07 Nov
07Nov

The origins of the Seminole Pumpkin are recorded in 1528 when Panfilo de Narvaez was exploring the gulf area in Southwest Florida. The Indigenous peoples of the Miccosukee, Calusa, and Creek grew it in a region named Chassahowitza which is an area Central Florida. The name they gave to this pumpkin was "pumpkin hanging place" because the area was full of hanging pumpkins. Check where it can grow and how you can prepare it in this episode.




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