp, place it on a baking sheet, do not put the top of the pumpkin (stem) on the sheet just yet.

  • Preheat oven to 400 degrees.

  • In a mixing bowl combine the sugar, eggs, and vanilla and whisk until combined.

  • Add the heavy cream, cornstarch, and salt and whisk until fully combined.

  • Pour mixture into your prepared pumpkin (allowing about ¾ of an inch space between the filling and the top of the pumpkin and begin baking it.

  • Bake at 400 degrees uncovered.

  • After 15 minutes, cover the top of the pumpkin loosely with foil (don't let it touch the top of the custard or it will stick and "ruin" the appearance) and bake another 15 minutes.

  • Lower oven temp to 375, place the top of the pumpkin on the tray and continue baking for 15 minutes more. Remover the foil and bake an additional 30 minutes or until a knife inserted into the custard comes out mostly clean.

  • Turn off the oven, allow the pumpkin to cool for an hour, then place it in your cold garage (loosely covered with wrap or foil) or your refrigerator and allow the custard to set 6 hours or overnight. (You can also enjoy it warm) When ready to serve, scoop out custard into small dishes (you can scrape the sides a bit as you scoop it out if you choose to scrape off some of the cooked pumpkin for additional flavor, I am sure the Pilgrims wasted nothing).

Notes

Choose to enjoy this warm from the oven or chilled. Delicious both ways.

Careful when you tent with foil, the top could become stuck. Baking on a center rack with top rack removed may lessen the need for foil, just keep at watch on it. Ovens will vary of course.

Cook time will vary, there is now way to know the size and density of the pumpkins you use.

I make extra custard 1.5 x the recipe in case I need it, (because again, never know the size of the inside of the chosen pumpkin) if I have leftover I cook in a ramekin and eat as a snack, yum!

You can also use a number of smaller pumpkins. Personal dessert pumpkins. They are just a little harder to cut out. I have done with success.

Nutrition

Serving: 6servingsCalories: 402kcalCarbohydrates: 27gProtein: 4gFat: 31gSaturated Fat: 19gPolyunsaturated Fat: 2gMonounsaturated Fat: 9gTrans Fat: 1gCholesterol: 191mgSodium: 62mgPotassium: 90mgSugar: 25gVitamin A: 1285IUVitamin C: 1mgCalcium: 64mgIron: 1mg

Keyword Custard Pumpkin Pie, Original Pumpkin Pie, Pilgrims Pumpkin Pie

Follow me on Tik Tok for 1 minute videos

The Original Pumpkin Pie The Way The Pilgrims Made It (2024)

FAQs

The Original Pumpkin Pie The Way The Pilgrims Made It? ›

Pumpkin Pie

How was the first pumpkin pie made? ›

Early American settlers of the Plymouth Colony in southern New England (1620-1692) may have made pumpkin pies, of sorts, without crusts. They stewed pumpkins or filled a hollowed out pumpkin shell with milk, honey and spices, and then baked it in hot ashes. Northeastern Native American tribes grew squash and pumpkins.

What did the Pilgrims do with pumpkins? ›

Early settlers used them in a wide variety of recipes from desserts to stews and soups. The origin of pumpkin pie is thought to have occurred when the colonists sliced off the pumpkin top, removed the seeds, and then filled it with milk, spices and honey. The pumpkin was then baked in the hot ashes of a dying fire.

Did the Pilgrims eat pumpkin pie? ›

Pumpkin Pie

Pilgrims liked pumpkins. According to accounts, they used to hollow them out, fill them with milk and honey to make a custard, and then roast the orange orbs in hot ashes. But when it came to making pies, the Pilgrims were essentially out of luck.

What four ingredients early colonists used to make the first pumpkin pies? ›

Colonists made the first pumpkin pies by slicing off pumpkin tops, removing the seeds and filling the insides with milk, spices and honey, then baking it all in hot ashes. Pumpkins were also used in the crust.

How was the first pie made? ›

From Egypt to Rome via Greece. The Ancient Egyptians were the first to invent a dish close to what we know as a pie today. They had a honey filling covered in a crusty cake made from oats, wheat, rye or barley. A recipe for chicken pie was also discovered on a tablet carved prior to 2000 BC.

What was the original purpose of the pumpkin? ›

History of the Pumpkin

For centuries the pumpkin was consumed and used in many ways by Native Americans. They would cook the flesh of the pumpkin by roasting, baking, boiling and drying it. They also ate the seeds of the pumpkin and sometimes used them as medicine.

What did the Pilgrims eat every day? ›

During the Mayflower's voyage, the Pilgrims' main diet would have consisted primarily of a cracker-like biscuit ("hard tack"), salt pork, dried meats including cow tongue, various pickled foods, oatmeal and other cereal grains, and fish. The primary beverage for everyone, including children, was beer.

What do pumpkins represent in the Bible? ›

The pumpkin is a symbol of abundance, prosperity and good fortune, and it is associated with the harvest season. The pumpkin's ability to produce so much food from a single seed is a testament to its importance as a food source of abundance. In the Bible, the blood of Jesus washes away our sins.

What did the Pilgrims actually do? ›

The people we know as Pilgrims have become so surrounded by legend that we are tempted to forget that they were real people. Against great odds, they made the famous 1620 voyage aboard the ship Mayflower and founded Plymouth Colony, but they were also ordinary English men and women.

What is the dark history of Thanksgiving? ›

"Thanksgiving day is a reminder of the genocide of millions of Native people, the theft of Native lands, and the relentless assault on Native culture," says the United American Indians of New England. They've marked the occasion as a day of mourning for 48 years, according to Native Hope.

What did pilgrims drink? ›

Suggesting that the Pilgrims might have had a tipple at their first Thanksgiving, Mancall says that the Pilgrims came from more urban places in England, where beer or cider was always preferred over water because it was more sanitary.

What food was missing from the first Thanksgiving? ›

It is also worth noting what was not present at the first Thanksgiving feast. There were no cloudlike heaps of mashed potatoes, since white potatoes had not yet crossed over from South America. There was no gravy either, since the colonists didn't yet have mills to produce flour.

Who invented pumpkin pie? ›

The 17th century French chef François Pierre La Varenne is credited with developing the first recipe for a “pompion” torte around 1650, complete with a pastry crust. English recipes including various dried fruits and nuts in the filling later followed La Varenne's prototype.

What type of fruit is pumpkin? ›

Botanically, pumpkin fruits are a type of berry known as a pepo.

Is pumpkin native to America? ›

Scientists believe that pumpkins originated in North America about 9000 years ago. The oldest pumpkin seeds have been found in Mexico and date back to somewhere between 7000-5550 B.C.. Pumpkins (along with other forms of squash) were a historically important food staple among Native Americans.

How did Native Americans cook pumpkin? ›

Native Americans cooked the squashes in all manner of ways: roasting them in the fire, cutting them into stews, pounding the dried flesh into a powder, or drying strips of it into something like vegetable jerky.

Is pumpkin pie actually made with pumpkins? ›

So the only real pumpkin pies out there are made by die-hard cooks who buy fresh pumpkins and then steam them so they can remove and puree the flesh. Everyone else is eating squash pie instead. And--it's not just pie.

Was pumpkin pie abolitionist? ›

But it wasn't until the mid-19th century that pumpkin pie gained political significance. The pie was a topic of conversation during the debate over slavery. In fact, many abolitionists were from New England, and they found their favorite dessert mentioned in novels, poems, and broadsides.

Why did pumpkin pie separate from crust? ›

According to the Libby's Pumpkin experts, if you see small bubbles in the filling around the edges of the pie, or if the filling separates from the crust, these are signs of overbaking. If either occurs, remove the pie from the oven immediately. Also, take care not to overbrown the edges of the pie pastry.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Horacio Brakus JD

Last Updated:

Views: 6068

Rating: 4 / 5 (51 voted)

Reviews: 90% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Horacio Brakus JD

Birthday: 1999-08-21

Address: Apt. 524 43384 Minnie Prairie, South Edda, MA 62804

Phone: +5931039998219

Job: Sales Strategist

Hobby: Sculling, Kitesurfing, Orienteering, Painting, Computer programming, Creative writing, Scuba diving

Introduction: My name is Horacio Brakus JD, I am a lively, splendid, jolly, vivacious, vast, cheerful, agreeable person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.