Showing posts sorted by relevance for query bread pudding. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query bread pudding. Sort by date Show all posts
Are you looking for a quick and easy dessert that is delicious and yet won't take up a lot of time? Look no further! I bet you didn't know you could cook bread pudding in the air fryer.
Well you can, beautifully. This air fryer bread pudding has a golden crisp top and yes is beautifully soft and indulgent inside. It's perfectly sweet and goes together lickety split.
In fact you can be enjoying this delicious dessert in pretty much less than half an hour from when you put it together. (Excluding the time it takes to preheat the fryer.)
Not only that, but it uses relatively few simple ingredients to make it. Its also a great way to use up stale bread.
This is also the perfect summer dessert for when you want something a little bit heartier as there is no need to heat up the kitchen by having your oven on!
Quick and easy to make? Simple ingredients? Keeping the kitchen cool? Delicious as well? Count me in!!
WHAT YOU NEED TO MAKE AIR FRYER BREAD PUDDING
A few simple every day kitchen ingredients, a six inch cake tin or casserole dish and an air fryer.
You will need:
- 4 cups (140g) cubed white bread (3/4 inch cubes, Italian, French, Brioche, Challah)
- 4 TBS sultana raisins (golden)
For the custard:
- 2 large free range eggs
- 1 cup (240ml) whole milk
- 1/4 cup (60ml) heavy cream
- 5 TBS sugar
- 2 TBS melted butter (hot)
- 1 tsp vanilla
- pinch salt
To serve:
- icing sugar (confectioners) to dust
- vanilla ice cream
The best breads to use are Brioche, French or Italian Bread or Challah. They give the nicest softest bread custard, but you can also use other kinds if you wish of that's all you have.
You can use stale sandwich bread, burger buns, hot dog rolls and dinner rolls. Place the cubes onto a baking sheet and let them air dry for a few hours prior to using.
You may also use a stale French baguette. In this case, assemble and allow the pudding to rest overnight in the refrigerator, covered.
Don't like raisins??? NO problem! Just use some fresh or frozen berries. If using frozen, thaw and drain first.
You can even use chopped dried apricots or date. Chocolate chips are also very nice. Just saying. 😉
HOW TO MAKE AIR FRYER BREAD PUDDING
You won't believe how simple this really is to make!! As I said you will need a six inch deep cake tin or casserole dish.
To make the custard, whisk the eggs in a bowl until emulsified. Whisk in the milk, cream, vanilla, salt and sugar. Whisk in the hot butter. (If the butter is hot it blends in better instead of coagulating.)
Butter a six-inch round cake tin or casserole really well. Add half of the bread cubes. Sprinkle 2 TBS of the sultana raisins over top. Pour over half of the custard. Press down lightly with the back of a spoon.
Repeat with the remaining bread cubes, sultanas and custard. Again pressing the bread down gently to submerge it in the custard.(Don't worry if it pops up again, you only want to dampen it all.)
Preheat the air fryer to 350*F/180*C for 15 minutes.
Place the pudding into the air fryer basket and into the air fryer. Cook for 15 minutes at 350*F/180*C. At this time the top should be nicely golden brown and a bread knife inserted near the center should come out clean. (If not done return to the air fryer and cook for a few minutes longer at the same temperature.)
Leave to set for about 10 minutes and then dust the top with icing sugar. Serve warm with scoops of vanilla ice cream.
I personally love this served warm with ice cream on top. I use my cookie scoop to scoop out several small balls of ice cream for each serving. I think it looks very pretty that way.
In the UK they would probably serve this with warm custard or cold pouring cream. Either way would be delicious also!
Wanting bread pudding, but don't have an air fryer? No problem, you can cook this in the oven if you wish. Preheat the oven to 350*F/180*C/ gas mark 4.
Place the pudding dish into a Bain Marie holding hot water to come halfway up the sides of your baking dish. Bale for 30 to 35 minutes until the top is golden brown and a knife inserted near the center comes out clean.
VANILLA SAUCED BREAD PUDDING - For those who enjoy a rich sauce with their bread puddings. Deliciously indulgent.
CHOCOLATE BOX BREAD PUDDING FOR TWO - A smaller sized bread pudding perfectly sized for two people in which you can use chopped up chocolate bars or leftovers from a box of chocolates. (What are those?)
SWEET ALMOND BREAD PUDDING WITH BLACKBERRY SAUCE - These little baby bread puddings have beautiful flavor and the sauce goes just perfect with them. They are great for entertaining.
Air Fryer Bread Pudding
Yield: 4
Author: Marie Rayner
Prep time: 5 MinCook time: 15 MinTotal time: 20 Min
You won't believe how quick and easy this dessert is to make. And all in the air fryer. No fuss, no muss and delicious! You will need a six-inch casserole or cake dish.
Ingredients
You will need:
- 4 cups (140g) cubed white bread (3/4 inch cubes, Italian, French, Brioche, Challah)
- 4 TBS sultana raisins (golden)
For the custard:
- 2 large free range eggs
- 1 cup (240ml) whole milk
- 1/4 cup (60ml) heavy cream
- 5 TBS sugar
- 2 TBS melted butter (hot)
- 1 tsp vanilla
- pinch salt
To serve:
- icing sugar (confectioners) to dust
- vanilla ice cream
Instructions
- To make the custard, whisk the eggs in a bowl until emulsified. Whisk in the milk, cream, vanilla, salt and sugar. Whisk in the hot butter.
- Butter a six-inch round cake tin or casserole really well. Add half of the bread cubes. Sprinkle 2 TBS of the sultana raisins over top. Pour over half of the custard. Press down lightly with the back of a spoon. Repeat with the remaining bread cubes, sultanas and custard. Again pressing the bread down gently to submerge it in the custard.(Don't worry if it pops up again, you only want to dampen it all.)
- Preheat the air fryer to 350*F/180*C for 15 minutes.
- Place the pudding into the air fryer basket and into the air fryer. Cook for 15 minutes at 350*F/180*C. At this time the top should be nicely golden brown and a bread knife inserted near the center should come out clean. (If not done return to the air fryer and cook for a few minutes longer at the same temperature.)
- Leave to set for about 10 minutes and then dust the top with icing sugar. Serve warm with scoops of vanilla ice cream.
Notes
You can use stale sandwich bread, burger buns, hot dog rolls and dinner rolls. Place the cubes onto a baking sheet and let them air dry for a few hours prior to using.
You may also use a French baguette. In this case assemble and allow the pudding to rest overnight in the refrigerator, covered.
You can leave out the sultana raisins and use fresh or frozen berries (thaw and drain.)
Thanks so much for visiting! Do come again!
I had some stale bread that needed using up today, along with some bananas that were ripening. I knew I could use two of the bananas up in another kind of bake, but I wanted to do something different with the one.
I am not a big bread eater most of the time. I only ever rarely eat it, and then it is always whole wheat, and usually as toast. I had bought this loaf of white bread when Eileen and Tim were here one day because they only eat white bread.
If I had a large freezer, I simply would have frozen it to use another time, but alas . . . I only have the top of my refrigerator freezer at this point in time. I have given the birds lots of my bread over the past few months.
Today I thought I could use at least some of this to make some sort of dessert and with the banana involved, a chocolate and banana bread pudding came to mind. And why not!
I wish you could have seen this when it first came out of the oven. The bread and custard had all souffled up and looked like a pretty flower.
All puffy and tall, golden brown. Buttery golden brown. Alas, what goes up usually comes down in a very short time so I was unable to get a photograph. You will just have to take my word for it!
It was indeed, extremely pretty. I love recipes like this one, where you can use up things you have in your house. I hate waste.
Bread puddings and the like are the perfect use for stale bread, as is French toast. A bread pudding is actually like a baked French toast in almost every way.
Or you could say French toast is fried bread pudding. Its all in how you look at it I guess!
Today I used Villagio Classic Italian White Bread. The slices were nice and thick. Brioche would also work very well. Mmmm . . . especially chocolate chip brioche, but I digress.
This is a bread and butter pudding, in that the slices of bread are buttered on one side before layering them in the dish. I cut them in half and used a glass pie dish, placing half of them in buttered side up, and sprinkled with cinnamon
They looked like a flower laying there in the pie dish. I covered the first layer of bread with sliced banana. Not too thin, each slice being about 1/3 of an inch thick. Then I sprinkled semi-sweet chocolate chips over top.
Bananas and chocolate go so well together. I wouldn't use milk chocolate here. It would be too sweet with the banana. Just my opinion.
I thought semi sweet would work much better. Trust me on this.
I placed the remaining half slices of bread over top of the banana and chocolate chips, again sprinkling them with ground cinnamon.
I placed them slightly askew from the bottom layer so that there were no real gaps right through to the bottom of the dish if that makes sense.
A rich custard then gets poured over top. This, too, is simple. Just beaten milk and cream, eggs and some brown sugar.
I used full fat milk. I mean there is cream, so what the heck. Why not use whole! Desserts are suppose to be a tad bit indulgent.
You want to whisk these together until the sugar melts completely into the liquid. You could add a touch of vanilla if you wanted to, or a bit of vanilla and lemon, but I did not.
Pour this over the bread, making sure that every slice gets some on it.
I then used the back of my wooden spoon to smush them down a tiny bit. Making sure each and every scrap of the bread was soaked or soaking.
Submerge it as well as you can, but don't compact it, if that makes sense. (And I hope that it does!)
I didn't bother putting any chocolate chips on top. I knew that the oven temperature would only burn them, or cause they to dry out too much. I don't like chocolate chips that are burnt and dried out.
I also don't think any other kind of chocolate chip would work as well as the semi sweet. You could chop up semi sweet chocolate or even dark chocolate, but make sure it is a good quality chocolate.
I sprinkled it with a final but of freshly grated nutmeg and then just left it sitting for half an hour so that a lot of the custard could be absorbed. Makes for a lovely soufflé like finish, in my opinion.
This is a pudding that loves to be served with lashings of something creamy. Vanilla ice cream. Pouring cream. Custard sauce.
I decided to serve it with lashings of cream. Yes, there is only me. Don't judge me, lol. I already judge myself.
This is pretty indulgent and difficult to resist. A once in a blue moon treat perhaps.
My problem is I have far too many of those. Blue moon treats that is, but at this stage of my life, I figure a bit of indulgence every now and than won't hurt.
Do you know what you can do with leftover bread and butter pudding? Pop it into the refrigerator and let it get really cold. Then cut it into slabs.
Fry the slabs in hot butter and then serve it hot, drizzled with maple syrup, with some berries scattered over top for breakfast. Just saying. Not that I am going to do that.
But a gal can dream can't she? Dreams cost nothing. Enjoy!
Banana Bread Pudding
Yield: 3
Author: Marie Rayner
Prep time: 10 MinCook time: 40 Mininactive time: 30 MinTotal time: 1 H & 19 M
You can use Brioche bread for this delicious pudding or ordinary white bread. Delicious served warm with vanilla ice cream, pouring cream or custard sauce. Simply double the ingredients to serve six.
Ingredients
- Softened butter to butter the bread and grease the casserole dish
- 5 thick slices of bread, you can leave the crusts on
- 1 banana, peeled and sliced
- 1 tsp ground cinnamon
- 4 TBS semi-sweet chocolate chips
- 3/4 cup (180ml) whole milk
- 1/3 cup (80ml) double cream
- 1 large free range egg, lightly beaten
- 2 TBS soft light brown sugar
- pinch of grated nutmeg
Instructions
- Butter all of your bread slices on one side and cut in half through the middle. Butter a 9 inch pie dish.
- Place half of the bread slices in the bottom of the dish, butter side up. Sprinkle with half of the cinnamon. Slice the banana over top and sprinkle with the chocolate chips. Top with the remaining slices of bread, butter side up, and sprinkle with the remainder of the cinnamon.
- Whisk together the milk, cream, egg and brown sugar until the sugar melts into the mixture and dissolves. Pour this evenly over the bread in the pan, making sure everything gets covered. Push the bread down into the milk mixture with the back of a wooden spoon if you need to.
- Sprinkle a bit of nutmeg on top and leave to sit for half an hour.
- Preheat the oven to 375*F/190*C/ gas mark 5.
- Bake the bread pudding in the preheated oven for 30 to 40 minutes until risen, golden brown and the custard has set. (A knife inserted half way between the side and the center should come out clean.)
- Serve warm and spooned out into bowls.
Did you make this recipe?
Tag @marierayner5530 on instagram and hashtag it #TheEnglishKitchen
I had some stale croissants in the kitchen and a few chocolates leftover from our Christmas box that I thought should be used up. (Not that they have done off, but you know . . . I like to get rid of tempation if I can.) I decided to experiment use them up in a scrumptious Chocolate Box Bread Pudding for Two. Lets end July in a positive way!
Plus it was a great way to showcase my newest tea/coffee cups. I got these from the Scandanavian Pantry. They're so cute. I am totally in love with Scandanavian design, always have been. I am also a lover of Nordic television dramas, but anyways, back to the pudding . . .
I had gotten two tins of these chocolates at Christmas, mostly because I was in love with the little tin that they came in.
I mean, what's not to love about this . . . I thought they would make perfect little sewing boxes. I know I have far too many fingers in far too many pies.
I chopped up four Country Fudge Chocolates and stirred them into the bread pudding batter, which was a mix of stale croissants, egg, milk, cream, sugar and vanilla. This sat for awhile so that the croissants could absorbe the liquid and then I divided it between the two cups, pushing a Golden Barrel (caramel) down into the centre. I then topped it with some more torn up bits of croissant which had been tossed with melted butter and sprinkled it with demerera sugar to give a nice crunchy topping.
I believe Demerara Sugar is called Turbinado sugar in North America. I had to take a photo as soon as they came out of the oven so you could see how nice they puffed up over the edges of the cups. So pretty.
They will sink upon standing . . . not a lot, but some, that's perfectly okay and quite normal.
I was tempted to dust this with icing sugar but held myself back, surely this was sweet enough . . .
Just look at that lovely buttery crunchy topping . . .
Nobody knows the special secret which is lurking beneath the surface . . .
What a surprise that will be when they dig their spoon into the centre . . .
And pull up some of that melted chocolate and caramel . . . so rich, so decadent.
The skinny man I live with has to have cream, or custard sauce on his puddings, which is what they call desserts over here in the UK. They all get called puddings . . . cake, pie, etc.
Just look at that . . . and he hasn't even discovered the chocolate fudge bits yet . . .
They are in there, I promise . . . so, so SO tasty!
I was trying to think of what other kinds of chocolate you could use in their place. Soft toffees could be chopped up along with coffee flavoured chocolates . . .
Then there is the chocolate orange which could be chopped and then in the centre a whole chocolate filled with orange fondant . . .
You really can let your imagination go wild here . . .
See the fudge bits in there. Wowsa, wowsa eh! Todd thought he had died and gone to heaven!
Chocolate Box Bread Pudding for two
Yield: 2
Author: Marie Rayner
prep time: 15 Mcook time: 30 Mtotal time: 45 M
Thoroughly decadent and no waste. Rich and delicious.
Ingredients:
- 2 TBS butter, melted plus extra to butter cups
- 3 croissants, torn into 1-inch pieces
- 1 large free range egg
- 2 TBS caster sugar
- 120ml cream (1/2 cup)
- 60ml whole milk (1/4 cup)
- 1/2 tsp pure vanilla extract
- 6 leftover chocolates (four toffee fudge ones and two caramel barrels)
- 1 tsp demerara sugar
To serve: (optional)
- pouring cream, clotted cream, ice cream, custard sauce
Instructions:
- Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Butter two (6-oz) tea or coffee cups really well. Place onto a small baking tray.
- Measure out about 1/2 cup of the croissant cubes and tear into smaller bits and toss together with the melted butter in a small bowl and set aside.
- Cut the fudge chocolates into small bits.
- Whisk the egg together in a bowl along with the caster sugar until the sugar dissolves. (Caster sugar is a fine granulated sugar.)Whisk in the cream, milk and vanilla. Add the cubed croissants and fold in the fudge chocolate bits. Let stand for fifteen minutes. Divide this mixture between the two buttered cups.
- Press a caramel barrel chocolate down into the centre of each pudding. Top with the buttered croissant pieces, piling them over the chocolate to cover completely. Sprinkle each with 1/2 tsp of demerara sugar.
- Bake in the preheated oven for 30 minutes until puffed and golden brown. The pudding should be set. Serve warm with pouring cream, clotted cream, ice cream, or custard sauce.
notes:
Don't panic if it sinks a bit after it starts to cool. This is completely normal.
Did you make this recipe?
Tag @marierayner5530 on instagram and hashtag it #EnglishKitchen
Created using The Recipes Generator
I wish I could outfit my whole kitchen in Scandanavian goodies, but then I would be worried each time Todd used something that he would break it. You know men can be quite careless . . . but we won't go there . . .
Happy Friday!
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