A pie is probably one of my favorite things to bake... and pumpkin pie is right up there at the top of the list. Up until a couple years ago I made my pumpkin pies using a can of pureed pumpkin. I think way back a very long time ago I attempted to make a pumpkin pie from a really fresh pumpkin, directly from my garden. The pumpkins were great, but the process was tedious and quite messy... and I seem to remember them being too watery. I determined at that point that there was no way I would ever make a pumpkin pie from a whole pumpkin again.
Moving ahead to just a couple years ago, I read an article somewhere online about cooking a whole pumpkin in a crockpot. Of course that was preceded by discovering a recipe for Homemade Fresh Pumpkin Pie. I decided I would have to give fresh pumpkin a try... just this once. I proceeded to do a search to find the best way to cook a whole pumpkin... I found a technique I would not have thought to try... using a crockpot. It has been a couple years, maybe three since I discovered this new method of cooking the pumpkin. It is in my head... and I did think I made note of the process and/or link... but when I went to double check, because it is only in the Fall of the year when the pumpkins start showing up at the store that I need to remember. I cannot send you to a link, because none of them I found in my recent search are done like the one I use. That is when I decided I needed to document how I do this process.
 Now this is absolutely the easiest possible technique.  You buy a "pie pumpkin", also known as sugar pumpkins. I have a couple different size crockpots... the one I use for this is one of the smaller ones and these "pie pumpkins" fit perfectly.  I had to cut the stem end down a bit so the lid would sit properly.  After I wash the pumpkin, I put the pumpkin in the crockpot and put the lid on.  I did not add any water and I did not pierce the pumpkin.  Put the pumpkin in and close the lid.  Turn the crockpot to High and walk away.
Now this is absolutely the easiest possible technique.  You buy a "pie pumpkin", also known as sugar pumpkins. I have a couple different size crockpots... the one I use for this is one of the smaller ones and these "pie pumpkins" fit perfectly.  I had to cut the stem end down a bit so the lid would sit properly.  After I wash the pumpkin, I put the pumpkin in the crockpot and put the lid on.  I did not add any water and I did not pierce the pumpkin.  Put the pumpkin in and close the lid.  Turn the crockpot to High and walk away. There is no way that I would buy a can of pumpkin again... unless there was just not any fresh pumpkins to be found and I had used up all that I had frozen. Freezing the pureed pumpkin in 2 cup packages makes it easy to make a pumpkin pie when it just feels like a pumpkin pie day.
 
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