Cakes & Bakes: Christmas Pudding

Home-made Christmas pudding | H is for Home
Stir-up Sunday happened to fall on my birthday this year, so I prepared my Christmas pudding on the following Monday instead.

Chopped dried fruit & nuts soaked in rum | H is for Home

I’m a bit of a fussy eater, so I often prefer to prepare my own food – like the mincemeat for mince pies and Christmas pudding. That way, I know that it’s made using vegetarian suet and contains no orange or lemon zest/juice, no candied peel and no whisky – none of which I like.

Christmas pudding ingredients divided into 4 mixing bowls | H is for Home

I had various packets of dried fruit and nuts already in my store cupboard so made a mixture containing raisins, sultanas, dates, dried apricots, almonds and pecans. Any dried fruit and nut combo will work – there’s no right way or wrong way. Also, I had a bottle of dark rum gifted to me by my sister last year; but brandy, sherry, Calvados or Armagnac would also be fine alternatives to the more traditional whisky and stout.

The pudding needs to be tightly sealed using a layer of parchment paper and pleated tin foil (to allow for expansion) and secured using string. A nifty little string handle is optional, but very useful for extricating the hot pudding. You can see how it’s done here.

I have a useful vintage aluminium pudding basin that has hinged fasteners and a handle incorporated into its design.

Uncooked Christmas pudding in vintage aluminium Sutox pudding basin | H is for Home

If you don’t have a steamer, put an upturned (heat-proof) saucer in the bottom of a saucepan, sit your pudding on top of it, fill the saucepan with hot water to about halfway up the sides of the basin and cover the saucepan with a lid. As the pan will be simmering away gently on the stove for about 5 hours, lift the lid every so often to check and see if the water level needs topping up.

Christmas pudding basin inside a steamer on the stove | H is for Home

Once cooked, the pudding should be stored away somewhere cool and dark until the big day. Some people prepare their puddings a year in advance; i.e. the one they prepared on this year’s Stir-up Sunday will be put away until Christmas Day 2020. They swear by the superior flavour that develops from giving the longer resting time.

There are as many preferred accompaniments to Christmas pudding as there are Christmas pudding recipe variations; brandy butter, pouring cream, clotted cream, custard or ice cream. Lots of people comment about having leftover pudding on Boxing day, fried in butter, with bacon or with cheese (a Northern thing, apparently).

Save my Christmas pudding recipe to Pinterest by clicking here

Home-made Christmas pudding recipe | H is for Home
Christmas pudding
Serves 6
Cook Time
5 hr
Cook Time
5 hr
SOAK FOR 1-7 DAYS
  1. 75g/2⅔oz raisins
  2. 75g/2⅔oz sultanas
  3. 200g/7oz dates, finely chopped
  4. 50g/1¾oz dried apricots, finely chopped
  5. 50g/1¾oz almonds, chopped
  6. 50g/1¾oz pecans, chopped
  7. 150ml/5¼fl oz dark rum
CREAM TOGETHER
  1. 2 eggs
  2. 75g/2⅔oz muscovado sugar
  3. 50g/1¾oz butter
  4. 1 lime, zest & juice
SIFT TOGETHER
  1. 50g/1¾oz self-raising flour
  2. ½tsp mixed spice
  3. a little fresh grated nutmeg
COMBINE ALL OF THE ABOVE THEN ADD
  1. 25g/¾oz vegetarian suet
  2. 100g/3½oz wholemeal breadcrumbs
  3. small cooking apple, peeled & gratedChristmas pudding ingredients
Add ingredients to shopping list
If you don’t have Buy Me a Pie! app installed you’ll see the list with ingredients right after downloading it
Instructions
  1. Generously grease a 1.5 pint pudding basin with a little butter. Cut out a small disc of parchment paper an lay it on the bottom of the basin
  2. Spoon the mixture into the pudding basin, pressing the contents down firmly with the back of the spoon
  3. Lay a circle of parchment paper over the top of the filled pudding bowl so that there’s a 2cm overhang
  4. Cover the parchment paper with a pleated layer of tin foil, also with a 2cm overhang
  5. Secure the parchment/tin foil overhang with string tied around the circumference of the pudding bowl, under the lip
  6. Attach another piece of string to act as a lifting handle
  7. Simmer the pudding in a steamer (or lidded saucepan with a trivet/upturned saucer and hot water that reaches halfway up the sides of the bowl) for 5 hours topping up the water level when necessary
  8. When cooked, allow to cool completely, remove the parchment & tin foil cover and string and replace with new. Store in a cool dry place, ready for reheating on Christmas day. Reheating will take about 90 minutes, steaming using the same method
  9. Once reheated, invert on to a serving plate and remove the disc of parchment paper. Just before serving, pour over a couple of tablespoons of rum that has been warmed in a little saucepan. Carefully set it alight
Notes
  1. Serve with thick cream, rum or brandy butter, custard or vanilla ice cream
Print
H is for Home Harbinger https://hisforhomeblog.com/

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.