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IssuesNovember/December 2011Food

Homegrown: One-Pie Town

by Aimee Seavey

YK1111_custard.jpg
Credit: Ekaterina Smirnova
YK1111_ingredients.jpg
Credit: Ekaterina Smirnova

The holiday season arrives under many banners: Pilgrim plays at school, the bloom of Christmas lights. For me, it's heralded by a craving for all things pumpkin. The flavor of this seasonal staple (along with its supporting cast of cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger, and clove) fills me with a longing that's as powerful as it is prompt, arriving every year with the first frost and lingering through New Year's.

And it's not just pumpkin I crave, but One-Pie canned pumpkin purée. It's New England's unofficial brand--the same brand used by my mother before me. The flavor is rich and consistent, the texture perfect. And truth be told, I can't resist the label, which hasn't changed in at least 50 years and looks even older. When it comes to my pumpkin, I accept no substitute.

But despite my deep attachment, I realized that I knew almost nothing about One-Pie. A glance at the label assured me that it hails from West Paris, Maine. But my preliminary research on the company behind it yielded nothing: no Web site, no advertising, not even a voice on the line. Weeks of calls to headquarters led only to unreturned messages. Was our beloved brand a chimera?

Finally ... an actual person in West Paris, who picked up the phone and led me to Jim Sheridan, a former account manager for Johnson O'Hare, a regional food broker based in Billerica, Massachusetts. Jim is now mostly retired, but he handled the One-Pie account for 10 years, and he understands our loyalty. In fact, that loyalty is now reaching beyond New England. When one supermarket chain carrying the brand expanded into upstate New York, Sheridan says a rival market "had to start carrying it as well to compete."

One-Pie's history is rooted in Maine's 19th- and early-20th-century food-products boom, when the state was home to well over 100 canneries. Maine, with its teeming waters and cool climate, shipped and sold sardines, sweet corn, beans, apples, and, yes, pumpkin. One-Pie canned pumpkin (the company also offers canned squash) officially got its start at the Medomak Canning Co. in Winslows Mills, a village within the town of Waldoboro.

Alas, most of those canneries are now gone, and though One-Pie is still distributed from West Paris, Maine, it's made in Illinois. Still, it holds a special place here in New England, where taste and tradition mingle, and a great-looking label doesn't hurt, either.

The following recipes make the most of this prized New England staple. One--a family recipe from Yankee lifestyle editor Amy Traverso--transforms traditional pumpkin-pie filling into a fluffy custard, its texture somewhere between pudding and soufflé. The second is another twist on a familiar favorite: pumpkin streusel bar cookies, with a creamy pumpkin center and crumbly top. Happy Holidays!

Pumpkin Custard

Pumpkin Streusel Bars

Reader CommentsRSS

Comment from Louise Crossman on November 10, 2011

My Mother used the One Pie Squash every year to make my favorite pie at Thanksgiving and on my Birthday. She always used the recipe on the label. Does anyone have any idea where I could get some One Pie Squash? It would really make my day.

I have tried using pureed Butternut squash to make that pie, but it\'s not the same. The One Pie squash is very smooth and regular Butternut squash is grainy like pumpkin.

Comment from Aimee Seavey on November 14, 2011

Hi Louise! I saw some One-Pie Squash next to the One-Pie Pumpkin this weekend at Market Basket. The stores usually stock both One-Pie Pumpkin and Squash together - but only for a brief window of time! I would suggest calling a few stores and ask before venturing out...good luck, and thanks for sharing your pie memories!

Comment from Elaine Monsen on November 14, 2011

Yes, I too, was looking for the squash and was lucky to find it this past weekend at my local Market Basket grocery store. Everyone loves pumpkin, but my personal choice has and always will be homemade squash pie!!! Following a big Thanksgiving dinner, the squash pie is lighter and not so heavy.

Comment from Aimee Seavey on November 14, 2011

I confess I have never had squash pie - I might have to try it this year!

Comment from CallMe Joe on December 5, 2011

We've made both pumpkin pie and squash pie using the One-Pie pumpkin and squash cans, and there's absolutely no contest. The squash pie is definitely the best. We were so delighted to finally finding One-Pie Squash this year on 11/9/11 at Hannaford in Londonderry, NH, and later in Hudson, NH, at Market Basket.

Another product we saw mentioned at the One-Pie merchant review site < merchantcircle.com/business/One.Pie.Canning.Maple.207-674-3920/review/list > is Stewart's MacIntosh Applesauce. Any idea where we could find it?

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