This recipe makes a large quantity, enough for two puddings. We used to always save the second one for New Year's Day lunch, which in a Scottish household was considered to be almost as important as the Christmas lunch. I use one large 2 1/2 litre pudding steamer which I fill to 3/4 full, and then for the smaller 2nd pudding, I use my old and trusted 1 1/2 litre basin. However, you can use whatever steamers you have on hand, or halve the recipe and just make one pudding.
Ingredients:
1 1/2 lb sultanas/24 oz/680 g
2 oz mixed peel/65 g
1/2 lb raisins/8 oz/230 g
1/4 lb currants/4 oz/115 g
2 oz. Glace cherries/65 g
2 oz blanched Almonds/65 g. slivered or whole
1/2 lb/8 oz/230 g butter
3-6 tablespoons Brandy or Sherry (some extra for flambe if you wish) A cheaper brandy is fine to use.
1/2 lb./8 oz/230 g Brown sugar
4 eggs
1 grated carrot
6 oz flour/170 g
1 level teaspoon mixed spice
1/4 level teaspoon bi-carbonate soda
6 oz. soft breadcrumbs/170 g (this isn't too many breadcrumbs)
N.B. Packets of Mixed dried fruit can be used to the equivalent weight of fruit listed above.
Preparation:
Macerating the fruit:
Prepare fruits, by slicing the cherries in half and chopping some of the raisins if you wish and place in a large mixing bowl. Add the nuts. Add 3 tablespoons brandy (or sherry), I prefer brandy, to the fruit and stir so that all of the fruit is covered and glistening. Cover the bowl and allow to stand overnight or for a few days, depending on your time frame. I then add a little more brandy over a few days if the fruit seems to have soaked it all up. The more brandy the better I say, when it comes to the Christmas pudding.
Preparation:
Good preparation is important before preparing your Plum Pudding batter. I allocate the whole day to make my Plum Puddings, as you need to be on task to watch that the basins keep simmering and the water doesn't go dry in the large cooking pots.
Leave the butter and eggs out overnight to bring them to room temperature. See my Cooks notes re the breadcrumbs. The bread needs to be left out overnight as well.
Method:
Cream shortening (butter) and sugar to a cream. Add eggs one at a time, beat well with each addition. Add this mixture to the marinated fruit in the large mixing bowl, add the grated carrot and mix well.
To the mixture add the sifted flour, spice, and bi-carbonate of soda which have been sifted together into a bowl, until all the fruit is well coated in batter. Then add the fresh breadcrumbs. Mix it well together. This is a good workout for your arm for the day.
Grease your pudding steamers, and cut a circle of baking paper to fit around the base of the steamer. This will ensure that the pudding lifts out of the steamer well, without sticking to the base. This brings such a sense of achievement to me when the aromatic warm pudding turns out beautifully in one glorious rounded mould onto the serving plate.
3/4 fill the pudding steamers with the mixture. Seal the lids. (I use two pudding steamers for this quantity, a 2 1/2 litre pot, and a 1 1/2 litre pot because that's what I have on hand.)
If using a calico pudding cloth to cook the pudding in, flour the inside of the cloth well, fill with the mixture allowing space for expansion during cooking, and tie securely.
Place the pudding steamers in 2 large pots of boiling water with the water level about half way up the sides of the basins. Cook for 4 hours in a large pot on gentle simmer being careful not to let the water run dry. I cook the large pudding in my largest pot on the gas burner in our BBQ area, and the smaller steamer in my largest Baccarat cast iron pot on the stovetop. I cook the smaller pudding for 2 hours, not 4.
(See my ps at the end of my post for how to cook a plum pudding in a Pressure Cooker, which only takes 1 hour 15 minutes in my Phillips all in one Pressure Cooker.)
Cool the puddings and keep in a cupboard or the refrigerator depending on how hot the weather is, and then gently simmer again in the large pot for 2 hours on the day of reheating (Christmas Day). I keep my puddings in the refrigerator.
We serve our pudding with a Delicious homemade Vanilla Custard. Custard powder will work just as well though.
We love to flambe our plum pudding with brandy before serving when everything is going well. Turn your lights off, pour about 1/4-1/2 cup of brandy over the pudding and set it alight. It looks magnificent and everyone loves the theatrics of it. It's very difficult to get a photo of this, one year I will though.
Cook's notes:
1. Trivets :- Because it takes 4 hours to cook the larger pudding, it's a good idea to place a trivet in the bottom of the large pot you are simmering it in. Mr. HRK bought a new one for me this week from the gardening section in Bunnings, which works well. My old one has disappeared, who knows where. There is a risk that the pudding might burn if it sits on the bottom of the cooking pot. That did happen to me one year. The trivet also stops the pudding steamer from moving around the pot when it is cooking.
2. I buy the cheapest sliced white bread available from the supermarket for the breadcrumbs. I place about 8 slices of bread out on my kitchen bench the night before so that they dry out slightly which makes it easier to make the breadcrumbs. Alternatively, they can be dried in the oven. This makes it much easier to make the breadcrumbs in the food processor, and is much cheaper and nicer than buying the breadcrumbs in a packet.
3. Use the food processor to grate the carrots and make the breadcrumbs, it makes life a lot easier.
4. I used the butter wrapper for one of the round steamer liners. It was already greased and was the perfect size to cut out a circle from to fit the base of the pot. Waste not, want not.
Perhaps it's time to do away with some of the traditional aspects of Christmas such as the turkey and the expensive gifts to make it much more economical for families. We have never eaten turkey at Christmas, just the thought of it in our Aussie Summer leaves me exhausted, and I don't think it's such a big thing in Australia in general as it is overseas. In Australia we seem to be preferring fresh seafood, however if that is just too expensive this year, we will be happy with a Roast chicken, some ham, perhaps some pork and a couple of cold salads.
If you have always wanted to make a Plum Pudding but have just been a bit nervous about it, I urge you to just bite the bullet and do it. You have still got plenty of time to make one, and I know you will be thrilled with the results. Just follow all of my tips and tricks and I'm sure it will turn out beautifully. If you don't have a steamer to cook it in, perhaps a friend will, likewise with the very large cooking pot that is used to steam it in. If you would like anymore information about what's involved please feel free to email me.
How to cook a Plum Pudding in a Pressure Cooker
It's still surprising to me how many people who are great cooks have never made a plum pudding, and I think it's partly because the old method of making one involves a lot of time. An initial four hours of simmering in a pudding steamer and then simmering it for another two hours on the day of eating it. Following a query by a reader about whether or not it could be cooked in a pressure cooker, I have added this ps to my post and given instructions on how to cook it in a Pressure Cooker, which is more suited now for busy people with little time.
I have a Phillips all in one pressure cooker. In my Pressure Cooker it will only take about 1 hour 15 minutes on manual pressure. Briefly, add two cups of water to the bowl, add a trivet so the steamer isn't sitting on the bottom of your stainless steel pressure cooker bowl, cover the batter with baking paper, then the lid of the steamer. Cook on manual pressure for about 1 hour 15 minutes, quick release, and your pudding is ready. However it's important to check the instruction manual for your particular type of pressure cooker for exact times and settings.
Happy cooking!
Enjoy the festive season and try to stay stress free. Thankyou to all of my readers who subscribe to my blog and read it, and either give me verbal feedback or send me a comment. I love hearing from you during the year, and hope that next year we can enjoy many more delicious recipes and enjoyable cooking experiences together.
Have a wonderful and festive Christmas. See you in the New Year.
Warmest wishes,
Pauline
I love your old pudding steamer! So many Cristmas pudding that must have come from that steamer! I made a steamed pudding years (decades actually) and keep telling myself that, this is the year for another one...
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DeleteThis pudding is sauch a family tradition for us now, I couldn't imagine Christmas without it Melynda. Thanks for your lovely comment:)
That looks splendid!
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DeleteThanks Angie
I am saving this recipe for next Christmas. As I’m having some minor surgery, this will not be the year to be playing in the kitchen with puddings! Is it okay to use ceramic pudding molds? Yours are metal and I’m wondering if there’s a major difference between the two. As I only have one ceramic mold, would it be OK to cook half the recipe one day and chill the remaining batter and steam it on the next day? I may even attempt this for Valentine’s Day! Thanks, Pauline. Your instructions are just perfect. David (C&L)
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DeleteDavid, so nice to hear from you. I'm sure I remember my Mum cooking steamed puddings in a white ceramic bowl that she owned. Whatever happened to that steamer I wonder. I'm sure you will research it, but the main thing I think is to keep the base of the bowl away from the bottom of the cooking pot with a trivet. She covered her bowl with greaseproof paper, and then perhaps alfoil on the top tied up with string. I'm sure she always steamed her Treacle and Golden Syrup puddings this way. It's a lovely idea for Valentines Day. It would be fine to cook one 'pudding on one day, and the 2nd one the next. However, you probably need to steam the first pudding , let it cool and then cook it again so you can tip it into a dish for reheating on the day. I've done that before. You will notice from the recipe each plum pudding needs to be steamed twice. The 2nd one can then be steamed the following day, and steamed again when convenient. Or just halve the recipe so you are only cooking one. I hope your surgery goes well, it's always great to have it over and done with. Warm wishes for your recovery, Pauline
You know, I've always wondered what exactly a plum pudding is. It shows up in stories and tales during this time of year, but I never knew what it was. Now I know! That steamer of yours is so cool - I bet so many good plum puddings have come from that! Happy Holidays, Pauline!!
ReplyDeleteAnon, thanks so much. Yes that steamer has made many a plum pudding. Happy holidays to you too.
DeleteI also use the butter wrappers to smear butter on my cake tins :) I have never tried making a plum pudding! Everything seems to have gone up this year. I have a friend who buys her puddings ready made, when the Christmas sales are on, and saves them in her freezer for during the year. Have a wonderful festive season xxx
ReplyDeleteThanks Tandy, if I wasn't up for making a plum pudding, I would be buying mine as well when the sales are on. Have a wonderful holiday season. xx
DeleteThat looks brilliant. Have wonderful holidays!
ReplyDeleteThanks Balvinder, it really is delicious and quite simple to make.
Deletethis looks like a fab xmas pudding Pauline. Merry Xmas to you and yours.
ReplyDeletecheers
Sherry
Thanks Sherry, and to you and yours too.
DeleteHoping my comment went thru. merry Xmas!
ReplyDeleteThanks Sherry it did. Sometimes I wonder as well if mine was published.
DeleteThank you for the pressure cooker instructions! Melynda @scratchmadefood!
ReplyDeleteMelynda it's a pleasure. Using the pressure cooker saves so much valuable time.
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