Showing posts sorted by date for query bread pudding. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query bread pudding. Sort by relevance Show all posts
One thing that is done extremely well over here in the UK are steamed puddings, and each area seems to have their own individual specialities. Added to that wonder, is the fact that there are not only sweet ones, but savoury ones as well.
They are all very traditional, and whilst most are made using a suet batter, occasionally you will find one which uses the extravagance of butter!
You can find a very good video here which perfectly illustrates the method of covering and steaming a pudding HERE. It's just brilliant and I couldn't explain it any better if I tried, although I do have a tendancy to use a rubber band to hold the lid on, and then I use the steamer pan that fits on top of one of my saucepans.
Savoury or sweet, there is nothing like a deliciously stodgy steamed pudding to help chase away the February blues! Here is one of our favourites.
A delicious buttery pudding filled with lots of chopped preserved ginger in syrup. We do so love ginger in this house and this tasty pudding is chock full of it's deliciously sweet heat. The sauce is also very scrummily gingery, but if you are feeling lazy you can just serve the pudding with some pouring cream.
Either way it's fabulously scrummy!!!
*Steamed Ginger Pudding with Ginger Sauce*
Serves 4
I think there has to be a ginger pudding or cake or bread recipe for just about every area in the UK. This one comes from Cornwall. It's buttery and moist and has a delicious ginger sauce to serve with it. Or, you can just be lazy and have it with cream.
For the Pudding:
4 ounces butter (1/2 cup)
4 ounces caster sugar (a generous half cup)
2 large free range eggs
6 ounces self raising flour (scant 1 1/2 cups)
3 knobs (2 ounces) preserved stem ginger in syrup, finely chopped
3 heaped dessertspoons of golden syrup
For the sauce:
300ml of whole milk (1 1/8 cup milk)
1 TBS finely grated fresh ginger
1 ounce butter (1/8 cup)
1 ounce plain flour (1/8 cup)
2 ounces caster sugar (1/4 cup)
Butter a 3 cup pudding basin. Cream together the butter and the sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs, adding a TBS of the flour after each addition. Fold in the remaining flour and the chopped ginger. Spoon the golden syrup into the pudding basin. Spoon in the cake batter over top. Smooth the top and then cover with a layer of pleated greaseproof paper and another layer of pleated foil wrap. Secure with a rubber band and trim off any excess leaving about an inch belong the rubber band. Place into the top of a steamer pot over steaming water and cover. Steam for 1 to 1 1/2 hours until done. (Should be well risen and look dry on top.)
While the pudding is steaming you can make the sauce. Place the ginger in the milk and then bring to the boil. Allow to sit and infuse for about half an hour then strain off the milk, discarding the ginger. Melt the butter in a saucepan. Whisk in the flour and cook for about a few minutes over low heat. Slowly whisk in the heated and strained milk, whisking constantly until the sauce boils and thickens. Add the sugar, stirring until it is dissolved. Keep warm.
Turn the steamed pudding out onto a pretty plate and pass the sauce seperately. Serve both warm.
As promised yesterday here is a selection of five delicious puds to serve at the end of your Christmas Dinner tomorrow. There is something here to please every taste I think . . . from chocolate to ice cream. All are quite simple and easy to make, and quite impressive I think. If you hurry, you'll be able to pick up any last minute ingredients at the shops before they close.
I'll be taking a well earned couple of days off now, celebrating the holiday with the Toddster and my little pup Mitzie. I wish each of you all the best! Enjoy and have yourselves a Very Merry Little Christmas Time!
*Mont Blanc*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
This has to be one of the easiest and the tastiest desserts around. Your guests will think you have slaved all day.
4 fine glasses with stems
8 to 12 small plain meringues
250ml of double cream, chilled (1 cup)
2 TBS icing sugar
400g sweet vanilla flavoured chestnut puree
chocolate sprinkles (optional)
Crumble the meringues and divide them equally amongst the stemmed glasses. Put the chilled double cream into a large bowl and whip with an eletric whisk until it forms soft peaks, but is not stiff. (if perchance you have whipped it a bit much, gently stir some unwhipped cream into it to loosen it up a bit. It works a charm) Fold in the icing sugar. Cover the layer of meringue in the glasses with chestnut puree and then cover that with the sweetened whipped cream. Sprinkle with sprinkles if desired.
*Fruity Chocolate Fondant Puddings*
Makes 6 servings
Printable Recipe
A delicious chocolate fondant pudding with the secret surprise of a fruited middle! Plan ahead as the middles have to be frozen for at least 3 hours before baking.
160g fruit mincemeat (1/2 cup)
50g of dark eating chocolate, chopped coarsely (about 2 ounces)
(70% cocoa solids)
150g of butter, chopped coarsely (2/3 cup)
3 large free range eggs
75g soft light brown sugar (1/3 cup packed)
75g plain flour (1/2 cup)
35g of self raising flour (1/4 cup)
1 TBS cocoa powder
For the Sauce:
150g of dark eating chocolate, chopped coarsely (6 ounces)
(70% cocoa solids)
80ml double cream (1/3 cup)
2 TBS dark rum
Spoon the mincemeat into 6 holes of a 1 TBS ice cube tray. Freeze for at least 3 hours.
Preheat the oven to 200*C/400*F/ gas mark 6. Butter six 1-cup pudding molds really well. Place on a baking tray and set aside.
Stir the chocolate and butter together in a small saucepan over low heat, stirring until the chocolate is melted and the mixture is competely smooth. Cool for 10 minutes before proceeding.
Beat the eggs and sugar together with an electric whish until thick and creamy. Sift the flours and cocoa together. Fold into the creamed mixture. Fold in the cooled chocolate.
Divide the batter equally amongst the pudding molds. Remove the frozen mincemeat cubes from the ice cube tray and pop one into the centre of each pudding,
Bake the puddings for 12 minutes.
While the puddings are baking make the sauce. Stir the ingredients in a saucepan over medium low heat until smooth and completely amalgamated.
Serve the puddings warm and drizzled with some of the sauce.
*Panettone Puddings*
Serves 6
Printable Recipe
Delicious individual bread puddings with a great fruity flavour!
2 (170g) individual panettone
270g of mincemeat (1 cup)
For the custard:
250ml of double cream (1 cup)
180ml of whole milk (3/4 cup
2 TBS caster sugar
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
2 large free range eggs
Icing Sugar to dust over the tops
Preheat the oven to 170*C/325*F/ gas mark 3 oven. Butter 6 (1 1/4 cup) ovenproof teacups. Place in a roasting tin large enough to hold them all. Set aside.
Bring the cream, milk, sugar and vanilla to the boil in a small saucepan. Whisk the eggs together in a bowl and then gradually whisk in the hot milk mixture.
Cut the panettone in half lengthwise, then cut each half into thick slices. Layer the Panettone and half of the mincemeat in the prepared cups, overlaping the panettone slightly. Dollop spoonfuls of the remaining mincemeat over top of each, then strain the custard over all.
Add enough boiling water to the roasting tin to come halfway up the sides of the dish. Bake for 35 minutes until set. Remove from the oven and remove the cups from the roasting tin and allow to stand for 10 minutes before serving. Dust with icing sugar just prior to serving.
*Glace Fruit Cakes with Ginger Syrup*
Serves 12
Printable Recipe
Delicious little individual fruity cakes served with a delectable ginger syrup!
105g slivered almonds (3/4 cup)
90g butter, softened (3 ounces)
2 tsp finely grated lemon zest
165g caster sugar (3/4 cup)
2 large free range eggs
75g self raising flour (1/2 cup)
110g plain flour (3/4 cup)
80ml milk (1/3 cup)
4 slices glace pineapple, chopped coarsely
70g red glace cherries, halved (1/3 cup)
70g green glace cherries, halved (1/3 cup)
75g coarsely chopped candied ginger (1.3 cup)
an extra 70g of slivered almonds (1/2 cup)
for the ginger syrup:
180ml of water (3/4 cup)
165g of caster sugar (3/4 cup)
1 inch piece of fresh ginger, grated
To serve:
icing sugar and cream
Preheat the oven to 170*C/325*F/ gas mark3. Butter a 12 hole medium muffin cup pan and line the bases with parchment paper cut to fit. Sprinkle the almonds into the bottoms.
Cream the butter, lemon zest and sugar together in a bowl with an electric whisk until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs, one at a time. Sift the flours together. Stir into the creamed mixture along with the milk, fruits and additonal almonds. Spread this batter into the prepared muffin cups. Bake for about 25 minutes, until risen and a toothpick inserted in the centre comes out clean.
While they are baking make the syrup. Stir the syrup ingredients together in a small saucepan over medium heat without boiling, until the sugar dissolves. Bring to the boil, then reduce the heat and simmer, uncovered without stirring for about 5 minutes or so until the mixture is slightly thickened.
Remove the baked cakes from the oven, Pour the hot syrup evenly over all. Allow the cakes to cool completely in the tins before removing.
Serve warm, dusted with icing sugar and with cream for pouring.
*Cranberry, White Chocolate and Pistachio Ice Cream Puds*
serves 8
Printable Recipe
A light little pud chock full of fruit and nuts, served drizzled with a warm white chocolate sauce.
1 vanilla pod
430ml of whole milk (1 3/4 cups)
600ml of double cream (2 1/3 cups)
180g of white eating chocolate, coarsely chopped (6 ounces)
8 large free range egg yolks
165g caster sugar (3/4 cup)
130g dried cranberries (1 cup)
2 TBS brandy
140g unsalted shelled pistachios (1 cup)
2 tsp vegetable oil
Split the vanilla pod lengthwise and scrape the seeds into a medium saucepan. Add the pod, milk, cream and 50g of the chocolate. Bring to the boil, then remove from heat.
Whisk the egg yolks and sugar together in a medium bowl until thick and creamy. Gradually whisk into the hot milk mixture. Stir the custard ove rlow heat without boiling until the mixture thickens slightly. Cover surface with plastic cling film and cool for 20 minutes. At the end of that time, strain into a shallow container, such as an aluminium baking tin. Cover with foil and then freeze until almost firm.
Place the ice cream into a large bowl, chop coarsley and then beat with an electric mixture until smooth. Pour the mixture into a deep container, cover and freeze again until firm. Repeat the process two more times.
Place the cranberries into a bowl with the brandy. Let steep for 15 minutes. Stir this mixture with the nuts into the ice cream the last time you beat it. Spoon the ice cream into 8 (180ml/3/4 cup) molds. Cover and freeze for 3 hours, until firm.
Stir the remaining chocolate and oil in a saucepan over low heat until melted and smooth.
Dip each mold into hot water, one at a time for about a second to loosen. Turn out onto serving plates. Drizzle with the warm melted chocolate mixture to serve.
Living in Chester as we do, we are right on the gateway to Wales. Indeed . . . a short five minute walk from the house, and we are in Wales!
Our Housing estate is actually surrounded by fields of leeks, which fill the air at certain times of the year with their pungent oniony smell. I think it's quite delightful, myself!
In fact, as we travelled to church this morning we passed by a field of frozen leeks . . . kind a pretty actually, all frosty green and icy tipped . . . but I wonder how the farmer feels. Are frozen leeks any good to him? Somehow I think not . . .
The Leek is the Welsh national symbol. ( I can think of worse things to represent you!)
This supper dish is a savoury bread and butter pudding, filled with the lovely flavours of slivered leeks and Caerphilly cheese, which is a Welsh variety of cheese, hailing from the Welsh village of Caerphilly!
Caerphilly sits in the shadows of one of Europe's largest castles. (Caer means Castle in the Welsh language) You can tell their cheese means a big deal to the people of Caerphilly as they hold a big festival there every year, called . . . "The Big Cheese" . . . what else!!
Caerphilly is a cow's milk cheese, light in colour and quite crumbly. It matures a lot quicker than cheddar giving it a dry crumbly centre and creamy edge . . . with a somewhat tangy, sour, but not at all unpleasant flavour.
We love this hearty supper dish as we love leeks and cheese, but you can also make it with cheddar and onion, which is also quite delicious!
I like it with a bit of Branston's Beetroot Pickle on the side. Yummo!
*Welsh Cheese Pudding*
Serves 4 - 6
Printable Recipe
Kind of like a savoury bread and butter pudding made with cheese and leek sandwiches. You can use sliced onions if you don't have any leeks. It's quite delicious!
3 medium slices of white bread, crusts removed
3 medium slices of whole wheat bread, crusts removed
2 ounces (1/4 cup) butter, softened
1 medium leek, washed, trimmed and very thinly sliced
8 ounces caerphilly cheese, crumbled (can use strong cheddar)
2 large free range eggs
1/4 tsp dry mustard powder
1 pint of milk (2 cups)
salt and pepper to taste
a small handful of walnuts, toasted and chopped
finely chopped spring onion to garnish (optional)
Spread each slice of the bread thickly with butter. Using one white slice and one whole wheat slice for each, make 3 sandwiches using the leek and 3/4 of the cheese. Press firmly together and then cut each sandwich into 4 triangles. Arrange them with the points up, in a 2 litre shallow ovenproof dish.
Beat the eggs together with the mustard powder and milk. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Pour over top of the sandwiches. Allow to stand for half an hour before cooking.
Preheat the oven to 160*C/325*F/ gas mark 3. Scatter the remaining cheese and walnuts over top of the pudding and then cook it in the preheated oven for about 45 minutes. Scatter the top with the spring onions, if using and serve to some lucky people.
I just love buying all the Christmas Cookery Magazines. It doesn't matter that I probably won't cook even a fraction of the recipes in them, if any . . . but I do love to look at all the different ideas that are presented in them each year.
Our Christmas Lunch stays basically the same each year . . . Roast Turkey, stuffing, roast potatoes, glazed parsnips, Brussels Sprouts, carrots. bacon wrapped chipolatas, cranberry sauce, bread sauce . . . and as if that weren't enough I also like to serve several desserts.
There is always a Christmas Cake and of course Christmas pudding . . . let's not forget the mince pies and I always like to make a Trifle of sorts.
One year a few years back I made a tasty Turkish Delight Trifle. You can find the recipe for that here. It was very lovely . . . sticky and sweet and almost over the top!
I often do a trial run of any new recipe I am hoping to use, ahead of the day just so that I can iron out any problems with a recipe . . . making absolutely sure that it is worthy of a place on my Christmas Lunch menu.
I was greatly intrigued by the Christmas Pudding Trifle recipe in the Nov/Dec issue of Jamie Magazine. (That's one of my favourite cookery mags.) There was a delicious article on using up your Christmas lunch leftovers. Tristan Welch, head chef of Launceston Place had what looked to be a lovely recipe for this interestingly different sounding trifle and I just had to try it.
His was beautifully presented in 200ml canning jars, each one tied up with a pretty red ribbon. I didn't have any canning jars, and I only wanted to make a half recipe for this trial and so I just used some 200ml ramekins with great success.
Without a doubt, hands down . . . this has to be the most delicious Trifle ever! There is just enough Christmas Pudding in it to give you a gentle hint of spicy flavour, without it going over the top. I don't think any die hard Christmas Pudding hater would be assaulted by it in the least . . . don't even tell them it's there. They probably won't even notice what it is, and even if they do, they will forgive you because it is that delicious that they will wonder how they ever got by in life without it thus far!
Imagine a rich custard, baked until slightly wobbly, atop some scrummy Christmas Pudding . . . chilled and then topped with crushed amaretti biscuits, brandy whipped cream, toasted flaked almonds and a few silver balls . . . yes . . . this is heaven.
All conversation will stop . . . amidst the sighs and satisfied drooling noises . . . this is a winner, pure and simple, and it will deffo be gracing my Christmas Lunch buffet! Nothing could be easier or tastier!
*Christmas Pudding Trifle*
Serves 6
Printable Recipe
A delicious trifle which consists of a lovely rich custard baked over top of some crumbled Christmas pudding until wobbly. Chilled and then covered with amaretti biscuits, brandy cream, flaked almonds and silver balls, this is probably one of the nicest trifles I've ever eaten . . .
300ml of milk (1 1/4 cups)
200ml of double cream (3/4 cup whipping cream)
freshly grated nutmeg
6 large free range egg yolks
70g caster sugar (about 1/3 cup)
Leftover Christmas pudding (It's up to you how much)
12 crisp amaretti biscuits
150ml of double cream (about 2/3 cup), whipped lightly with a dash of brandy
1 TBS Toasted Flaked almonds
Silver balls
Preheat the oven to 110*C/225*F/ gas mark 1/4. Place 6 200ml containers on a baking tray. Crumble some Christmas Pudding into the bottom of each. You can use as much as you want. I crumbled about 1 TBS of the stuff into each container, so that it was about 1/2 inch deep. Set aside.
Heat the milk and double cream together, along with a grating of nutmeg, just to the boil. Whisk the egg yolks and sugar together until pale. Whisk in the heated milk mixture, whisking constantly. Strain this mixture into the prepared pots, dividing it equally amongst them. Grate a little more nutmeg on top. Bake in the heatred oven for 30 to 40 minutes, just until set. The centre should still have a slight wobble. Remove from the oven. Cool to room temperature and then chill in the refrigerator for a couple of hours.
Just before serving, whip the cream softly along with a dash of brandy, or brandy flavouring. Crumble 2 amaretti biscuits over top of each pudding, then top with some whipped brandy cream. Sprinkle some toasted almonds and silver balls over top of each and serve.
I think I must subscribe to just about every cooking magazine going. I know . . . I am obsessed. Todd thinks I'm crazy . . . but, having said that . . . he does more than enjoy my cooking efforts daily.
Usually I flag recipes from each magazine that I want to try out at some point. Of course there are far more than I could ever conceivably try in reality . . . but, at least I am well intentioned. Sometimes I get there and, well . . . sometimes I don't . . .
I flagged this pudding recipe in the October issue of Good Food magazine as one that I definitely wanted to make. It's taken me almost a month to get to it, but today was the day.
All my stars were in alignment or something coz I actually got it done! Roly Poly pudding is a favourite around this house with my old school hubby as is bread and butter pudding, and we are both nuts about anything with jam in it!
This lovely pudding combines elements of all three! Lovely little buttery roly poly bread and raspberry jam sandwiches laid on a bed of more raspberry jam, and then baked in a sweet vanilla custard, until it all souffles up in a rich cloud of baked custardy goodness . . . soft and creamy inside, with lovely buttery sweet crunchy bits on the outside.
You take a slightly trembling spoonful and place it in your bowl, licking your lips in anticipation . . . you want to dig in immediately, but daren't for fear the jam will burn your lips . . .
You finally lift a spoonful to your mouth and gently blow before you plunge the delightful mass past your trembling lips . . .
mmmm . . . ahhh . . . did you feel that?
That, my friends, was an itty, bitty taste of heaven . . .
*Roly Poly Bread and Butter Pudding*
Serves 8
Printable Recipe
Little bread butter and jam rolls baked in a delicious vanilla custard until light fluffy and scrummy yummy! You will want to use very fresh bread for this. Dry bread will not roll properly.
3 ounces softened butter, plus extra to butter the baking dish (3/8 of a cup)
12 ounces of raspberry jam (1 1/2 cups)
1 large fresh unsliced loaf of white bread
4 large free range eggs
14 fluid ounces of milk (1 3/4 cup)
14 fluid ounces of double cream (1 3/4 cup)
3 ounces of caster sugar, plus a bit extra for sprinkling on top of the pudding (3/8 of a cup)
1 tsp of vanilla paste, or the seeds scraped from one vanilla pod
Butter a deep two litre baking dish. Stir the jam well with a fork and then spoon half of it into the prepared baking dish.
Trim the crusts and rounded top off of the loaf of bread so that you have a large rectangular block of bread. Carefully cut the bread into 4 long slices lengthwise. (This is the hardest part as fresh bread is a bit squidgy, but persevere and go slowly. It will be worth it.) You can whiz all the edges and leftovers into bread crumbs and store in the freezer for something else.
Spread each of the four long slices of bread on one side with butter. Flip them over and spread the jam on the other sides. (Yes it will make the counter a bit of a mess, but again, it's worth it!) Roll up the bread slices, rolling up from the short sides, until you have 4 fat swiss rolls. Cut each in half carefully, so that you have 8 jammy rolls, and then place them, cut sides down into the jam lined baking dish.
Whisk together the eggs, milk, cream, sugar and vanilla. Pour through a strainer over top of the jammy bread rolls, stopping to allow it to soak in, until all the mixture has been used up. Let stand for half an hour on the counter before baking,
Preheat the oven to 160*C/325*D/ gas mark 3. Place the baking dish on a baking sheet. Sprinkle the top with some more caster sugar and then place in the heated oven to bake for about an hour to an hour and a quarter until the top is lightly browned and the custard is gently set. Remove from the oven and allow to cool for five minutes before serving. Delicious!
Note - I knew that there was no way that the Toddster and myself could eat a whole one by ourselves, so I cut the recipe in half. It worked out great!
My Todd is a simple man . . . with traditional tastes and values. He grew up during the War and knows well the deprivations that went along with that era, both during and after the war . . .
It does not take much to please him, and he appreciates most anything you set down in front of him . . .
Just so long as it's not pasta . . . or chocolate.
He even liked school dinners when he was growing up. Not a lot of people did. School dinners have traditionally gotten a bad rap, but not for Todd. He loved them. I suspect I would have probably have loved them too. In any case they would have been better than a cold sandwich and a bruised apple served up in a paper bag, which is what I had!
Anyways, I digress . . . Todd . . . simple man . . . traditional values.
Like bread and butter pudding, which normally has lovely sultanas studded all the way through it. They always kind of burn on the top and get all chewy and scrummy, however . . .
I am not always a traditionalist. I sometimes like to shake the tree a little bit.
Just a little bit mind . . . not so hard that all the coconuts fall out . . . just enough to give things a little bit of a twist . . .
Like your traditional bread and butter pudding. I got to thinking the other day how delicious it would be with a layer of strawberry jam added in the middle . . . kind of like souffled jam sandwiches . . .
all soft and unctuous, with a tasty layer of sweet jam in the middle . . . the custard gently flavoured with lemon zest, cardamom and cinnamon . . . oh and with a traditional dusting of nutmeg on top . . .
This was some good. Warm and comforting and delicious. School room flavours . . . with a grown up touch.
Kind of like a Queen of Puddings . . . without the meringue . . . but somehow better. With just enough spice and lemon to really bring out the lovely strawberry flavour.
It went down a real treat!
*Strawberry Bread and Butter Pudding*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
A delicious bread and butter pudding with the added twist of a layer of tasty Strawberry Jam.
1 ounce softened butter, plus extra for buttering the dish
8 thin slices of sturdy white bread
good quality strawberry jam
1 tsp cinnamon powder
1/4 tsp ground cardamom
the grated zest of one lemon
12 ounces whole milk
2 ounced double cream
2 large free range eggs
1 ounce caster sugar
grated nutmeg to taste
demerara sugar for sprinkling
Butter a 2 pint pie dish with butter. Set aside. Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/Gas mark 4.
Trim the crusts off of the bread and butter each slice on one side. Spread half of the slices thickly with some strawberry jam, on the unbuttered side. Put together with the other half of the slices like little jam sandwiches, with the buttered sides showing on the outside of each. Cut each sandwich in half diagonally and then place into the prepared dish. Sprinkle with the cinnamon and cardamom.
Place the milk in a pan over low heat. Add the lemon zest. Scald. (Heat just until you see bubbles appearing around the edges. Do not let it boil.) Whisk in the cream.
Break the eggs into a bowl, add the sugar and beat together well. Whisk in the heated milk slowly. Strain the resulting custard into a beaker, then pour this custard over the bread mixture. Let stand for about 30 minutes so that it is absorbed somewhat. Sprinkle with some freshly grated nutmeg and a dusting of demerara sugar.
Place into the oven and bake for 30 to 40 minutes, or until the custard has set and the top is a golden brown. Serve warm.
In North America, a pudding would be described as being a dessert . . . created from milk, sugar, eggs and flavouring . . . soft and spoonable . . . not quite a custard, but . . . very similar.
Over here in the UK, however . . . the term pudding is used to describe any manner of prepared sweets that would come under the classification of desserts.
In fact . . . the dessert course is, more often than not, referred to as . . . "the Pudding."
If there is one thing that the British do better than any other culture, it is puddings!
Oh my goodness, they make my head swoon . . . delicious cakes and crumbles . . . pies and tarts . . . custards and flans . . . there is no end to the variety of puddings available to drool over.
British puddings have a very long and honourable tradition. Comforting, and homely, they are a well anticipated part of any meal, celebratory or otherwise . . . and for a great many children throughout the years, they have been the best part of most School dinners!!
One of our favourite puddings has to be Queen of Puddings. A delicious, old fashioned baked pudding composed of simple and humble ingredients . . .
soft bread crumbs, eggs, milk and jam. Only the British could take such something as simple as these things, and create something totally scrumptious.
One spoonful and I think you'll agree that it is not hard to reason why this pudding is called the Queen . . .
"We" are most impressed . . .
*Queen of Puddings*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
With it's beautiful cloud of meringue floating on top, it's not hard to see why this is called "Queen of Puddings." It is certainly one of the lightest and most mouthwatering puddings ever . . certainly fit for the royalty in this house!
1 pint whole milk
1/2 ounce butter
4 ounces fresh white bread crumbs
2 ounces caster sugar, divided, plus 1 tsp.
the grated rind of one unwaxed lemon
2 large eggs, at room temperature
pinch of salt
3 TBS of raspberry jam
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F. Generously butter a 1 1/2 pint glass baking dish. Set aside.
Place the milk along with the lemon rind and bring just to the boiling point over medium heat. Remove from the heat and stir in the breadcrumbs and 1 ounce of the sugarsugar. Set aslide to infuse for 20 minutes.
Separate the eggs, putting the whites into a clean glass bowl, free from any grease. Beat the yolks and then beat them into the breadcrumb mixture. Pour this bread custard into the prepared baking dish, spreading it out evenly. Bake in the centre of the oven for 30 to 35 minutes, or just until set. Remove from the oven.
Heat the jam until it melts and then spread it evenly over top of the baked pudding.
Beat the egg whites along with a pinch of salt until foamy. Continue to beat, adding the remaining 1 ounce of sugar slowly, beating them until they form stiff peaks. Spoon this mixture evenly over top of the jam. Sprinkle evenly with the remaining tsp of sugar.
Place back in the oven and bake for an additional 15 minutes, until the meringue is golden brown. Serve warm to 4 lucky people!
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