Posts tagged: mixed spice

Bread Pudding

By Anna, 11 September, 2010 12:53 pm

Delightful Bread Pudding – not to be confused with its richer cousin, bread and butter pudding – is another way to use up stale bread.
As my Grandad pointed out to my Mum, the addition of dried fruit, butter, sugar, eggs and spices makes it a very expensive way of using up cheap stale bread, but it is delicious and filling. Just the thing to plug the vast, bottomless hunger hole that inhabits the space between coming home from school and eating dinner.
Speaking of children, this is a really good recipe for kids to make – the tearing of bread is laborious, but passes more quickly with someone chatting to you, little hands are good at squeezing water from soggy bread and they can beat it half to death with a wooden spoon because you can’t overmix bread pudding.

Interestingly, Grandad’s recipe book lists the recipe as a hot pudding to be eaten with custard, but we never ate it this way; no, it’s strictly left to cool and cut into slabs to be devoured as you would a piece of cake. A very substantial piece of cake, mind you, but still that’s our eating method of choice.
Yes, it’s a good rainy day recipe and it’s decidedly Autumnal here now. Sad for us to bid farewell to hot days, but great for good traditional bread pudding!

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Apple Pie

By Anna, 26 September, 2009 6:32 pm

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There is an unmistakeable cinnamon and brown sugar warmth to this sweet, juicy apple pie made with flaky, easy to make, pastry.
Ian said that when warm, it reminded him of the apple pie that one gets from the Golden Arches. He then went on to say that he meant that in a good way.

I struck him across the face with my silk-lined muff, but I know what he meant – it’s that warm spicy sweetness and the slight firmness to the apple – just without the freaky fat-laden fried pastry. Cheeky swine.
It’s a good one, this recipe. You need a 9″ deep pie plate for this pie.
A quick word about the pastry. I have a little bit of a pastry avoidance issue, but the ease of this recipe has almost cured me. Freezing the fat and using ice cold water keeps everything cold. Cold is good for pastry. Using the processor keeps warm fingertips out of the way and works quickly to avoid over handling the dough. Honestly, it’s OK – have a go and channel your inner Grandparent who would faint if they knew you used bought pastry.

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