Kabocha pumpkin 'Shisigatani'
Cucurbita moschata
Kabocha or Japanese pumpkin originated in Mesoamerica and was brought to Japan in the late 1800s. Shishigatani kabocha was originally a flat, chrysanthemum-shaped pumpkin from Tohoku in the northern part of Japan. According to 1909 literature, a farmer in 1804-18 received pumpkin seeds from Tohoku and brought them back to Kyoto for plantIng. At first, he produced a normal chrysanthemum-shaped pumpkin, but there is a description that a unique gourd- or hourglass-shaped pumpkin was formed after a few years. From then on, it was cultivated in various parts of Kyoto, but after around 1920, consumer tastes shifted to western pumpkins and it gradually disappeared from the market. In Kyoto City, in order to protect various types of traditional vegetables, the city has established ordinances, and it has paid farmers to cultivate these pumpkins from seeds. Currently there are two farmers doing this.
Every July 25th, the Anrakuji Temple in Kyoto provides cooked Shishigatani kabocha dishes for people as a pumpkin memorial service, a traditional event that has continued for two centuries. It has been said that eating Shishigatani kabocha would protect people from illness.
To harvest this rare pumpkin, female flowers are tied up after being carefully pollinated, to ensure other pumpkin pollen does not mix with this rare species. As the fruit matures, it changes from green to orange. It has a higher nutritional value and contains more vitamin C than other pumpkins, but has a less sweet taste.
This pumpkin I painted was green initially, and the farmer waited until it turned orange before harvesting it. He said that his ancestors would polish the Shishigatani kabocha before taking them to the market to give them a beautiful luster. To draw this work, I went to the field every month to observe the process of pumpkin growth. At first, I intended to draw mainly the pumpkin itself, and thought about a simple composition. But as I sketched and observed its growth, I decided to incorporate various parts. The flowers would wither by 8 am, so I drove up to Kyoto at dawn to see them bloom. The female flowers are particularly large and wide, and the ovaries are not visible from the angle I chose for the drawing. When the sun rose higher, the flowers drooped, and seemed relieved to finish pollinating, but they were still beautiful, and now the interesting shape of the ovary was exposed.
Here is the abstract of an article by a cultural anthropologist about this kabocha, which appeared in the journal Food, Culture &Society. The article title is “Everything but the Taste: Kyoto’s Shishigatani Squash as Culinary Heritage”.
“The Shishigatani kabocha, an heirloom squash variety cultivated in Japan’s Kyoto Prefecture, epitomizes the celebrated un-delicious. Farmers, retailers, local officials, and consumers describe this heirloom variety as difficult to prepare and ‘not delicious.’ Yet the squash is valued: Kyoto City restaurants display it outside with other local produce to attract customers, and upscale department stores all over Japan feature it prominently in produce sections dedicated to heirloom vegetables. Kyoto’s Anraku Temple even holds a yearly Shishigatani kabocha ‘mass’ that attracts hundreds of visitors. This paper examines the reasons for the Shishigatani kabocha’s appeal and argues that cultural embeddedness and distinct attributes including an unusual shape can compensate for a less delicious flavor profile. In this paper, data obtained from interviews with farmers, local officials, retailers, and consumers are used, as well as participant observation at events including the annual mass at Anraku Temple. Comparing the Shishigatani kabocha with other heirloom vegetable varieties that have had less success reveals lessons about taste, agrobiodiversity, and the market potential of less palatable heirloom varieties.” 1
1 De St. Maurice, G. (2017). Everything but the Taste: Kyoto’s Shishigatani Squash as Culinary Heritage. Food, Culture & Society, 20, 281-301.
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Read more about this artist’s work: 22nd Annual