It's recommended to cut it very fine or to grate it.
You can also try to shortly microwave it (cooking would also be possible but I think microwaving a small amount is easier) until soft and squeeze it e.g. using a fork.
For things like that I simply buy a whole or a large piece and use the remaining for my own food
Same goes with other veggies, I just cut off some pieces of the raw veggies in the evening when cooking dinner, put them in the fridge and serve them next day.
Yes, they "don't breed true" ("sind nicht reinerbig").
However, one can buy seeds that "breed true". One then only must take care they are not interbreeding with other plants from the cucumber family, like summer squash, cucumber which one might also have in their garden or their neighbor's.
(Same goes with other kinds of vegetables.)
I'm curious: What did you got when you tried to grow from the seeds?
Yes, they "don't breed true" ("sind nicht reinerbig").
However, one can buy seeds that "breed true". One then only must take care they are not interbreeding with other plants from the cucumber family, like summer squash, cucumber which one might also have in their garden or their neighbor's.
(Same goes with other kinds of vegetables.)
I'm curious: What did you got when you tried to grow from the seeds?
The seeds grow fine but since pumpkin is toxic in nature and was modified to be eatable, there is a chance the plants you grow will become toxic again. Always plant seeds you bought..
Same with zucchini btw.
Yes, I was knowing about this (seeds germinate, plant grows, fruit will be off). Is, however, not for "breeds true" - there you can do that, reuse the seeds. If doing that, one will usually have to start with the seeds however and not with a pumpkin as those sold in supermarkets aren't breeding true.
(I'm very much used to gardening, parents have are almost self-sufficient, was in a gardening club ("Gartenbauverein") and such )
Dito, that's why I mentioned the "summer squash" (from my experience in the US, "zucchini" is often not understood there, but they say "summer squash", so I used that word).
I like to cut it into worm shapes and add it to the bowl in a pile. You can move it a bit with your fingers and draw some attention to it and it works pretty well. I do this with all kinds of squash.
Not always. If he was hungry he would eat from my hand or chomp a big mouthful from the dish. Some days he would graze a little bit. Some days he ignored the food and the leftovers went to the roach colony.