
The first time I roasted pumpkin seeds, I burned the crap out of them.
It was heart-breaking, especially since I wasn’t convinced it was even worth the effort in the first place. All that seed cleaning and pumpkin de-stringing – I didn’t even get to enjoy the fruits of my labour. Hrmph.
Here is the part that no one told me about: The inner seeds cook much faster than the outer shell. I kept peeking in the oven and everything looked fine on the outside. Little did I know, the inner seeds were burnt to smithereens.
Well, thank goodness I didn’t give up after that first miserable attempt! My life just wouldn’t be complete without roasted pumpkin seeds.

I’m happy to say, the second batch didn’t just work, it blew my mind! The cup of seeds I roasted did not last long between the two of us. Every pass by the kitchen was an excuse to grab a crispy handful off the pan.

Today, I’m sharing my secrets for a fantastic batch of roasted pumpkin seeds. If you’ve ever doubted they were worth the effort or had so-so results, I beg you to try this one last time. Only I know it won’t be the last time, but the start of a life-long obsession. Watch out pumpkins, we’re coming for ya!
How To Roast Pumpkin Seeds:
1. Clean the seeds. The annoying-but-necessary task is that you have to meticulously clean the seeds until there are no signs of pumpkin guts. The best way to do this (that I have discovered from your comments!) is to plunk the seeds + guts into a big bowl of water and use your hands to break it apart. The seeds will float to the top of the water! They clean much faster this way.
Note: Some of you say that sugar pumpkin seeds yield much crispier seeds than carving pumpkins. I used sugar pumpkin seeds and mine were certainly super crispy!

2. Boil for 10 minutes in salt water. Using Elise’s method for inspiration, I added the pumpkin seeds to a medium-sized pot of water along with 1 tsp salt. Bring it to a boil and reduce the heat to simmer, uncovered, for about 10 minutes over low-medium heat. Apparently, this method helps make the pumpkin seeds easier to digest and produces a crispy outer shell during roasting. If you are short on time, you can totally skip this step! They will still turn out lovely.

3. Drain the seeds in a colander and dry lightly with a paper towel or tea towel. The seeds will stick to the towel, but just rub them off with your fingers. Don’t worry, they don’t have to be bone dry – just a light pat down.
4. Spread seeds onto a baking sheet and drizzle with extra virgin olive oil (I only needed to use about 1/2-1 tsp). Massage oil into seeds and add a generous sprinkle of Herbamare (or fine grain sea salt will do). Try to spread out the seeds as thin as possible with minor overlapping.

5. Roast seeds at 325°F for 10 minutes. Remove from oven and stir. Roast for another 8-10 minutes (if your oven temp is wonky, this bake time could vary a lot!). During the last 5 minutes of roasting, remove a few seeds and crack open to make sure the inner seeds are not burning (you don’t want the inner seed brown). Cool a couple and pop them into your mouth to test. They are ready when the shell is super crispy and easy to bite through. The inner seed should have only a hint of golden tinge to it. They should not be brown.
6. EAT! Remove from oven, add a bit more Herbamare, and dig in! Ah, so good, so good! There is no need to remove the outer shell; it’s quite possibly the best part.

I had no idea I was going to love freshly roasted pumpkin seeds so much. I love how crispy the outer shell is and how fun it is to crunch. They taste a bit like popcorn, but they are much crunchier, filling, and of course packed with nutrition.

Yes, pumpkin seeds are super healthy for you! They are packed with iron, magnesium, fibre, zinc, potassium, healthy fats, protein, and tryptophan (which can boost your mood and help you sleep). Vegans & vegetarians have been using pumpkin seeds for years as a natural source of iron. I think it’s just about my favourite way to get iron, next to Iron Woman Gingerbread Smoothies, of course. Be sure to pair it with Vitamin C to absorb the most iron you can.
7. Share with some very lucky people! (but chose them wisely…)

I promise you’ll never throw the seeds out again.
I want to buy pumpkins just to be able to roast another batch of seeds. And of course, make homemade pumpkin puree. I’m already looking forward to making some different flavour combos – maybe garlic powder, cayenne, rosemary, brown sugar or cinnamon, nutmeg, ground cloves, etc would both be nice to try out? I can’t wait to experiment…many ideas are a-swirlin’ in my…stomach.
Looking for more pumpkin recipes?
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What spices would YOU put on your roasted pumpkin seeds?

How to Roast Pumpkin and Seeds

Yield
4 cups flesh, 3/4 cup seeds
Prep time
Cook time
Total time
This is my go-to method for roasting a sugar pumpkin and its seeds at the same time! Most recipes tend to provide instructions on roasting them separately, but I wanted to come up with directions on how to roast them both simultaneously. And, luckily, I've discovered it couldn't be easier.
Ingredients
- 1 sugar pumpkin (2 1/2 to 3 pounds)*
- Extra virgin olive oil
- Pink salt, fine sea salt, or Herbamare
Directions
- Preheat the oven to 325°F (160°C) and place two racks near the centre of the oven. Grab two rimmed medium-sized baking sheets and line one of them with parchment paper.
- Fill a medium-sized bowl with water and set aside. Lie an absorbent towel onto the counter next to the bowl.
- Slice off the pumpkin stem and discard.
- Place the pumpkin, cut side down, onto a cutting board. Carefully slice the pumpkin in half.
- Scoop out the pumpkin seeds and flesh/strings and place it all into the bowl of water. The seeds will float to the top (like magic!). Using your hands, grab the big chunks of flesh and pick off any attached seeds. Place the seeds back into the bowl of water. Discard/compost the chunks of flesh.
- Use a slotted spoon to remove the seeds. Let excess water drip off and then place the seeds onto the towel. Blot dry (the seeds don’t have to be bone dry and it’s okay if there are some strands attached—they add flavour!).
- Spread the seeds onto the baking sheet without the parchment and toss with 1 teaspoon of oil. Spread the seeds out into a single layer and sprinkle with salt.
- Mist or spread oil all over the inside of each pumpkin half and then sprinkle with salt and pepper. Place each half cut-side down onto the lined baking sheet.
- Place both sheets into the oven with the seeds on the lower rack. Roast at 325°F (160°C) for 20 minutes then remove the seeds and taste test a couple. As long as the inner seeds aren't tasting burned, you can keep roasting them. I usually return the seeds to the oven for another 3 to 4 minutes. Remove the seeds and cool.
- Leave the pumpkin in the oven and increase the oven temp to 350°F (180°C). Continue roasting the pumpkin for another 12 minutes or so, until fork-tender. (The timing may vary based on how large and fresh your pumpkin is.) At this point you can slice it up and serve it as a side vegetable with your meal, or process/blend the flesh to make homemade pumpkin purée.
Tip:
- * One sugar pumpkin (roughly 2 3/4 pounds) yields about 4 cups (720 g) of roasted pumpkin flesh and 3/4 cup (75 g) seeds.
Looks good, I will give it a try
[And I’ll have to figure out what to do with the rest of the pumpkin after making these haha]
When I made the butternut sauce from the butternut macaroni and cheese recipe on this site, I toasted the seeds (sprinkled with salt) right next to the squash as I roasted it, and they came out great
Just wanted to add another random comment to this thread–I just learned today that you can roast honeydew seeds too! In pretty much the same way.
I tried it and they are quite delicious, I will NEVER be throwing out melon or squash seeds again haha woot woot:D
I’ll search “melon” recipes on here and leave this info on those posts too, for anyone who might want to try it
Hi Angela,
Love the post and the comments! If you loved the pumpkin seeds, do yourself a favour and save you butternut squash seeds to try these recipes on…..they are even better than pumpkin seeds…honest! I must try the coconut oil and eastern seasonings:)
Yes I tried that last week and they were so good!
My 5 year old and I made this today. He had fun playing with the seeds while I cleaned them. :P
He was so excited to try them and he says they taste ‘just like pop corn”! Lucky for me he doesn’t remember my nasty previous attempts. Thanks for posting!
Roasted pumpkin seeds over the weekend and my husband and I loved them!! They were even more delicious with some cayenne pepper ;). Thanks for the recipe!
They are SO good. I had to go to Whole Foods to find the herb salt, but it was worth it.
With Squash seeds, I found that putting them in water & massaging out the seeds works great. Hope that works with my pumpkins today. I also soaked overnight in water with Salt & found them to be too salty for me, but less than if I buy David’s pumpkin seeds. I think your boiling method is just a speed version, but I think the soaking in some fashion does help.
So, I don’t do any salt to mine. I toss them with Virgin Coconut Oil & roast them, then at the last 5 min or so, I toss in some unsweetened Coconut & sliced almonds.
I have some raw Honey this year, so I’m going to add just a dab with the oil & get a bit of sweetness.
Yum, thanks for the recipe. I just made a batch using my CSA’s butternut squash. Left some of the guts on and they came off during boiling.
After all the recipes you find in the net with “healthy” labels.. its gets really hard to weed through the ones worth trying– Yours definitely belong in that category. So far, all the recipes I`ve tried from Oh She Glows have turned out fantastic– That is saying alot,because even though I eat vegetarian all the dairy substitutes work just as well!
I roasted the seeds without boiling them and definitely noticed the difference in the “crunch factor” I added Himalayan salt that is a bit more coarse and turned out really nice.
Thank you very much for taking the time to post all this recipes.
I have made pumpkin seeds for over 50 years and have just cleaned them then roasted them.
Last year my best friend was doing landscaping at a house where the owner used MANY
pumpkins for decorations. He told her to get rid of them after Halloween and she offered
some to me. I got about 25 and my wonderful husband cut them and cleaned the seeds
for me. I roasted them and stored them in a huge T*pperware canister and they were
all gone by Christmas. YUM. (I did not share)
I have bought the really salty ones during the “off-season” but they are no where near
the taste of the home made kind.
Hopefully I get some more this year, if not I will probably have to buy some.
I grew one last year but some critter got inside the pumpkin and chewed every bit of the “meat” and seeds..
If I wanna do them sweet with cinnamon and Brown sugar do I still use olive oil too??
Yes I probably would!
Being smack in the middle of pumpkin and squash season I’ve started hoarding squash like no one’s business. A quick (ish) way to clean the seeds is to simply leave them out on a paper towel for a few days to dry and the pulp easily comes off when you rub the seeds in between your fingers. I came across this recipe a while back and procrastinated making it until last week. After they finished baking I put them in a jar in my pantry and (regretfully) forgot about them until today when I took them out to top my lunch salad. While the rest of my lunch heated up I popped a couple in my mouth….and then a few more…well they didn’t make it to the salad that’s for sure! I ended up putting the half empty jar back in the pantry to snack on later (read: 5 minutes later). I’m ashamed to admit I had no desire to share them! They are unbelievably delicious, crispy and and salty. I am NEVER throwing out my squash seeds after trying this recipe. Thank you Angela, I used to think the best part of a squash was the flesh, but now I think its the seeds!
I have a sandwich bag of pumpkin seeds and was thinking about doing a taste test. I’m a nanny so I have a little bit of time during nap to do this. I could do the guts/bake method and the boil/bake method to see which i like better :) I think boiling them adds a step you really don’t need. and I think people are roasting them at too high of a temp…isn’t it 250-275 for an hour? I’m probably wrong.
I tried these with carving pumpkin seeds. The outer shell is too chewy. The seed is really good, but a lot of work to eat. I guess I need to find the sugar pumpkins or just go an buy some seeds. Thanks for the info.
Quick and easy pumpkin seed cleaning – fill the bowl of seeds with water; with your hands scoop up some seeds and any orange hitchhikers; spread a handful on a dry papertowel; and pat the top with another papertowel; lift up the bottom paper towel and the seeds easily fall off or easily get knocked off and the orange goop stays behind! A little time consuming but you get clean seeds every time.
Sugar, cumin, cinnamon, ginger, pinch of cayenne. Best sweet and savory seeds. Seriously.
I did an internet seach for roasting pumpkin seeds…and you blog came up right away! I was stoked because I love you blog :)
In the past, my seeds always burned or were undercooked, but the boiling in salt water first worked great! I seasoned mine with some garlic powder, chilli powder, cumin and sea salt. Used some cooking spray when they were done to get a little more salt to stick. Having a carving contest at work, going to get all the seeds and bring them home and cook them tonight.
Thanks for the recipe/method!
Will boiling the seeds kill the nutrients like it does with most foods? I just carved 3 pumpkins with my kids and I am really looking forward to roasting the seeds. Thank you all for your great tips, my mouth is watering!
Pumpkin seeds float in water, pumpkin guts are heavy to neutral, just dump the guts with the seeds an all in a big bowl of water and mix around with your hands. The seeds will float to the top, then just skim them off with your hands.
If you soak the seeds before boiling the gooey stuff comes off easier