Halloween Pumpkin Carving

October 30, 2009 by
Filed under: DIY 

Since my friend John bought me a white pumpkin from a pumpkin patch in Caledonia, Mississippi for Halloween, I decided that this year I would actually carve a pumpkin.  Every year we talk about carving one but thus far it has not happened.

My White Pumpkin

This is how I did it, well this is how John, Nikki and I did it:

  1. I placed the pumpkin on an old towel and found a pencil and a permanent marker to draw his face.  I was told this is not the first step and that I should cut the stem first but I didn’t want to do it that way.
  2. Next, I drew the face on my white pumpkin with the permanent marker because I thought it would be easy and didn’t need the pencil.  I failed.  So with Nikki laughing at me, I turned the pumpkin around and started over.
  3. I began cutting around the stem with the largest knife I could find, because it made sense to me that I needed the largest knife in my kitchen.  Under the advice of my friends I (a.) started using a smaller serrated knife and (b.) faced the blade away from my face. (Side note: White pumpkins smell like cantaloupes when you cut them.)

    Use a serrated knife to carefully cut around the pumpkin stalk.

    Use a serrated knife to carefully cut around the pumpkin stalk.

  4. Next I began to pull on the stalk.  Nothing happened even though I thought I was pulling really hard.  Nikki took the knife away from me and ran the knife around the stalk to make sure it was cut all the way through.
  5. Nikki was right.

    Pull the top off and scrape the pulp off, so that it is clean.

    The orange triangles are from the first face i tried to draw.

  6. Next, I used a spoon and pulled out all of the pulp and seeds.  The seeds I set aside because we plan on toasting them tonight.  The pulp went to the compost bin.  Our worms got a Halloween treat too.

    Set your seeds aside, you can toast them later. Compost the pulp.

    Now he needs a face.

  7. I finally cut his face.  This took way longer than it should have until John told me that Turby had mentioned that a pairing knife would work better.  He didn’t tell me himself because he had already offered some advice to which i replied “I don’t want to do it that way.”  Sometimes I make things harder than they are supposed to be.

    My Jack-O-Lantern is smiling or maybe yelling.

    My Jack-O-Lantern is smiling or maybe yelling.

  8. After his face was cut, I added a soy candle which was leftover from my recent wedding.  The soy candle I used is supposed to burn for 12 hours, which cuts down on the amount of candles I will use to amuse the trick-or-treaters and the amount of chemicals the candle will release while burning.

    I added a soy candle which can burn up to 12 hours.

    I added a soy candle which can burn up to 12 hours.


by Selena Faye

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Comments

3 Comments on Halloween Pumpkin Carving


  1. Amber Oswalt
    on Wed, Nov 11th 2009 @ 2:02 pm

    Hey! I want to start a compost pile! How can I do that?


  2. Backyard Composting | Faye Dodges Zombies
    on Fri, May 20th 2011 @ 5:15 pm

    [...]  We put in leaves, egg shells, coffee grounds, tea bags, any table scraps (except meat) and the pumpkin I carved for Halloween. It is really gross inside the compost [...]


  3. Backyard Composting | Porch Swing Media Blog Network
    on Fri, May 20th 2011 @ 5:15 pm

    [...]  We put in leaves, egg shells, coffee grounds, tea bags, any table scraps (except meat) and the pumpkin I carved for Halloween. It is really gross inside the compost [...]

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