A pumpkin seed, also known as a pepita (from the Mexican Spanish; Castilian: pepita de calabaza, 'little seed of squash'), is the edible seed of a pumpkin or certain other cultivars of squash. The seeds are typically flat and oval with one axis of symmetry, have a white outer husk, and are light green in color after the husk is removed. Some pumpkin cultivars are huskless, and are grown only for their edible seed.[1] The seeds are nutrient- and calorie-rich, with an especially high content of fat (particularly linoleic acid and oleic acid), protein, dietary fiber, and numerous micronutrients. Pumpkin seed can refer either to the hulled kernel or unhulled whole seed, and most commonly refers to the roasted end product used as a snack.
Pumpkin seeds are a common ingredient in Mexican cuisine and are also roasted and served as a snack.[2] Marinated and roasted, they are an autumn seasonal snack in the United States, as well as a commercially produced and distributed packaged snack, like sunflower seeds, available year-round. Pepitas are known in the US by their Spanish name (usually shortened), and typically salted and sometimes spiced after roasting. They are also available as a packaged product in Mexico and other Latin American countries, in the American Southwest, and in specialty and Mexican food stores.
The earliest known evidence of the domestication of Cucurbita dates back 8,000–10,000 years ago, predating the domestication of other crops such as maize and common beans in the region by about 4,000 years. Changes in fruit shape and color indicate intentional breeding of C. pepo occurred by no later than 8,000 years ago.[3] [4] The process to develop the agricultural knowledge of crop domestication took place over 5,000–6,500 years in Mesoamerica. Squash was domesticated first, with maize second, followed by beans, all becoming part of the Three Sisters agricultural system.[5] [6]
As an ingredient in mole dishes, they are known in Mexican Spanish as . A salsa made of pumpkin seeds and known as is a traditional dish of the Yucatán.[7] [8] A Mexican snack using pepitas in an artisan fashion is referred to as . Lightly roasted, salted, unhulled pumpkin seeds are popular in Greece with the descriptive name Greek, Modern (1453-);: πασατέμπο|label=none|translit=pasatémbo, from Italian: passatempo||lit=pastime.
The pressed oil of the roasted seeds of a Cucurbita pepo subsp. pepo var. 'styriaca' is also used in Central and Eastern Europe cuisine.[9] [10] Pumpkin seeds can also be made into a nut butter.Pumpkin seeds can also be steeped in neutral alcohol, which is then distilled to produce an eau de vie.[11]
Dried, roasted pumpkin seeds are 2% water, 49% fat, 15% carbohydrates, and 30% protein (table). In a 100-gram reference serving, the seeds are energy-dense, and a rich source (20% of the Daily Value, DV, or higher) of protein, dietary fiber, niacin, iron, zinc, manganese, magnesium, and phosphorus (table). The seeds are a moderate source (10–19% DV) of riboflavin, folate, pantothenic acid, sodium, and potassium (table). Major fatty acids in pumpkin seeds are linoleic acid and oleic acid, with palmitic acid and stearic acid in lesser amounts (source in table).
Pumpkin seed oil, a culinary specialty in and important export commodity of Central Europe, is used in cuisine as a salad and cooking oil.
The following are ranges of fatty acid content in C. maxima pepitas:[12]
n:unsat | Fatty acid name | Percentage range | |
---|---|---|---|
(14:0) | 0.003–0.056 | ||
(16:0) | 1.6–8.0 | ||
(16:1) | 0.02–0.10 | ||
(18:0) | 0.81–3.21 | ||
(18:1) | 3.4–19.4 | ||
(18:2) | 5.1–20.4 | ||
(18:3) | 0.06–0.22 | ||
(20:0) | 0.06–0.21 | ||
(20:1) | 0–0.035 | ||
(22:0) | 0.02–0.12 |
The total unsaturated fatty acid concentration ranged from 9% to 21% of the pepita.[12] The total fat content ranged from 11% to 52%. Based on the quantity of alpha-tocopherol extracted in the oil, the vitamin E content of twelve C. maxima cultivar seeds ranged from 4 to 19 mg/100 g of pepita.[12]
Pumpkin seeds were once used as an anthelmintic in traditional medicine to expel tapeworms parasites, such as Taenia tapeworms.[13] This led to the seeds being listed in the United States Pharmacopoeia as an antiparasitic from 1863 until 1936.[14]
Due to their versatility as a food product ingredient or snack, pumpkin seeds are projected to grow in sales by 13% annually and reach $631 million from 2020 to 2024.[15]