Burlington Pudding
Mix 1/2 cup of flour with a little
cold milk and stir into 1 pint of boiling milk.
Remove from the fire, and add 1/2 cup sugar and 2 large
tablespoons of butter; also 6 eggs, the whites and
yolks beaten separately. Flavor with vanilla
or lemon, and bake one-half hour in pan of hot water.
Serve with wine sauce.
Fig Pudding
2 cups bread crumbs, 1 of currants,
1 of chopped raisins, 1 of figs, 1 of suet, 3 eggs,
well-beaten, 2 cups milk, 1 of brown sugar. Steam
four hours.
Pancake with Fruit
Take 4 eggs, a cup of cream or rich
milk, and flour enough to make a thin batter.
Add a little fine sugar and nutmeg. Butter the
griddle and turn the batter on. Let it spread
as large as a common dinner plate. When done
on one side, turn it, as a pancake. Have some
nice preserves, and spread over quickly. Roll
the cake up, place on a flat dish, sift on a little
powdered sugar and cinnamon, a little butter, if you
wish, and serve hot. Be careful and not make
the batter too thin.
Strawberry Custard
1 cup sugar, 1 quart milk, yolks of
5 eggs, white of 1, and vanilla. Let the milk
boil, then add eggs and sugar, and let cool. Crush
and strain 1 pint strawberries, 2 tablespoons sugar
and whites of 4 eggs, beaten stiff. Place the
custard in glasses, about half full, then fill glasses
with strawberry juice and the whites of eggs, beaten
together.
Orange Float
1 quart of water, juice and pulp of
2 lemons and 1 coffee cup of sugar. When boiling
hot, add 4 teaspoons corn starch. Boil fifteen
minutes, stirring constantly. When cold, pour
this over four or five oranges, which have been sliced.
Beat the whites of 3 eggs to a stiff froth, sweeten
and flavor, and place large spoonfuls over the top
of the float.
Kiss Pudding
1 quart milk, 3 tablespoons corn starch,
yolks of 4 eggs, 1/2 cup sugar, a little salt.
Put part of milk, salt and sugar on to boil. Dissolve
corn starch in remainder of milk, stir into milk, and
while boiling, add the yolks. Flavor with vanilla.
Frosting. Whites of
4 eggs, 1/2 cup sugar, flavor with lemon, spread on
pudding, and put in oven to brown. Save a little
frosting to moisten top; then put grated cocoanut
to give appearance of snow.
Batter Pudding
1 pint of milk, scalded, stir in 1
tablespoon corn starch and 2 of flour, mixed with
a little cold milk, beat 4 eggs (yolks and whites
separately), and, when the batter is cold, stir in
first yolks, then whites, and bake three quarters
of an hour.
Sauc cup sugar,
1/2 of butter, beaten to a cream, put over tea-kettle,
and stir in 1/2 pint whipped cream, and flavor with
brandy.
Suet Pudding No 1
1 cup chopped suet, 1 of raisins,
1 of molasses, 1 of milk, 1/2 teaspoon soda, and 1
of salt. Stir quite thick with flour, and boil
in a bag three hours. Serve with wine sauce.
Suet Pudding No 2
1 pint powdered bread crumbs, 2 pints
boiling milk, poured on to the bread, 3 eggs, 1 cup
suet, fruit to taste, 1 wine-glass of sherry or brandy,
and spice to taste. To be eaten with sauce.
Suet Pudding No 3
2 cups chopped bread, 1/2 cup chopped
suet, 1/2 cup molasses, 1 egg, 1 cup chopped raisins,
1 of milk, with 1/2 teaspoon soda dissolved in it,
1/2 teaspoon cloves, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, a little
salt and mace. Boil two hours in a pudding-boiler.
To be eaten with hot or hard sauce.
Poor Man’s Pudding
1 cup suet, 1 of milk, 1 of molasses,
2 of raisins, 4 of flour, 1 teaspoon saleratus.
Steam four hours. Serve with rich sauce.
Poor Man’s Rice Pudding
1 quart of milk, 1 tablespoon rice,
1 of sugar, 1/2 saltspoon of salt. Bake slowly,
stirring once or twice.
Indian Pudding
1 pint milk, boiled, and stir in while
boiling 2 tablespoons meal, with a little salt and
a piece of butter. Butter dish and bake.
Before baking, add 1 cup cold milk.
Cracker Pudding
3 Boston crackers, rolled fine, 3
eggs, 3 tablespoons sugar. Salt and spice to
taste. Pour 1 quart of boiling milk on to the
crackers. Add the sugar, eggs and spice.
Pour into a buttered dish. Bake one-half hour,
and serve with either hard or liquid sauce.
Lemon Bread Pudding
1 quart milk, 2 coffee cups bread
crumbs, 1 of white sugar, 1/2 cup butter, 4 eggs,
the juice and 1/2 the grated rind of 1 lemon.
Soak the bread in the milk, then add the beaten yolks
with the butter and sugar, rubbed to a cream; also
the lemon. Bake in a buttered dish until firm
and slightly browned. Beat the whites to a stiff
froth, with 3 tablespoons of powdered sugar, and flavor
with lemon. Spread over the pudding when baked,
and brown slightly; then sift sugar over it. Eat
cold. Orange pudding may be made in the same way.
Delmonico Pudding
1 quart milk, piece of butter size
of a walnut, 3 tablespoons corn starch dissolved in
a little milk, yolks of 4 eggs, 6 tablespoons white
sugar. Boil all together. When done, place
in a dish, and set in the oven while beating the whites
of eggs, to which add 3 tablespoons powdered sugar.
Flavor with vanilla. Spread the beaten whites
of eggs over the pudding, and return to oven, to slightly
brown.
English Plum Pudding No 1
1/2 pound of seeded raisins, same
of currants, well washed and dried, grated rind and
juice of 2 oranges, 1/2 a nutmeg grated, 1 tablespoon
each of cinnamon, cloves and allspice, 1/2 a teaspoon
of salt, 1/2 a pound of sugar, 1/4 pound of citron,
1/2 pound of suet, 1/2 pound of bread crumbs, 1/2
pound of flour, 1 teaspoon of baking powder and 6
well-beaten eggs. Chop the suet very fine, after
removing the skin, and put it, together with the flour
and bread crumbs, into a large bowl; then add the
spices, oranges and sugar. Mix thoroughly.
Beat the eggs until very light, and add to the contents
in the bowl and mix well together. Stir in 1
pint of old English ale. Flour the raisins and
currants and add to the compound. Butter a tin
pudding-mold, put in the pudding, taking care to well
secure the cover. Have ready a kettle of boiling
water. Place the mold in it, and keep boiling
constantly five hours.
Sauce for the pudding. Beat
the yolks of 2 eggs, with 1 cup of sugar and 1/2 cup
butter. Have ready 1 pint of boiling cream, a
dessert-spoon of corn starch, blended with a little
cold milk. Add gradually to the beaten batter
and eggs. Put all on the fire, and stir constantly
until it boils. Add a wine-glass of sherry and
1 of brandy. Serve hot with the pudding.
A hard sauce used in connection with the hot one is
a great improvement.
English Plum Pudding No 2
1 small loaf of bread, crumbed, 1/2
pound of raisins, the same of currants, 1/2 pound
of citron, 1 of beef suet, chopped fine, a little
salt, 3/4 pound sugar and a little nutmeg. Mix
and let stand over night. Beat 12 eggs, very
light, and stir them in the mixture. Take enough
milk to slightly moisten the whole. Add a little
salt and nutmeg and 3/4 glass of brandy. Boil
five hours. Set on fire with brandy to serve,
and have a rich sauce.
Plain Plum Pudding
6 butter crackers, rolled, 6 eggs,
3 pints of milk, 1 cup sugar, 1/4 cup butter, 1 teaspoon
mixed spice, 1 pound raisins. Bake in a deep
pudding-dish, in a moderate oven, three or four hours,
stirring several times the first hour, to keep the
raisins from settling. Serve with hard sauce.
Snow Pudding
1 box gelatine, soaked in 1/2 tea-cup
of cold water, then add 1 quart boiling water.
Stir till it is all dissolved. Add 4 cups white
sugar and the juice of 4 lemons. Strain and set
away till cold; then add the beaten whites, beating
the whole thing half an hour, or until it is very
white. Place on ice. Use the 4 yolks and
1 pint milk, and make a custard to eat with it.
Tapioca Cream
Soak 4 tablespoons of tapioca over
night in water enough to cover it, scald 1 quart milk,
beat the yolks of 3 eggs, add 1 cup sugar, and stir
this in with the tapioca, and the whole mixture thus
formed into the milk. Let it cook about twenty
minutes. Remove from fire, and stir in the whites
of the eggs, having beaten them to a stiff froth.
Add flavoring, and serve cold. This pudding should
be cooked in a vessel set in hot water.
Baked Apple Dumpling
1/2 pound flour, 1/4 pound lard, 1
teaspoon salt, 1 of yeast powder, enough cold water
to make a stiff dough. Roll-out pastry. Cut
with biscuit-cutter twice as many pieces as you have
apples. Peel and core the apples. Put one
round of pastry on one end of the apple. Fill
the core-hole with sugar, cinnamon and a piece of
butter. Put another round of pastry on so that
the edges meet. Bake slowly three-quarters of
an hour. This will make nine or ten dumplings.
Apple Pudding
Boil 6 tart apples, after paring them
as for sauce, remove from fire, sweeten a little.
Add a lump of butter, 1 cup cracker crumbs, stirred
in 1 cup milk, yolks of 4 eggs, keeping whites for
frosting, with 1/2 cup sugar. Serve with hard
sauce.
Apple Souffle
1 pint steamed apples, 1 tablespoon
melted butter, half a cup of sugar, whites of 6 eggs,
yolks of 3, and a slight grating of nutmeg. Stir
into the hot apple the butter, sugar and nutmeg and
yolks of eggs, well-heated. When this is cold,
add the well-beaten whites to the mixture. Butter
a 3-pint dish and turn the souffle into it. Bake
thirty minutes in a hot oven. Serve immediately,
with any kind of sauce.
Apple Pan-dowdy
Pare, core and slice 5 apples, and
put in a pudding-dish, with a little water, and 1
cup sugar. Cover with pastry, and bake slowly,
breaking the cover into the apples at last.
Apple Sago Pudding
Pare and core the apples, put sugar
and cinnamon in the holes. Take as many tablespoons
of sago as you have apples. Mix it with a little
cold water and turn in as much boiling water as will
fill the dish. Stir till it thickens, then cover
up for two hours, and let it thoroughly swell, then
pour it over the apples, and bake about three hours.
Sugar and cream for sauce.
Sponge Pudding
Scald 1 pint of milk, boiling hot,
add 1/2 cup butter; when melted, add a smooth thickening
made of 1 cup of flour, mixed with cold milk.
Stir until thick and smooth, being careful not to
let it become lumpy. Remove from fire, and when
cold, add the yolks of 8 eggs, beaten very lightly;
lastly, the whites of the eggs, beaten to a stiff foam.
Bake in a dish standing in hot water.
Sauce. The yolks of
2 eggs, beaten in 1 cup of pulverized sugar to a cream.
Add the whites, and turn over the whole 4 tablespoons
of boiling cream or milk, and flour. Add wine,
if you wish.
Boston Thanksgiving Pudding
2 quarts of milk, 5 soda crackers,
rolled fine, 5 eggs, 1 small cup of butter, 1 pint
of stoned raisins, 2 nutmegs, 1 large spoonful each
of ground cloves and cinnamon. Sweeten to taste.
Bake slowly six hours the day before using. Do
not put the raisins in until it commences to thicken,
and stir occasionally the first two hours after the
raisins are in. Before serving the next day,
set the tin in boiling hot water long enough before
dinner to have it hot. Cold sauce.
Blackberry Pudding
Take baker’s bread and cut away
the crusts, butter, and slice rather thick, lay 1
layer of bread and then cover with blackberries and
some of the juice (which has been stewed with a little
sugar), then more bread and more berries. Over
the top throw a glass of wine. Serve with hard
sauce.
Rennet Pudding
Buy a rennet from the butcher (it
is the stomach of a very young calf). Wash it
thoroughly, and cut it in small pieces. Put it
in a quart jar, and fill with sherry wine. When
wanted to use, heat a quart of milk to blood-heat,
and put it in the dish in which it is to remain.
Stir in 1 tablespoon of the wine water, grate a little
nutmeg over the top, and put in a cold place.
Very good for invalids, and makes a nice dessert,
with fresh berries.
Chocolate Pudding
1 pint milk, 3 sticks grated chocolate,
boil until thick, then set away to cool, 5 eggs, whites
and yolks beaten separately, 3 tablespoons sugar,
beat sugar light with the yolks, and to this add 1
cup cracker flour, 1 teaspoon vanilla, and the whites,
last. Put all this in the chocolate, and let
boil one and a half hours in a well-buttered form.
Serve with whipped cream.
Apricot or Peach Pudding
Butter a pan thoroughly and dust well
with cracker flour, and put a row of apricots or peaches
on the bottom of the pan. Take 4 eggs, beaten
together with a cup of powdered sugar. Beat in
a pan of boiling water twenty minutes. Then add
1 cup of flour, 1 lime or some lemon juice, and 1
teaspoon vanilla and a pinch of salt. Put this
mixture over the apricots or peaches, and bake three
quarters of an hour.