National Pumpkin Pie Day
Tuck into a slice of spiced squash filling wrapped in a pastry crust, top with cream for extra sweetness and perfect your homemade pie recipe.
Drive December dessert sales and bakery foot traffic by positioning pumpkin pie as a seasonal must-have treat with pre-order promotions and recipe content.
- Share homemade pumpkin pie recipes and baking tips to engage home cooks
- Highlight bakery pre-order specials to capture early holiday demand
- Feature creative pumpkin pie variations (vegan, gluten-free, gourmet toppings)
- Run user-generated content campaigns showcasing customer pumpkin pie celebrations
The background of National Pumpkin Pie Day is inextricably linked to the history of this delectable dessert!
The pumpkin has become an international symbol of harvest time, and is often featured also at Halloween in the form of jack-o-lanterns and other autumn decorations.
However, the pumpkin can be used for much more than simply carving. It has a whole host of options for use in recipes–and it’s actually a rather nutritious food (although not quite as much when so much sugar is added to it).
The pie made from this gourd consists of a pumpkin-based custard, ranging in color from orange to brown. It is baked in a single pastry shell, and does not normally contain a top crust.
Pumpkin pie is generally flavored with nutmeg, cinnamon, cloves and ginger–a combination of which is often referred to as “pumpkin pie spice”, the inspiration for the famous coffee drink.
Pumpkin pie is often made from canned pumpkin or packaged pumpkin pie filling (spices included) but can also be made from freshly harvested and cooked pumpkin.
Pumpkin pie is a seasonal product available in bakeries and grocery stores in the USA, although it might be possible to find it year-round in some places.
The history of the pumpkin pie is a little fuzzy, but its origins seem to date back approximately 400 years. This was in the early 1600s, when settlers in the New World may have used the gourds to make some sort of pie.
Although they probably didn’t use crusts and likely were not as sweet as they are today, they might have been flavored with honey and certain spices.
Even though the Americans claim this pie as their tradition, one of the first known recipes for something resembling pumpkin pie with a crust can be found in French and English cookbooks dating back to the late 1600s.
It took another hundred years or so before pumpkin pie resembling what we know it as today would appear in an American cookbook, American Cookery, by an American Orphan written by Amelia Simmons.
And now, National Pumpkin Pie Day can be celebrated by anyone, all throughout the world!
Eat Some Pumpkin Pie
During this time of year, pumpkin pies can be found in many bakeries and grocery stores around the US and other places in the world. But since it’s a popular holiday, it might be a good idea to order pies ahead from a favorite bakery, to make sure they’re available for the celebration. Whether eaten with whipped cream or a scoop of ice cream on top, pumpkin pie is a tasty treat!
Compete for the World’s Biggest Pumpkin Pie
Interested in earning a Guinness World Record? Perhaps the title of World’s Largest Pumpkin Pie could be challenged. The current record was set in 2010 by those at the New Bremen Pumpkinfest in New Bremen, Ohio. It contained almost 2800 eggs, more than 1200 pounds of canned pumpkin and 14 pounds of cinnamon. The final result was a pie weighing almost 3700 pounds and measuring 20 feet in diameter. Now that’s a pumpkin pie!