My version of Jane's Poached Pears, that ended up in the Telegraph (pic: Greg Funnell)
I have come to a true milestone in the project because the
behemoth that is the Puddings
chapter is now done and dusted. It was a beast, weighing in at a stonking 66 recipes.
It was a very diverse chapter with a vast array of desserts and techniques,
many of them new to me. Unlike other large chapters (e.g. Teatime)
it wasn’t really possible to sub-categorise and make Puddings
easier for me to, er, swallow. Jane tends to mix the recipes up, but such is
the way of the English pudding. Jane says that they had a ‘great reputation’
since at least the seventeenth century. She found this great quote from the
protestant exile François
Maximilien Misson:
They bake them in an
oven, they boil them with meat, they make them fifty-several ways: blessed be he that invented pudding, for it is manna
that hits the palates of all sorts of people.
#173 Summer Pudding
For those who are not British, the word ‘pudding’ causes
some confusion because it has several meanings, in the context of this post,
and therefore the book, it simply means dessert (aka afters or sweet, depending
on where you from). Readers of the blog will know that many puddings are not
sweet at all (e.g. #200 Steak,
Kidney and Oyster Pudding, #189 Mussel
and Leek Rolypoly, #181 Yorkshire
Pudding), some desserts have pudding in their name, but
others don’t. Usually the steamed puddings have ‘pudding’ in their name (e.g. #90 Sussex
Pond Pudding), but not always. It’s very confusing! I thought to
iron out some of this confusion I would give a very potted history of pudding:
In mediaeval times, and probably much earlier, puddings were
animal intestines filled with a mixture – these are the true puddings – #34 Black Pudding
is one of the few survivors, but sausages also belong to this group too, though
rarely boiled in England these days, they are in other countries such as
Germany. Surprisingly #27 Rice Pudding,
bread and butter pudding and #181 Yorkshire
Pudding all started life as these true puddings. It did
mean, however, that puddings could only be made when there were fresh
intestines around. Eventually, the pudding cloth was invented, the pudding
could now be swaddled in material and boiled, producing a cannonball-shaped
pudding, Dickensian Christmas
Puddings are an example of this. Other favourites like Spotted Dick
could be cooked like this and #374 Pease
Pudding got an upgrade from potage! Roly-poly
puddings could be made by wrapping them in shirt sleeves, giving them
the moniker ‘dead man’s arm’.
A page of Mrs Beeton's cold desserts
Finally, the pudding basin was invented meaning that suet
pastry and sponge cake mixtures could be used with great success. As time went
on, puddings got lighter, more spiced and more sweet as ingredients became
cheaper, and a switch from French to Russian service (single dishes and
courses) meant they were served at the end of a meal. Hence, we call dessert the
pudding course, explaining why all desserts have ended up being called pudding.
The British have great enthusiasm for their puddings,
especially the old-fashioned ones many ate as children, often called ‘nursery
puddings’, #27 Baked Rice Pudding, Spotted Dick
and other steamed
puddings fall into this category. Of course, a love of puddings means
that one’s waistline is somewhat affected. We know that we are eating too much
sugar, fat and flour and we need to reduce our intake, but how can we when they
are so irresistible!? It’s the main reason why I go to the gym; I exercise five
or six times a week, and try to watch what I eat, just so I can eat what ever I
like on Saturday and Sunday (I’m revisiting #167 Brown
Bread Ice Cream this weekend).
#321 Sweetmeat Cake
The best desserts says Jane are ‘simple and natural’, and
stinginess should be frowned upon. It is this piece of advice that has really
stuck with me. Just don’t cut corners, it’s simple really; if you do, it’s
slippery slope to cheap margarines instead of butter and lard, or substituting egg
yolks for cornflour (she hated Bird’s custard powder!). Jane also showed me how
to improve things with little additions, suggesting adding a chopped quince to
your (#96) Apple
Pie, or a teaspoon of chopped mint to soft fruits such as the blaeberry.
The Puddings
chapter is broad and Jane shows us both familiar and new recipes, as well
favourites from her own childhood and historical recipes. I became so in love
with the British pudding that I started up my own Pud Club – a seven-course dessert
only meal. There are many top scoring recipes too – five score full marks and ten
score 9 or 9.5/10. There are several recipes from the book that are now part of
my own canon – the most notorious being the #309 Sticky
Toffee Pudding, goodness knows how many of those I have made in my
lifetime! Others to point out are #384
Foolproof Flaky Pastry, #300 Trifle and #90
Sussex Pond Pudding.
#361 Poor Knight's Pudding with Raspberries
Jane’s #275
Pears in Syrup recipe is good
– and easy to remember – that I used it in the second round of the Fabulous
Foodie 2015 competition in the Telegraph,
the judges were suitably impressed and off I went to the final!
There are lots of recipes from history; a mediaeval custard
tart #264 ‘A Coronation
Doucet’, #329
John Evelyn’s Tart of Herbs made from spinach, #326
John Farley’s Fine Cheesecake laced
with rose water and wobbly #131 Devonshire
Junket, the list goes on…
#435 Worcestershire Pear Souffle
There were recipes I did not enjoy too, of course, #153 Mocha
Cake was a wan wartime tiramisu rip-off, and I managed to achieve
my only food induced hangover from eating too much of the extremely very boozy #125 Whim-Wham,
not a badge I wear with pride.
It is this chapter that has inspired me most to get into the
kitchen, and I have managed to pass on my enthusiasm to my brother and his
family who have bought a copy of English Food just for the recipes in this
chapter!
An apple tart made with #384 Foolproof Flaky Pastry
It’s fair to say that the number British desserts is vast,
and Jane couldn’t include all of them, but I think she left out some real
classics – there is no recipe for custard
for example, nor is there a bread and butter pudding, jam
roly-poly, spotted Dick,
blancmange, treacle tart
or Eton mess.
She obviously didn’t like rhubarb,
because it isn’t mentioned once. There are some very good historical puds too
that were overlooked such as posset,
cabinet pudding or flummery. Readers of the other blog will know that I
am trying fill in these gaps myself.
Making #402 Blaeberry Pie
So, as mentioned, the chapter had 66 recipes, even though there were many excellent puddings, it actually came out with a very average mean score of 7.2 (it faired better non-parametrically with a median and mode of 7.5 and 8 respectively). Of course, you can judge for yourself because all the recipes as they appear in the book are listed below with links to the post and their scores. If you cook one – or have cooked one – please let me know!
#28
St Valentine’s Syllabub
5.75/10
#157
Gooseberry Fool 8/10
#12 Orange Fool 7.5/10
#201 Two Tea Creams 6.3/10
#125 Whim-Wham 3.4/10
#300 Trifle 10/10
#153 Mocha Cake 2/10
#221
Cherry Tarts 6/10
#142
Ballymaloe Fruit Tarts
7.5/10
#297
Raspberry Pie 8.5/10
#96 Apple Pie 6.75/10
#126 Kickshaws 8/10
#8
Chocolate Pie 9/10
#301
Yorkshire Curd Tart 9.5/10
#54
Yorkshire Almond Tart
7.75/10
#321
Sweetmeat Cake 10/10
#139
Bakewell Pudding 7.5/10
#428
Sweetheart Cake 6/10
#112
Queen of Puddings 6.25/10
#173
Summer Pudding 9.5/10
#275
Pears in Syrup 8/10
#179
Fruit Salad with Tea 7.5/10
#65
Mangoes of the Sun 8.5/10
#236
Baked Almond Pudding II
8.5/10
#77
Baked Semolina Pudding
5.5/10
#90
Sussex Pond Pudding
9.25/10
#89
Steamed Ginger Pudding
7.5/10
#37
Ginger Ice Cream 9/10
#74
Vanilla Ice with Plum Sauce and Lace
Biscuits 9/10
#167
Brown Bread Ice Cream 5.75/10
#61
Melon Water Ice 5.2/10