Baguette and Butter Pudding
- Ready In:
- 2hrs
- Ingredients:
- 11
- Serves:
-
6
ingredients
- 4 tablespoons butter, softened
- 5 ounces baguette, thinly sliced (about half a baguette)
- 6 1⁄2 tablespoons golden raisins
- 2 extra-large egg yolks
- 2 extra large eggs
- 3 1⁄2 tablespoons granulated sugar
- 1 1⁄4 cups heavy cream
- 1 1⁄4 cups milk
- 4 tablespoons Baileys Irish Cream (or any cream liqueur, or add more to taste)
- 1 tablespoon demerara sugar (for sprinkling)
- 3 tablespoons apricot jam
directions
- NB The instructions are edited and the comments in brackets are mine.
- Grease the sides of a 1.5 litre shallow baking dish with some of the butter (I use a Le Creuset oval dish).
- Spread the bread slices with the remaining butter (I spread on both sides, sometimes using a little more butter than he suggests).
- Arrange the bread in the dish in overlapping layers, sprinkling the dried fruit in between.
- Beat the egg yolks, whole eggs and granulated sugar together until creamy.
- Beat in to the mixture the cream, milk and liquer.
- Pour the mixture over the bread.
- Press the bread slices down gently so they are completely submerged.
- Let stand for about 20 minutes so that the bread can soak up the custard mixture.
- Preheat the oven to 350F (180C, Gas Mark 4).
- Put the dish in a roasting pan and pour enough boiling water into the pan to come halfway up the sides of the dish, to prevent the custard from overheating and curdling.
- Sprinkle with demerera sugar and bake for 45-50 minutes until golden.
- Warm the jam so that it is runny.
- Remove the pudding from the oven and dab it with the jam. Let it stand for 15 minutes before serving so it firms up. (I take it our of the bain marie but Gordon is unclear on that point).
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY
I am Emma, a part-time photocopy girl and part-time PhD student working on the Flood story in children's books. It is much more exciting than it sounds (well, except for the photocopying bit).
I am English married to a Dutch bloke and we are both obsessed by food and travelling - hoorah! When I first joined Zaar my fave cookbooks were on the opposite ends of the spectrum: 'The Classic 1000 Quick and Easy Recipes' by Carloine Humphries and Gordon Ramsay's 'Just Deserts'. I hardly ever use the first book now because Zaar has replaced it. The second book can be extended to 'anything by Gordon Ramsay'. It is amazing that such a recognised chef can write recipes that always turn out well! What is particularly exciting about them is that when they aren't quite right I always know what I did wrong and can fix it the next time.
When all said and done though, I really am a pudding cook. Main meals are great and I love them but I get much more pleasure from outrageous deserts. They have to be really outrageous though, with 6 eggs, a pint of cream and giant bars of chocolate. None of this delicate mousse type thing. I made a bavorois the other day and when all said and done it was just a posh mousse.
I hope to post more recipes but finding the time is hard. When I review recipes I try to use the following ratings:
5 stars = great, I will make it again perhaps many times
4 stars = good, I will make it again but will probably adapt it
3 stars = ok, I may make it again but will definitely adapt it
2 stars = something went wrong
1 star = if I ever need to use this I won't post a review. I am too much of a scaredy custard
I will always be honest and will try to give constructive feedback as well as say what I did differently. In cases where something went wrong I will try to explain why.
Whatever rating I give though - thank you for posting. RecipeZaar has become my main recipe source (bar the genius that is Gordon Ramsey) and that is because of you.
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