The Guardian Australia

Move over pumpkins! A swede, which looks like a preserved head dug up from a bog, is far more terrifying

- Emma Beddington Emma Beddington is a Guardian columnist

Halloween is a time of tradition and I have two: reminiscin­g about my former homeland Belgium’s surly semicapitu­lation to this unwelcome US import – an uncarved, often green squash dumped unceremoni­ously on the doorstep – and tirelessly talking up turnips.

Why is a swede (turnip for Scots – my heritage) lantern better than a pumpkin one? First, pumpkins – garish and slimy, the worst of vegetables but with peerless PR – are due a comeuppanc­e. What other gourd is uppity enough to become a leisure activity in its own right? My local farm shop has pivoted entirely to “pumpkin patch” for the month, with costumed helpers and themed snacks: an incongruou­sly wholesome way to contemplat­e our own mortality.

Swedes, in contrast, are innately terrifying. Even before carving, their natural skull shape means they look like a peat-preserved head you might excavate from a bog, unwittingl­y unleashing an ancestral curse. Clodagh Doyle, the keeper of terrifying carved roots (OK, the keeper of the folklife division) at the National Museum of Ireland, rightly describes the model of an early 20th-century turnip lantern in its collection as “pretty scary and awful”.

Second, unlike the too-convenient­ly hollow pumpkin, swede is one of the hardest substances known to humanity. I have treasured childhood memories of watching my stepfather, hunched over the kitchen table, grimly whittling the unyielding, adamantine mass with a small knife and a teaspoon – truly “the austere and lonely offices of love”, that. He claims there were “no pumpkins in York in the 1980s” but his eyes light up with masochisti­c pleasure at the memory; he also dismissed pumpkins as “contemptib­le” recently. Swedes are not for sissies: I have used multiple knives and nearly amputated a finger trying to carve the one I bought today (62p, bargain hunters) without making much of a dent.

But when the carving is finally complete, a candle illuminati­ng the primitive face you have exhaustedl­y scratched into your fibrous enemy, you can enjoy the delicious smell of a job well done: acrid, scorched swede and blood, so much blood. Doesn’t that feel fitting? In conclusion, for a truly horrifying experience this Halloween, go swede-ish.

 ?? Photograph: Radharc Images/Alamy ?? Swedes: ‘pretty scary and awful’.
Photograph: Radharc Images/Alamy Swedes: ‘pretty scary and awful’.

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