Pepita

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[puh-PEE-tahs] These edible pumpkin seeds are a popular ingredient in Mexican cooking. With their white hull removed, they are a medium-dark green and have a deliciously delicate flavor, which is even better when the seeds are roasted and salted. Pepitas are sold salted, roasted and raw, and with or without hulls.

Pumpkin seeds just scooped from the fruit
Pumpkin seeds after shelling, roasting, and salting

Pepita (from Mexican Spanish: pepita de calabaza, "little seed of squash") is a Spanish culinary term for the pumpkin seed, the edible seed of a pumpkin or other cultivar of squash (genus Cucurbita). The seeds are typically rather flat and asymmetrically oval, and light green in color inside a white hull. The word can refer either to the hulled kernel or unhulled whole seed, and most commonly refers to the roasted end product. The pressed oil of the roasted seeds of a specific pumpkin variety is also used in Central and Eastern European cuisine (see Pumpkin seed oil).[citation needed]

Pepitas are a popular ingredient in Mexican cuisine and are also roasted and served as a snack.[1] Marinated and roasted, they are an autumn seasonal favorite in the rural United States, as well as a commercially produced and distributed packaged snack, like sunflower seeds, available year-round. Pepitas are known by their Spanish name (usually shortened), and typically salted and sometimes spiced after roasting (and today also available as a packaged product), in Mexico and other Latin American countries, in the American Southwest, and in speciality and Mexican food stores. In the Americas, they have been eaten since at least the time of the Aztecs[citation needed] and probably much earlier, since squash was one of the three earliest plant domesticates in the Western Hemisphere, along with maize (corn) and common beans (collectively the Native American agricultural "Three Sisters", originating in Mexico).

As an ingredient in mole dishes, they are known in Spanish as pipián. A Mexican snack using pepitas in an artisan fashion is referred to as Pepitoría.

Lightly roasted, salted, unhulled pumpkin seeds are popular in Greece with the descriptive Italian name, passatempo ("pastime").

Contents

Nutrition

The seeds are also good sources of protein, as well as iron, zinc, manganese, magnesium, phosphorus, copper,[2] and potassium. In regards to iron, 25 grams of pepitas (about a US quarter-cup) can provide over 20 percent of the recommended daily iron intake[citation needed].

In 2007, Stevenson, et al., of the USDA's New Crops Products Research Unit searched the primary literature for information about the lipid content of pepitas, and then grew and analyzed pepitas from seven cultivars of C. maxima.[3] They found the following ranges of fatty acid content in C. maxima pepitas:

n:unsat Fatty acid name Percentage range
(14:0) Myristic acid 0.003-0.056
(16:0) Palmitic acid 1.6-8.0
(16:1) Palmitoleic acid 0.02-0.10
(18:0) Stearic acid 0.81-3.21
(18:1) Oleic acid 3.4-19.4
(18:2) Linoleic acid 5.1-20.4
(18:3) Linolenic acid 0.06-0.22
(20:0) Arachidic acid 0.06-0.21
(20:1) Gadoleic acid 0-0.035
(22:0) Behenic acid 0.02-0.12

The reported concentration of myristate and palmitate (the cholestrogenic fatty acids) for the pepitas ranged from 1.6% to 4.9%. The total unsaturated fatty acid concentration ranged from 9% to 21% of the pepita. 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 the twelve C. maxima cultivar seeds ranged from 4 to 19 mg/100 g of pepita.

Nutraceutical uses

The seeds (and seed oil, see below) of pumpkins, such as Cucurbita pepo varieties have been subject to a great deal of research, especially into the treatment of prostate ailments.[4]

Whole seeds or kernels

According to the USDA,[5] one gram of roasted pepita contain 5.69 mg L-tryptophan and one gram of pepita protein contains 17.2 mg[6] of L-tryptophan. One cup of milk contains 183 mg. This high tryptophan content makes pepita of interest to researchers studying the treatment of anxiety disorders.[7] Some eat the seeds as preventative measure against onset of anxiety attacks, clinical depression and other mood disorders.

Some studies[which?] have also found pumpkin seeds to prevent arteriosclerosis (hardening of the arteries) and to regulate cholesterol levels in the body.

A 2011 Egyptian study found that in rats, pumpkin seed oil has anti-hypertensive and cardio-protective properties.[8]

A 2009 double-blind, placebo-controlled Korean study found that in men suffering from benign prostatic hyperplasia (n=47), pumpkin seed oil is an effective treatment.[9]

The oil

The oil of pumpkin seeds, a culinary speciality in (and important export commodity of) Central European cuisine as a salad oil and a cooking oil, is also used to treat irritable bowel syndrome and various other ailments, both in folk medicine and in modern medical practice and research.

Long an Eastern European folk remedy for the prostate problems of men, the oil has in fact been shown to improve symptoms associated with an enlarged prostate due to benign prostatic hyperplasia. Components in pumpkin seed oil appear to interrupt the triggering of prostate cell multiplication by testosterone and DHT. It is questionable whether eating the seeds whole in snack quantities, rather than taking therapeutic doses of the concentrated oil, would provide any prostate benefit.[2][4]

In German folk medicine, the oil is also used to quell parasitic infestations such as tapeworms.[citation needed]

In Vietnam, consumption of relatively large numbers of seeds was seen to increase the evacuation rate of thread worms from the gastrointestinal tract[citation needed].

See also

References

  1. ^ Pepita Preparation[clarification needed]
  2. ^ a b World's Healthiest Foods[unreliable source?]
  3. ^ Stevenson, David G.; Eller, Fred J.; Wang, Liping; Jane, Jay-Lin; Wang, Tong; Inglett, George E. (2007). "Oil and Tocopherol Content and Composition of Pumpkin Seed Oil in 12 Cultivars". Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 55 (10): 4005–13. doi:10.1021/jf0706979. PMID 17439238.  The data are found in Tables 1-3 on pp. 4006-4010. http://ddr.nal.usda.gov/bitstream/10113/19116/1/IND43913544.pdf
  4. ^ a b See Pumpkin seed oil#References for extensive medical journal citations.
  5. ^ "Search the USDA National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference". Nal.usda.gov. http://www.nal.usda.gov/fnic/foodcomp/search/. Retrieved 2011-05-25. 
  6. ^ This second number was obtained by dividing the quantity of L-Tryptophan published by the USDA <http://www.nal.usda.gov/fnic/foodcomp/search/> in dried pumpkin seed by the total of the quantities of all the amino acids, and then multiplying by 1000 mg/g.
  7. ^ Hudson, C; Hudson, S; MacKenzie, J (2007). "Protein-source tryptophan as an efficacious treatment for social anxiety disorder: A pilot study". Canadian journal of physiology and pharmacology 85 (9): 928–32. doi:10.1139/Y07-082. PMID 18066139. 
  8. ^ El-Mosallamy, AE; Sleem, AA; Abdel-Salam, OM; Shaffie, N; Kenawy, SA (2011). "Antihypertensive and Cardioprotective Effects of Pumpkin Seed Oil". Journal of medicinal food: 111114095452002. doi:10.1089/jmf.2010.0299. PMID 22082068. 
  9. ^ Hong, H; Kim, CS; Maeng, S (2009). "Effects of pumpkin seed oil and saw palmetto oil in Korean men with symptomatic benign prostatic hyperplasia". Nutrition research and practice 3 (4): 323–7. doi:10.4162/nrp.2009.3.4.323. PMC 2809240. PMID 20098586. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pmcentrez&artid=2809240. 

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