Ultimate Butterscotch Pudding - Cook's Illustrated

"This unconventional recipe uses the heat of the caramel to thicken the cornstarch and egg yolk; it is not heated once the eggs are added, so they have no chance to scramble. Adapted from Cook's Illustrated Jan/Feb 2013."
 
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Ready In:
55mins
Ingredients:
13
Serves:
8
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ingredients

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directions

  • In a large saucepan, combine butter, both sugars, water, corn syrup, lemon juice and salt. Bring to a boil over medium heat, stirring occasionally until sugar is dissolved and butter is melted. Bring to a full rolling boil and cook, stirring occasionally, for 5 minutes (caramel will be about 240F). Immediately reduce to medium-low, until caramel develops a steady stream of lazy bubbles. Cook, stirring frequently, until mixture is color of dark peanut butter, smells ever-so-slightly burnt and registers 300F, 12-16 minutes more.
  • Remove from heat and carefully add 1/4 c cream (it will bubble and steam), swirling to incorporate. When bubbles subside, whisk vigorously, scraping into corners, until completely smooth, at least 30 seconds. Over medium heat, whisk in remaining cream until smooth. Whisk in 2 c milk until smooth, remembering to scrape into the corners of the pan to collect any remaining caramel.
  • In microwave, bring remaining 1/4 c milk to a simmer, 30-45 seconds. Whisk egg yolks and cornstarch together in a large heat-safe bowl until smooth. Gradually whisk in hot milk until smooth; set aside at room temperature.
  • Return saucepan to medium-high heat and bring back to a full rolling boil, whisking frequently. When bubbles begin to climb sides of pan, immediately dump entire pan into bowl with yolk mixture (do not add slowly). Whisk vigorously and thoroughly for 10-15 seconds. Add vanilla and rum and whisk to combine. Spray a disc of parchment paper cut to fit the bowl with non-stick spray and press onto surface of pudding. Refrigerate until cold and set, 3 hours or more. Whisk until smooth before serving.

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Reviews

  1. I'm a pretty good cook, but I was disappointed in this recipe. It never thickened. I had to freeze it to serve it and that was not very successful as it melted quickly. The texture was grainy. Probably something I did wrong. I grew up on homemade butterscotch puddings. This was no match to my memory.
     
  2. The flavor was spot on. The method worked wonderfully. The consistency was looser than I prefer (it was pourable) so next time I'll cut back on the milk by a half cup ave heavy cream by a quarter cup.
     
  3. I have made this and it's very tasty. No comparison to the stuff ready made at the store.
     
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

I'm a 48 y/o gay Jewish man in the suburbs immediately north of New York City. I'm a general internist, practicing and teaching at a medical college north of NYC. I also earned a Masters in Public Health degree in 2013. After a Walt Disney World trip in Dec 2006 where I had to rent an electric scooter because I couldn't manage the walking, I decided to have gastric bypass surgery, which was done Feb 28, 2007. I lost 160 lbs (though I've gained back about 60 of that since). I can't eat as much as I used to, so I want every bite to be extra good!
 
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