Skip to content
B Bitluxy

flavorful high fiber recipes page 158

Our Familys Plum Pudding 1992, 1/2

Ingredients

  • 1/2 c Blackberry jam or preserves
  • 1 ts Baking soda
  • 1 1/2 c Candied fruit peels
  • 1 tb Brandy
  • Brandy
  • Brown sugar or flour
  • 6 Egg whites beaten stiff but not dry
  • Candied red cherries (opt.) for bottom of molds
  • 2 loosely-packed c Currants
  • 1/2 ts Mace
  • 1/2 ts Nutmeg
  • 1 c Flour sifted
  • 1 ts Cinnamon
  • 6 Egg yolks well beaten
  • sprigs Holly
  • Candied fruit or angelica
  • 1 c Brown sugar
  • 2 c English walnuts finely chopped (1/2 pound)
  • 2 drops cream if needed
  • 1/2 ts Salt
  • 1/2 c Butter softened
  • 1 1/2 c Golden raisins and/or muscat raisins
  • 1/2 c cocktail sherry Dry
  • 2 c beef suet Good quality, ground by butcher
  • brandy Additional for ripening pudding
  • 1/4 c Cognac
  • 5 Loosely-packed c fresh bread crumbs from home-made bread

Instructions

  1. Combine the dried fruits and peels in a large bowl and sprinkle with cognac. Cover and place in the refrigerator overnight (or longer - in which case you may want to add more cognac). To the fruits in the large bowl, add nuts and suet. Resift flour with the baking soda, salt and spices; then sift over the fruit mixture while tossing and mixing with a wooden spoon to evenly distribute the dry ingredients. Stir in jam and brown sugar. Prepare the bread crumbs (use the food processor, removing crusts first if they are crusty and hard). Sprinkle bread crumbs into the sherry, mixing with a fork. Add to the fruit mixture. Add the beaten egg yolks; mix thoroughly. Last, fold in beaten egg whites. Prepare two pudding molds. This recipe makes enough for one 2-quart mold, and the remainder can be steamed in a coffee can - a 26-ounce can makes a round pudding about 3“ tall. (You could make one huge pudding if you have a container.) Grease molds with butter and then sprinkle them with sugar or dust with flour. Arrange candied cherries in molds, if desired (cherries should be dusted with flour). Fill 2-quart mold no more than 2/3 full with batter. Cover pudding mold with its lid, fasten with clamps or tie on securely. For the coffee can, cover with its plastic lid, tie it on and wrap all with aluminum foil. (The plastic will split.) For a bowl without a lid, cover the top with layered waxed paper tied down securely, then do the same with aluminum foil. (Continued)

Related Posts