A Receipt for a Pudding
Contributed by Mrs. Cassandra Austen (Jane’s mother) to Martha Lloyd’s collection of recipes, 1808. As this recipe attests, Jane Austen came by her talent honestly. For amusement, her family wrote riddles, charades, poems, and plays for each other. Mrs. Austen excelled at poetry to the extent that one can easily follow her recipe in rhyme.
If the vicar you treat,
You must give him to eat,
A pudding to hit his affection;
And to make his repast,
By the canon of taste,
Be the present receipt your direction.
First take two pounds of Bread,
Be the crumb only weigh’d,
For the crust the good house-wife refuses;
The proportion you’ll guess,
May be made more or less,
To the size that each family chuses.
Then its sweetness to make
Some currants you take
And Sugar of each half a pound
Be not butter forgot
And the quantity sought
Must the same with your currants be found
Cloves & mace you will want,
With rose water I grant,
And more savory things if well chosen;
Then to bind each ingredient,
You’ll find it expedient,
Of Eggs to put in half a dozen.
Some milk dont refuse it,
But boiled ere you use it,
A proper hint this for its maker;
And the whole when compleat,
In a pan clean and neat,
With care recommend to the baker.
In praise of this pudding,
I vouch it a good one,
Or should you suspect a fond word;
To every Guest,
Perhaps it is best,
Two puddings should smoke on the board.
Two puddings! – yet – no,
For if one will do,
The other comes in out of season;
And these lines but obey,
Nor can anyone say,
That this pudding’s with-out rhyme or reason
Jean at Delightful Repast has created a modern interpretation of this bread pudding. It looks so delicious, I think I shall try it at my next Janeites meeting! Click on the link for the recipe. Thank you for sharing, Jean!
Bread and Butter Pudding, also called simply “bread pudding,” is a dessert that has been a first for many of my dinner guests. Since I grew up with it, I’m always amazed when people tell me they’ve never had it before. They always like it and think it was something very difficult and time-consuming to make, when actually it is quite the opposite (Isn’t that what every hostess aims for!).
If you are a Jane Austen aficionado, you may have read her mother’s recipe, written in rhyme. My recipe makes about a fourth the quantity of Mrs. Austen’s and uses proportionately less sugar and butter and more eggs. Also, I skip the cloves and rosewater–the cloves because so many people don’t like them and the rosewater because I seldom have it on hand.
Sometimes I serve it with custard sauce, sometimes with my Banana-Pecan Rum Sauce (see below), but this time I served it with softly whipped cream sweetened with a drop of real maple syrup.
Fun, fun, fun! My husband and myself both grew up eating bread pudding. I don’t know if you need to be of a certain age or from a certain area but most people under 50 it seems have never had it. (As well as what used to be called an Indian pudding made with cornmeal, or a homemade rice pudding.) Restaurants that used to serve a good bread pudding with a rum sauce I believe is/was The Ram and The Hard Rock Cafe. I personally use these kinds of puddings to use up my milk that is expiring – great treat and you can adjust the butter or fat content as well as sugar for any. I use cinnamon and raisins in both the bread and rice puddings and vanilla as well. If served warm ice cream is lovely over it…whipped cream anytime, custard or rum sauce for those that might like it, caramel for the others. This is one dessert that can be so versatile. I used craisins in mine last to use them up and the kids loved it.
Thanks, Suzan! I love Indian pudding and rice pudding as well. I like all three puddings best without any kind of dried fruit, but sometimes put it in to suit other people. Dried blueberries work very well. I should post my Indian pudding recipe sometime because I’m into heritage-type cooking and my father’s father’s family came over on the Mayflower.
I love certain bread puddings and the one you’ve linked to looks delicious. Thank you! Nordstrom’s restaurants has the best bread pudding I’ve tasted. Have you tried theirs, Vic?
I haven’t! But now that you’ve told me, Katherine, I shall try some. Thank you and Happy Easter.
Katherine, I hope you will give my Bread and Butter Pudding a try! I’m so glad you left a comment here, by way of which I discovered your Gaskell blog. I love the underappreciated Elizabeth Gaskell!
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