February 11, 2009 7:02 PM
- Text
White, The New Orange For Pumpkins
(AP)
These pumpkins look like something scared THEM.
Eerie-looking white pumpkins — naturally white, not painted — are finding their way into more and more homes this Halloween season.
The albinos are called Ghost pumpkins, Snowballs, Luminas or Caspers — presumably a reference to the friendly ghost. And the ones about the size of a baseball? Baby Boos.
White pumpkins are a little bit more expensive than their orange cousins. But parents and party planners say they are more ghoulish and offer a better canvas for drawing or painting a jack-o'-lantern face.
Victoria Pericon, author of "Mommy Land: Entering the Insanity of Motherhood," spotted white pumpkins this year for the first time in New York City and thinks her crayon-wielding 2-year-old daughter "will be crawling all over this thing."
Those who carve the pumpkins will find they still have orange flesh beneath the white rind, adding to their ghostly appeal when a candle is put inside.
"When you get a dark night, I think they're going to look pretty cool outside," said Karla Neely, a Dallas public relations account executive who bought a white pumpkin for her home last week. "They seem like they will almost glow."
White pumpkins — simply another variety of the autumn favorite — have been around for a while, but what was once a curiosity at farmers markets is now making the scene at larger groceries and pumpkin patches.
Gensler Gardens, a family farm near Rockford, decided to grow 6,000 white pumpkins this year because the 1,000 last year proved such a hit. But more than a week before Halloween, all 6,000 had been sold, and the Genslers will probably grow 20,000 next year, Scott Gensler said.
"White has become a strong decorating element in people's homes," said Nancy Soriano, editor in chief of Country Living magazine, which put pumpkins that had been painted white on its cover last October. "They might have white pottery, sofas, and white pumpkins add a very iconic look."
Deborah Racicot, the executive pastry chef at Gotham Bar and Grill in New York has been carving white pumpkins up for years to display at her house.
"People that are throwing parties tend to buy them," Racicot said. "These guys ... are looking for the coolest thing to make their party a little more chic than normal."
Eerie-looking white pumpkins — naturally white, not painted — are finding their way into more and more homes this Halloween season.
The albinos are called Ghost pumpkins, Snowballs, Luminas or Caspers — presumably a reference to the friendly ghost. And the ones about the size of a baseball? Baby Boos.
White pumpkins are a little bit more expensive than their orange cousins. But parents and party planners say they are more ghoulish and offer a better canvas for drawing or painting a jack-o'-lantern face.
Victoria Pericon, author of "Mommy Land: Entering the Insanity of Motherhood," spotted white pumpkins this year for the first time in New York City and thinks her crayon-wielding 2-year-old daughter "will be crawling all over this thing."
Those who carve the pumpkins will find they still have orange flesh beneath the white rind, adding to their ghostly appeal when a candle is put inside.
"When you get a dark night, I think they're going to look pretty cool outside," said Karla Neely, a Dallas public relations account executive who bought a white pumpkin for her home last week. "They seem like they will almost glow."
White pumpkins — simply another variety of the autumn favorite — have been around for a while, but what was once a curiosity at farmers markets is now making the scene at larger groceries and pumpkin patches.
Gensler Gardens, a family farm near Rockford, decided to grow 6,000 white pumpkins this year because the 1,000 last year proved such a hit. But more than a week before Halloween, all 6,000 had been sold, and the Genslers will probably grow 20,000 next year, Scott Gensler said.
"White has become a strong decorating element in people's homes," said Nancy Soriano, editor in chief of Country Living magazine, which put pumpkins that had been painted white on its cover last October. "They might have white pottery, sofas, and white pumpkins add a very iconic look."
Deborah Racicot, the executive pastry chef at Gotham Bar and Grill in New York has been carving white pumpkins up for years to display at her house.
"People that are throwing parties tend to buy them," Racicot said. "These guys ... are looking for the coolest thing to make their party a little more chic than normal."
-
Stephen Smith Stephen Smith is a news producer and sports editor for CBSNews.com
Latest Now in National
- Autopsy on Whitney Houston to begin Sunday
- Experts: Stanford's trial not won with 1 witness
- Drillers cut natural gas production as prices drop
- Man charged in plot to kill Utah governor
- Nature: Bobcats riding out the snow
- US seeks to mine social media to predict future
- RI player wins $336 million Powerball jackpot
- How the revolution became digitized
- Celebs mourn Whitney Houston at Clive Davis event
- The nation's weather
- Whitney Houston fans pay emotional tribute
- Hudson to honor Houston at Grammys
- Man to face Alabama trial in wife's diving death
- Whitney Houston's final performance
- Remembering Whitney Houston 1963-2012
- Screenplay for Murder
- Extra: Jimmy Siokos on Mark Twitchell
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News
- Autopsy on Whitney Houston to begin Sunday
- Clarissa Ward on reporting from Syria
- Whitney Houston's death overshadows Grammys
- Experts: Stanford's trial not won with 1 witness
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News






