Our predecessors had a myriad ways of using up stale or
leftover bread, and I am always interested in finding a new/old idea. Bread
pudding in one of its more or less rich forms is one well-known English
solution to the problem - and a happy one too, for as we all know the English
do love their puddings.
I recently came across an interesting variation of the bread pudding concept. The bread-and-butter pudding of my childhood was pale and sweet and soft and studded with currants. Here is a far more robust version:
I recently came across an interesting variation of the bread pudding concept. The bread-and-butter pudding of my childhood was pale and sweet and soft and studded with currants. Here is a far more robust version:
Black Bread Pudding. A Heidelberg Receipt.
Grate fine a
quarter of a pound of stale black bread, a quarter of a pound of fine white
sugar, a few almonds, a little citron cut very fine; eight eggs beaten
separately very light. Mix all well together, then add the yolks gradually, and
lastly the whites. This pudding must bake about three quarters of an hour in a
quick oven. Make a wine sauce to serve with it.
Home cookery: a
collection of tried receipts, both foreign and domestic, by Mrs. J.
Chadwick (1853)
Naturally, I looked to see how common this idea is in the
English language corpus. The answer is – not particularly common at all. But I
did find the following recipe, which contains a small puzzle.
Black Bread Pudding.
Take yolks
of 3 eggs and beat with 1 cup of granulated sugar; add 1 cup of grated stale
black bread gradually. Add 1 teaspoon of cinnamon, a pinch of allspice, or a
very little ground cloves if desired. Mix all together and then add the beaten
whites of the eggs. Bake in a tube form or pudding dish; when baked, leave it
in the oven, and pour 1 cup of red wine over it. Serve the pudding with either
a Charlotte russe, or a rich wine sauce.
San Rafael Cook Book (1906)
The
instruction to serve with “a Charlotte russe or a rich wine sauce” is odd. A
Charlotte Russe is a dish in its own right, not a pudding accompaniment. Did
the cookbook author make a mistake, or is there some small region where it IS a
sauce?
Quotation for the Day.
The bread I eat in London, is a deleterious paste, mixed up
with chalk, alum, and bone ashes: insipid to the taste, and destructive to the
constitution.
Tobias Smollett, The Expedition of Humphrey Clinker (1771)
Tobias Smollett, The Expedition of Humphrey Clinker (1771)
5 comments:
That brings back memories, thank you. Must ask my wife to make one some time.
Keith.
http://woodsrunnersdiary.blogspot.com/
I dont actually fancy it myself. I think i have been corrupted by the sweet white custardy kind. Its my Mums fault.
I dont actually fancy it myself. I think i have been corrupted by the sweet white custardy kind. Its my Mums fault.
Hi
I'm researching about black bread for a project I'm working on. I understand black bread was typical of Russia (as opposed to brown bread if you like) but I haven't found much information. Could you possibly post something about it? Many thanks, wonderful blog
Hi Gaviota. I will try to get around to answering your request, but dont know when it will be. I would think that to thoroughly research Russian black bread woul require knowledge of the Russian language, which, sadly I dont have.
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