Bakewell Pudding aboard Queen Elizabeth |
Several years ago I posted a blog about how I discovered the Burgess side of my family originated from Bakewell, Derbyshire, England. On my recent cruise on the Queen Elizabeth I met some women from that area who asked if I knew about Bakewell pudding. (There's also Bakewell tart, a bit different dish.)
Coincidentally, a few nights later we were served this dish in the Brittania dining room. I loved the almonds and the creamy sauce. I hope to visit the Bakewell Bakery some day, where Bakewell pudding and tart are featured. I found their shop online, and learned that the eponymous pudding has been made in that hamlet since the 1800. My ancestors must have sampled some, and now, so have I.
Thinking about pudding, I remembered that my Grandma Gertie, who married Joe Burgess, knew how to make pudding herself, even though it wasn't Bakewell, and didn't involve almonds. Here's what I know about Grandma's pudding, and how I tricked my late husband, who claimed an aversion to all things pudding:
The Proof of the Pudding
“The proof of the pudding is in the eating,” Miguel Cervantes
wrote in Don Quixote. I believe that
to be absolutely true, literally, not just figuratively!
“I don’t eat pudding in any way, shape or form,” my husband Ken
had warned me when he spotted the package of banana pudding mix I’d set on the
kitchen counter.
“I thought I’d mash up these two elderly bananas and stir
them into the mix. I know you like banana cream pie.”
“Make some banana bread instead. I don’t do pudding.”
Yes, Ken had definite do’s and don’ts about what he’d eat. So
now I added pudding to the mental list that already included lima beans, candied
sweet potatoes and deviled eggs. When we first got married I’d been amusedly
puzzled that he’d refused to sample some of the down home dishes Grandma Gertie
had taught me to cook and that I dearly loved.
How could he be so fussy? After all, here was a fellow who
bragged he’d savored snails in garlic sauce purchased from a street vendor a
block from the Eiffel Tower, and lamented that Wal-Mart didn’t carry quark,
a kind of yogurt cheese he’d buy when he’d lived in Germany.
But now, a few years into our late-in-life marriage, I began
to be a bit troubled. I’d found myself more than once forced to toss out a dish
that simply didn’t please his palate. Ken knew how much I hated to throw any
food away. My years in the Peace Corps had taught me “waste not, want not” when
it came to edibles. Why, one spring as we weeded the front yard, I’d even
mentioned I wished I could remember how Grandma had prepared what she called “a
mess o’ greens.”
“I know she wilted the dandelion leaves in bacon grease, and
added onion and garlic,” I began, dreamily recalling the delicious aroma. “I
think she added a dash of vinegar. Or maybe it was pepper sauce.”
“It would be a mess, all right,” Ken had retorted, yanking
the weeds from my hand and tossing them into the wheelbarrow.
I usually went along with his preferences, but when it came
to bread, I drew the line. I believed that letting bread grow stale or moldy
amounted to blasphemy. Bread, I’d learned from Grandma, was the staff of life.
Every crumb needed to be consumed.
So when ours started to stale I’d make croutons to sprinkle
on French onion soup, crumbs to pad out meat loaf, or cubes to stir into stewed
tomatoes. Then finally one day I noticed that some of the apples from our trees
that I’d stored in our pantry last autumn had begun to look a bit dehydrated.
We also had half a loaf of more-than-a-day-old French bread.
I thumbed through my recipe box and found Grandma’s recipe
for apple bread pudding. Aha! I told myself, ready to delve into
a little deception. I’d have to call it something else. Maybe I’d claim it was
Brown Betty. Grandma had made that, too, but it didn’t contain milk and eggs.
Ken wouldn’t know the difference.
I headed for the kitchen to whip up dessert.
Gertie’s Apple Bread
Pudding
4
cups soft bread cubes
¼ cup raisins
¼ cup raisins
¼ cup chopped
walnuts
2 cups peeled and sliced apples
1 cup brown sugar
1 ¾ cups milk
½ cup butter
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
2 cups peeled and sliced apples
1 cup brown sugar
1 ¾ cups milk
½ cup butter
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
½ teaspoon ground
nutmeg
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
Directions:
In a large bowl, combine bread, raisins, walnuts and apples. In a small saucepan over medium heat, combine brown sugar, milk, and cup butter. Cook and stir until butter is melted. Pour over bread mixture in bowl. In a small bowl, whisk together cinnamon, nutmeg, vanilla, and eggs. Pour bread mixture into prepared dish, and pour egg mixture over bread. Bake in the preheated oven to 350 degrees for 40 to 50 minutes, or until center is set and apples are tender.
In a large bowl, combine bread, raisins, walnuts and apples. In a small saucepan over medium heat, combine brown sugar, milk, and cup butter. Cook and stir until butter is melted. Pour over bread mixture in bowl. In a small bowl, whisk together cinnamon, nutmeg, vanilla, and eggs. Pour bread mixture into prepared dish, and pour egg mixture over bread. Bake in the preheated oven to 350 degrees for 40 to 50 minutes, or until center is set and apples are tender.
Sometimes Grandma served this with a sauce, either vanilla
or caramel, but since Ken scrunched up his face at syrupy sauces, I’d simply
top it with whipped cream, which he loved.
“Ready for dessert? I
baked something this afternoon that I think you’ll love.”
Ken favored me with his lopsided smile. “What’s it called?”
I averted my face as I scooped out a couple of servings into
custard cups. I had a hard time telling even a little white lie without turning
crimson. I squirted a little whipped cream as I thought about how to answer.
“Oh, it’s just something Grandma used to bake,” I said,
carefully evading the question. “It’s kind of an old fashioned dish, sort of like
a Brown Betty with apples.”
Ken ate every bite. “It’s paradisiacal,” he said. “I’ll take
a second helping. What all goes into it?”
I bit my lip. I didn’t want to fib outright, so I handed him
Grandma’s recipe card.
“Bread pudding?” Ken sputtered. “I thought you said it was
Brown Betty.”
Now it was my turn to smile.
“Hmmm. I must have pulled out the wrong recipe. Still want
seconds? You said you didn’t do puddings in any way, shape or form.” I stifled
a giggle, as Ken’s frown morphed into a grin.
“Now I can’t say that anymore,” my amiable husband replied
as he handed me his dish.
Grandma always said the way to a man’s heart was through his
stomach. And I had been convinced Ken would love her old-fashioned dish if only
I could coax him to taste it. Grandma also taught me that results are what
count…it’s not how you start but how you finish. I’d started with good
intentions, albeit a little loving trickery, and ended with a satisfied spouse.
There’s more than one way to skin a cat, I’ve heard.
Wait…did Miguel Cervantes say that? No…I think it was Grandma Gertie.
****
Queen Elizabeth buffet food sculptures |
Here's the link to the earlier blog about discovering my Bakewell background:
My first husband was a picky eater. This one will eat anything that isn't locked up. Fun post.
ReplyDeleteYum! I love bread pudding! It's one of my hand-me-down dishes from my grandma and my mom. I've never baked it with apples though. I'm going to have to try that!
ReplyDeleteI squirted a little whipped cream as I thought about how to answer.
ReplyDeleteเย็ดสาว
Really a beautiful blog.It is very astonishing and marvelous design.
ReplyDeleteดูหนังออนไลน์