355. Plain Bread Pudding, N.
Lay 3 slices of a 5-cent loaf of bread (minus the
crust) in a pudding dish and pour over them 1 quart
cold milk; set the dish on the side of stove to heat
gradually; when hot stir 2 eggs with 2-1/2 tablespoonfuls
sugar to a cream and add a little cold milk or water
and 1 teaspoonful essence of lemon; stir this into
the bread and milk; put 1/2 tablespoonful butter in
small bits on top, grate over some nutmeg, bake in
oven from 20 to 30 minutes and serve hot or cold without
sauce.
356. Plain Bread Pudding (baked),
N. Put 3 slices of bread (minus the
crust) into a pudding dish and pour over them 1 quart
boiling milk; cover the dish and let it stand until
cold; then beat up the bread with a fork; stir 3 eggs
with 3 or 4 tablespoonfuls sugar to a cream and mix
it with the bread; flavor with lemon; put a few small
pieces of butter with a little grated nutmeg on top
and bake in the oven till thick; serve with lemon
or nutmeg sauc/4 pound raisins or currants may
be added if liked.
357. Bird’s Nest Pudding.
Peel 6 good sized greening apples, remove the cores
with an apple corer without breaking the fruit, put
them in a long, shallow tin pan, pour over 2 cups boiling
water, cover with a pan of same size and let them
boil on top of stove for 5 minutes; then drain off
all the water and put 1 teaspoonful apple or currant
jelly into each apple. For batter take 1 cup flour,
1-1/2 teaspoonfuls baking powder, 1 cup milk, 2 eggs,
1/4 teaspoonful salt, 1 tablespoonful lard, butter
or clarified dripping and 2 teaspoonfuls sugar; sift
flour, powder, sugar and salt into a bowl; put in
the butter or lard and chop it fine in the flour; make
a hollow in center and put in the yolks of the 2 eggs;
then add the milk gradually and mix the whole into
a smooth batter; add lastly the whites of the eggs
beaten to a stiff froth; pour the batter over the
apples and bake 1/2 hour in a medium hot oven; serve
as soon as done and send the following sauce to table
with it: Stir 1 tablespoonful butter with
4 tablespoonfuls powdered sugar to a white cream and
add the yolk of 1 egg, 1 tablespoonful rum or brandy
and a little nutmeg; lastly stir in the white of the
egg, beaten to a stiff froth; in serving give to each
individual an apple on a small plate and a large spoonful
of sauce on each apple; sufficient for a family of
6. This pudding has the advantages of being healthy
and excellent, while not being expensive.
358. Bread Pudding (boiled).
Soak 3/4 pound stale bread (minus the crust) in water;
when soft press it out either in a napkin or with
the hands; melt 2 tablespoonfuls butter or clarified
dripping in a saucepan, add the bread and stir over
the fire till it has formed into a compact mass and
loosens itself from bottom of saucepan; transfer the
bread to a dish; stir the yolks of 6 eggs with 4 tablespoonfuls
sugar to a cream and add them by degrees to the bread;
add 2 cups well cleansed currants, 1/2 cup finely chopped
almonds, the grated rind and juice of 1/2 lemon, a
little nutmeg and 1/2 teaspoonful cinnamon; add lastly
the whites of 6 eggs, beaten to a stiff froth; butter
a pudding form and sprinkle with bread crumbs; fill
in the mixture, put on the cover, place the form in
a vessel of boiling water, cover closely and boil
2 hours; serve with lemon, fruit or hard sauce.
359. Bread Fruit Pudding.
Pare off the crust from a 5-cent loaf of bread and
cut the loaf into thin slices; spread the slices on
both sides with any kind of fruit marmalade; butter
a pudding form, sprinkle with bread crumbs and lay
in the bread; stir 8 eggs with 1/2 cup sugar and the
grated rind of 1 lemon until they foam; add by degrees
1 pint hot milk, stirring constantly; pour this over
the bread, cover the form tightly and boil 1-1/2 hours;
serve with wine cream sauce.
360. Bread Sponge Pudding.
Boil 1 cup milk with 1 tablespoonful butter; stir
in while boiling 1 cup sifted flour and keep stirring
until it has formed into a smooth paste and loosens
itself from bottom of saucepan; transfer the paste
to a dish; stir 1 tablespoonful butter to a cream
and add, alternately, the yolks of 5 eggs, 4 tablespoonfuls
sugar, the paste, 1/4 pound well cleansed currants,
a little nutmeg and grated lemon peel; pour 1/2 cup
rum over 1 cup fine bread crumbs and add them to the
above mixture with the beaten whites of the 5 eggs;
butter a pudding form, sprinkle with bread crumbs,
fill in the mixture and boil in a tightly covered
vessel of water for 2 hours; serve with wine cream,
fruit or hard sauce; sufficient for 8 persons.
361. Hanoverian Pudding.
Pare and quarter 6 large pippin or greening apples
and cut them into fine slices; put them in a saucepan
with 1 tablespoonful butter, 1/2 cup sugar, 1 tablespoonful
well cleansed currants, 1 tablespoonful seedless raisins,
2 tablespoonfuls finely cut citron and the grated
rind and juice of 1/2 lemon; stir this over the fire
till the apples begin to get soft; add 1/2 cup raspberry
or currant jelly and set aside to cool; soak 1/4 pound
bread (minus the crust) in water and press it out in
a napkin; then place it in a saucepan with 1 tablespoonful
butter and stir over the fire until the bread loosens
itself from bottom of saucepan; stir 1 tablespoonful
butter to a cream and add, alternately, the yolks
of 5 eggs, 2 tablespoonfuls sugar and the bread (by
spoonfuls); add lastly the beaten whites of the eggs;
next butter a pudding dish and sprinkle with bread
crumbs; put in a layer of bread mixture and over it
a layer of apples; continue in this way until all
is used; bake 40 minutes; serve with or without sauce.
362. Huckleberry Pudding (German
style). Soak a 5-cent loaf of bread (minus
the crust) in milk till soft; press it out, put in
a saucepan with 1 tablespoonful butter and stir over
the fire to a smooth paste; transfer it to a dish
and set aside to cool; stir 1 tablespoonful butter
to a cream and add (alternately) the yolks of 8 eggs,
5 tablespoonfuls sugar and the bread (by spoonfuls);
when this is well mixed add 1 pint huckleberries and
lastly the whites of the eggs, beaten to a stiff froth;
fill this into a well buttered and floured pudding
form, cover closely and boil in a kettle of water 2
hours; serve with hard or wine sauce. This pudding
may be made of peaches, apples, cherries or blackberries;
sufficient for 12 persons. For a small family
1/2 the above quantities will suffice.
363. Rye Bread Pudding.
Stir 1 tablespoonful butter to a cream and add by
degrees 1/2 cup sugar and the yolks of 6 eggs; stir
this for 1/2 hour; then add 1/4 pound finely pounded
almonds, 1/2 teaspoonful cloves, 1 teaspoonful cinnamon,
a little cardamon and nutmeg and 1/4 pound rye bread
which has previously been cut into slices, dried in
the oven and rolled fine with a rolling pin; add lastly
the grated rind of 1 lemon, a small glass of Cognac
or rum and the whites of the 6 eggs, beaten to a stiff
froth; butter a pudding form, sprinkle with bread
crumbs, fill in the mixture and cover and set the form
in a kettle of boiling water; the form should only
be immersed in water half way; boil 1-1/2 hours, keeping
the kettle closely covered; serve with brandy, wine
or hard sauce.
364. Apple Pudding (German art).
Pare, core and cut into quarters 6 good sized tart
apples, put them in a stewpan with a little water
and boil till half done; then carefully remove the
apples to a pudding dish, pour 3 tablespoonfuls raspberry
syrup or jelly over them and set aside to cool; place
a saucepan over the fire with 1 pint milk and 1/2
tablespoonful butter; as soon as it boils put in 1
cup sifted flour and stir until the mixture forms into
a smooth paste and loosens itself from the bottom
of saucepan; transfer it to a dish; stir 1 tablespoonful
butter to a cream and add alternately the yolks of
5 eggs, 5 tablespoonfuls sugar and the paste, a spoonful
at a time; when this is well blended together add the
grated rind of 1 lemon, 1/2 cup finely chopped almonds
and lastly the beaten whites of 5 eggs; pour this
mixture over the apples and bake in a medium hot oven
for 3/4 hour; it may be served with wine, fruit or
hard sauce or may be dusted with sugar and served without
a sauce. Note. When peaches,
cherries, plums or berries are used they need not
be cooked before baking.
365. English Apple Pudding.
Butter a deep pudding dish and sprinkle with bread
crumbs; line the sides of dish with a rich pie crust
and put a narrow strip around the bottom so as to leave
the center of bottom uncovered; next fill the dish
with finely cut apples with some sugar sprinkled between
them; add a very little nutmeg, a pinch of cinnamon
and a little butter in small pieces; cover with the
same crust and bake 1 hour; when done turn the pudding
out onto a dish and serve with hard sauce. (See Sauce.)
366. Apple Pudding (boiled).
1 cup finely chopped suet, 3 cups flour, 1 cup milk,
3 eggs, 1/2 cup sugar, 3 cups finely cut apples, 1/2
teaspoonful salt, a little grated lemon peel and 2
teaspoonfuls baking powder; sift flour, salt and powder
into a bowl and add grated lemon peel and suet; next
add the yolks of the eggs and mix the whole with the
milk to a stiff batter; then add the beaten whites
of the eggs; dust the apples with flour and stir them
into batter; butter a pudding form, sprinkle with
bread crumbs, fill in the mixture, cover tightly and
boil 2 hours; serve with hard sauce. Note. The
apples and dough may be put in layers in the form,
putting first a layer of dough, then a layer of apples,
then dough, and so on. This pudding may also
be made of apricots, peaches, figs, plums or currants,
citron or raisins.
367. Apple Bread Pudding (German
art). Pare and cut into slices 8 large
tart apples; soak a 5 cent loaf of bread in cold water;
when soft press it out and put in a saucepan over
the fire with 2 tablespoonfuls butter; stir for 5
minutes and transfer it to a dish to cool; stir 4
tablespoonfuls sugar with the yolks of 4 eggs to a
cream and add the bread, the sliced apples and lastly
the whites of the eggs beaten to a stiff froth; butter
a pudding form, sprinkle with bread crumbs, fill in
the bread mixture, boil 2 hours and serve with hard
sauce.
368. Bread Pudding (with Apples).
Cut 3 slices of bread, 1/2 inch in thickness, from
a 9 cent loaf of bread and soak them in cold water
for 10 minutes; press out and put them over the fire
in a saucepan with 1 tablespoonful butter; stir for
5 minutes, or until it has formed into a compact mass;
transfer it to a dish; when cold stir the yolks of
3 eggs with 2 tablespoonfuls sugar to a cream and
add the bread; then add 2 cups finely chopped apples,
2 tablespoonfuls fine bread crumbs and lastly the
beaten whites of the eggs; butter a form, sprinkle
with bread crumbs, fill in the bread mixture, close
tightly and boil for 2 hours; serve with hard, fruit
or wine sauce.
369. Apple Rice Pudding (German art).
Place a saucepan with 1/2 pound rice covered with
cold water over the fire and boil 5 minutes; drain
in colander, rinse off with cold water and return rice
to saucepan; add 1 quart milk, 1/2 teaspoonful salt
and boil till tender; pare and cut into slices 6 large
tart apples and stew them in 2 tablespoonfuls butter
till nearly done; put them into a pudding form; when
rice is cold mix it with 1/4 pound sugar, the yolks
of 6 eggs and lastly the beaten whites of the eggs;
pour it over the apples, bake in the oven and serve
with the following sauce: Put the apple
peels and cores in a saucepan, cover with water and
boil till tender; strain through a jelly bag, return
the liquor to saucepan, add the juice of 1 lemon and
boil 5 minutes; add 1 cup sugar and let it boil 5
minutes; serve with the pudding.
370. Apple Pudding a l’allemande.
Pare and core 6 medium sized greening apples, put
them in a long, shallow tin pan, add 2 cups boiling
water, cover with another pan of same size and boil
5 minutes; drain off the water and put them into a
pudding dish of a size large enough to admit of the
apples standing side by side. Prepare the pudding
batter as follows: Put 1 cup milk in a saucepan
over the fire, add 1 tablespoonful butter and when
it boils add 1 cup sifted flour, stirring constantly;
continue the stirring until the mixture has formed
into a smooth paste and loosens itself; then take
it off the fire and let cool; in the meantime stir
1 tablespoonful butter to a cream and add 4 tablespoonfuls
sugar and the yolks of 4 eggs, adding 1 yolk and 1
spoonful sugar at a time, stirring well; then add
a little of the paste and continue in this way until
all the paste, yolks and sugar are well mixed; add
lastly the whites of the 4 eggs, beaten to a stiff
froth; put 1 teaspoonful currant jelly into each apple,
pour the batter over the apples and bake 3/4 hour;
serve with hard sauce.
371. Old-Fashioned Apple Pudding.
1/2 pound finely chopped suet, 1 pound flour, 1 teaspoonful
salt and 1 cup cold water; sift flour and salt into
a bowl, add the suet and mix the whole with the water
into a stiff paste; roll it out on a floured board
1/4 inch in thickness, put in the center 1/2 dozen
finely cut tart apples, sprinkle 1 tablespoonful sugar
and a little flour between them and add a pinch of
nutmeg and 1 teaspoonful butter in small pieces; dip
a large napkin in hot water, ring out and dust it
with flour; cover the apples with the paste, lay the
pudding in center of cloth, fold the cloth together
and tie it tightly; have a large kettle of water with
1/2 tablespoonful salt over the fire; as soon as it
boils put in the pudding, cover the kettle and boil
2 hours; serve with hard, brandy or cherry wine sauce
and if liquor is objected to serve with nutmeg sauce.
The pudding should be served as soon as taken from
the water. For a small family half these quantities
will be sufficient.
372. Roly-Poly. 1 cup
finely chopped suet, 2 cups prepared flour, 1 egg
and 3/4 cup water; mix this into a stiff dough, roll
out 1/8 of an inch in thickness, brush it over with
beaten egg and sprinkle over 1 tablespoonful bread
crumbs; put on a layer of finely cut apples, sprinkle
over 1 spoonful sugar, roll the dough up like a music
sheet, brush the outside all over with beaten eggs
and sprinkle with fine bread crumbs; dip a napkin
into hot water, wring out dry and dust the inside
with flour; put the pudding in center of cloth, fold
the napkin around it, lap the ends over and fasten
with a pin; tie a string around it, drop into slightly
salted boiling water and boil for 2 hours; serve with
the following sauce: Mix 1 tablespoonful
cornstarch with 1/2 cup cold water and add 1 cup boiling
water and 2 tablespoonfuls butter; boil 5 minutes,
strain through a sieve, add 1 cup sugar, a little
lemon juice and 1 cup sherry wine; or serve with hard
sauce.
373. Roly-Poly Tutti Frutti.
Prepare a dough the same as in foregoing recipe; roll
out 1/8 of an inch thick, brush over with beaten egg
and sprinkle 1 tablespoonful bread or cracker crumbs
over it; pare, core and slice 1/2 dozen tart apples
and put them with 1-1/2 tablespoonfuls butter and
3 tablespoonfuls sugar in a saucepan; add 1/2 cup
currants, the same quantity seedless raisins and finely
cut citron; cover saucepan and stew over the fire
till apples begin to soften; pour them into a dish
and when cold spread the apples over the dough; lay
2 tablespoonfuls currant or apple jelly in small pieces
all over the apples; then finish the same as Roly-Poly;
serve with the following sauce: Stir 2
tablespoonfuls butter with 1 cup powdered sugar to
a cream and add by degrees 2 whole eggs, a little
nutmeg and 4 tablespoonfuls Jamaica rum or brandy;
or serve with lemon or nutmeg sauce.