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Jack
O' Lantern Carving 101
By Cheri Sicard
Before
you can begin to carve your design, you must prepare the pumpkin
by removing the seeds and thinning the inner walls (save the seeds
to make roasted
pumpkin seeds, a wholesome snack). Depending on the complexity
of your design, allow an hour or more to make your Jack O Lantern.
By the way, the techniques outlined below will also work for carving
turnips, some squash or even watermelons.
You can gain access
to the inside of the pumpkin by cutting a small hole in the bottom,
which works especially well if your pumpkin doesn't want to stand
up straight. You can discard the portion that is cut, then set
the pumpkin over a candle to light.
Alternatively, you can
cut out around the top stem, but be careful not to cut in a circle
or the top will fall through when you try to replace the lid after
carving. Instead, cut hexagon or six-sided shape with the stem
in the center.
When cutting a lid,
it helps to angle the blade of your knife or saw inward, so it
creates a small lip for the lid to rest upon. Once you've gained
access to the pumpkin, use a large scoop to remove the seeds and
strings, then continue to scrape away on the inside of the pumpkin
until the walls are no more than 1" thick. You can make more elaborate
designs by scraping some areas thinner than other, or even away
scraping away designs so that the light shines through strategic
areas of the pumpkin wall, but for overall carving, scrape the
walls to about a 1 inch thickness. If you need to check, you can
do so with a pushpin or poker.
Trim
away the excess paper from your pattern with scissors (click
here for some awesome free patterns). Attach the pattern to
the pumpkin with tape or straight pins. If you have the time,
an easier way of transferring the design to your pumpkin is to
soak the paper pattern in water to help it stick to the pumpkin.
Once you have the pattern in place, use tacks to hold it there
and allow it to dry completely - several hours -- before starting
to transfer the design.
Using a poker tool to
poke holes around the design lines. Do not push poker all the
way into the pumpkin. Use just the tip to poke through the paper
and outer pumpkin skin. Check to see that all the lines have been
transferred before removing the pattern. On large designs you
can use the larger poker and place the dots farther apart, but
for detailed designs, use the small poker and place the dots close
together.
The drill tool is used
to make small round holes in the pumpkin and the time to use it
is before carving the larger parts of your design, remember always
cut out smaller parts first, larger parts last. To use the drill
tool, push the very tip through the pumpkin skin, then hold the
drill near the end and with gentle pressure, begin twisting the
tool into the pumpkin. Keeping the drill at a 90-degree angle,
grasp the handle and continue turning until the hole is complete.
The poker tool can also be used as a drill by pushing it all the
way into the pumpkin.
Remove
the pattern and rub some ordinary flour over the design to make
the dots easier to see. Now the time has come to connect the dots
and carve your design.
Use the larger saw
for the big areas and the tiny detail saw for the smaller, more
intricate areas. It's usually easiest to hold the pumpkin in your
lap, and hold the saw as you would a pencil. Push the blade into
pumpkin or, if necessary, rock it gently forward and back to insert
it. The saws are somewhat fragile, especially the finer ones.
Don't put too much pressure on them or they will break.
Saw with a continuous
up-and-down motion, with gentle forward pressure. In order to
avoid putting pressure on carved (and therefore weakened) areas,
carve your design from the center outward, beginning with the
smaller details.
The last step is to
anchor a candle inside (tinfoil makes a good candleholder) and
light it. See where the smoke blackens a spot on the lid, then
cut a small chimney hole there, so heat and smoke can escape.
Cheri
Sicard is the editor of FabulousFoods.com, a favorite net destination
for recipes, cooking tutorials, holiday and entertaining ideas,
celebrity chef interviews, cookbook reviews and more. Sign up
for their free cooking newsletters! http://www.fabulousfoods.com
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