Showing posts with label leftovers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label leftovers. Show all posts

Tuesday, 2 September 2008

Bread and Butter Pudding


And while we’re on bread puddings, I thought I better add my old favourite (sadly not anymore, with all those eggs and milk and butter) here’s the basic to play around with to your hearts content. Leave it as it is, or add marmalade, or apricot jam, or slides of orange, or pieces of chocolate, or……

Ingredients:
5 or 6 thin slices of bread and butter
1 pint of milk
2 eggs
1 dessert spoon of sugar
sultanas, currents, or candied lemon

method:
cut of the crusts and divide each slice into 4 squares, arrange them in layers in a well-greased pie dish and sprinkle each layer with sultanas or whatever is being used. Beat the eggs, and the add the sugar, stir until dissolved, then mix in the milk and pour gently over the bread, which should only half fill the dish. Let it stand at least an hour for the bread to soak, then bake in a moderately cool oven for nearly 1 hour.
Sufficient for 4 or 5 people

Today’s illustration ‘toast’ © Lois Blackburn, please visit www.loisblackburn.co.uk to see more work.

Bread pudding


A friend of mine just asked if I have a recipe for bread pudding, although I have made lots of bread and butter puddings in my life, I’ve never made a bread pudding. Curious to find out more, I turned to my trusty “Mrs Beeton’s Everyday Cookery’ (an absolute gem of a cookery book and the basis for many an economical delicious dish) and here follows the recipe…. A great way of using up any remnants of bread..

Bread pudding, baked.

Ingredients:
8oz of stale bread
4oz of raisins or currents
2oz of finely shredded suet (you can get vegi versions of suet, or I’m guessing you could use butter)
2oz of sugar
1 egg
a little milk
a good pinch of nutmeg

Method:

Break the bread into small pieces, cover them with cold water, soak for half an hour, then strain and squeeze dry. Beat out all the lumps with a fork, and stir in the sugar, suet, raisins, nutmeg and mix well. Add the egg, previously beaten, and as much milk as necessary to make the mixture moist enough to drop readily from the spoon. Pour into a greased pie-dish and bake gently for about 1 hour. When done, turn out on to a dish, and dredge well with sugar. Sufficient for about 5 or 6 people.

Today’s illustration ‘toast’ © Lois Blackburn, please visit www.loisblackburn.co.uk to see more work.