Now here is an interesting idea: from
the Adelaide Observer (South
Australia), of 19 July 1845.
Carrots a Substitute for Eggs in Puddings.
It is not generally known, and will not, perhaps, be
credited, when it is observed that boiled carrots, when properly prepared, form
an admirable succedaneum for eggs in the making of puddings. They must, for this
purpose, be well boiled and mashed, and afterwards passed through a coarse
cloth, or horsehair sieve. The pulp, when thus cleared of any chance fibrous or
granular matter, may be introduced among the other ingredients constituting the
pudding, with the total omission of eggs, in a quantity proportionate to the
size of the former. A pudding composed partly of the above material will be
found to be considerably lighter than if the same had been made with eggs, and
will impart a far more grateful and agreeable flavour. Upon the principle of
economy, the above fact is well worthy the prudent housewife's attention, and there
are some housekeepers, approved culinary practitioners too, who, in making
their Christmas plum-puddings, adopt the recipe under notice in preference to using
eggs for this purpose. Any person who will try the above experiment upon a small
scale, will be fully satisfied with the justice of the remarks here submitted. —Sun.
Carrots as a substitute for eggs? I
am intrigued, but slightly disbelieving. I have come across the concept before,
in a recipe for carrot pudding from 1848 in which the author claimed that
carrots have “something the properties of eggs, in being light.”
The idea was discussed in the
American magazine Popular Science in
May 1918, which seems to be sourced from wartime Food Conservation Notes. The
author of the article goes so far as to say that puddings made with carrot
instead of eggs were not only lighter, but more palatable. In spite of the name
of the magazine however, no attempt was made to explain the phenomenon.
Carrots Used as a Substitute for Eggs in Puddings.
In these days of high prices, anything that can be used as a
substitute, and give results at the same time, will be a welcome addition in
helping to keep down the high cost of living. Boiled carrots, when properly
treated, form an excellent substitute for eggs in puddings, etc. Boil the
carrots until they are tender and nearly ready to fall apart; drain carefully,
and mash and press through a coarse cloth or strainer. The pulp is then
introduced among the other ingredients of the pudding, and the eggs totally
omitted. Puddings made in this manner are lighter than where eggs are used, and
are more palatable. The carrots also impart a fine yellow color to the pudding
so that nobody can tell whether eggs were used or not.
Carrot pudding seems to have been quite
a thing for a couple of centuries. I have previously given several recipes for
carrot puddings (made with eggs) from 1744, 1774, and 1823, but if carrots
could indeed substitute for eggs, it would be good news for the egg-allergic,
and for vegans, perhaps. For those of us not so constrained or inclined,
however, I would suggest that any carrot pudding made without eggs might be
better made with them.
As the recipe for the day, in keeping
with the secondary theme of carrots in sweet dishes, I give you a rather
interesting and elegant (but not eggless) carrot “cake” which is really more of
a pudding, from The Cook's Dictionary and
House-keeper's Directory (1830) by Richard Dolby.
Carrot Cake.
Take a dozen large
and very red carrots; scrape and boil them in water with a little salt; when
done, drain them, take out the hearts, and rub the rest through a bolting; put
them in a stewpan, and dry them over the fire. Make a cream pâtissière, with about half a pint of
milk; and when done mix it with the carrots; add a pinch of minced
orange-flowers pralinée, three
quarters of a pound of powder-sugar, four whole eggs; put in, one at a time,
the yolks of six more, and a quarter of a pound of melted butter; mix all these
ingredients together well; whip up the six whites to a froth, and stir them in
by degrees. Butter a mould, and put some crumb of bread in it, in a minute or
two, turn out all the bread, and three quarters of an hour before the cake is
wanted, pour the preparation into the mould and bake it. Serve it hot.
I suspect that replacing some of the eggs with strained carrots might result in what i'll call the "SnackWells effect" -- substituting fibre-less carb (i.e. sugar) for fat and protein. Admittedly, I haven't boiled or steamed a LOT of puddings, but even with well-beaten eggs in them, they always seem to turn out rather dense.
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