The tradition of eating plum pudding on Christmas might have originated with a Roman Catholic Church decree to make a 13-ingredient pudding to represent Christ and the apostles. On the informally named “Stir It Up Sunday,” or the Sunday before the beginning of the Advent season, families made this pudding by taking turns stirring the batter from east to west to commemorate the Magi’s journey.
English Plum Pudding | Christmas Recipes
Course: DessertCuisine: EnglishDifficulty: Medium4
servings30
minutes4
hours300
kcal4
hours30
minutesThe tradition of eating plum pudding on Christmas might have originated with a Roman Catholic Church decree to make a 13-ingredient pudding to represent Christ and the apostles. On the informally named “Stir It Up Sunday,” or the Sunday before the beginning of the Advent season, families made this pudding by taking turns stirring the batter from east to west to commemorate the Magi’s journey.
Ingredients
- Grand Plum Pudding
1 cup raisins
1 cup dried currants
1 cup walnut pieces
½ cup candied orange peel
2 tsp ground cinnamon
1 tsp ground clove
1 tsp ground nutmeg
1 tsp salt
½ tsp ground allspice
½ cup brandy or dry sherry
5 large eggs
1 cup sugar
1 cup milk
2 cup all-purpose flour
2 cup dry plain breadcrumbs
1 cup unsalted butter
1 tsp baking soda
- Crème Anglaise
1 cup half and half cream
2 egg yolks
2 Tbsp sugar
1 tsp vanilla extract
Directions
- Grand Plum Pudding
- Lightly grease an 8-cup steamed pudding mold (a curved metal or ceramic mold with a lid) and ready a large stock pot filled with 3-inches of water.
- Toss the raisins, currants, walnuts, candied peel, cinnamon, clove, nutmeg, salt and allspice together. Stir in the brandy (or sherry, if using) and let sit while preparing the other part of the pudding.
- Whisk the eggs with the sugar, then whisk in the milk. Sift in the flour and whisk, then stir in the breadcrumbs followed by the melted butter. Stir in the soaking fruits and nuts (including any excess liquid). Stir the baking soda in a small dish with 1 Tbsp of warm water and stir this quickly into the batter. Scrape the batter into the prepared pudding mold and secure the lid.
- Bring the stockpot with water up to a gentle simmer and place a cookie cutter or other similar ring (even a tuna tin with the top and bottom cut out) and place the pudding mold on top of the ring (to prevent it from touching the bottom of the pot. Cover the pot and steam the pudding for 4 hours, checking periodically that the water level in the pot remains the same. Remove the pudding from the pot, uncover, and allow it to cool for an hour before turning out and serving with Crème Anglaise.
- Crème Anglaise
- Heat the cream to just below a simmer in a small saucepot.
- In a separate bowl whisk the egg yolks and sugar together. Slowly pour into the hot cream while whisking, then return the entire mixture to the pot. Switch to a wooden spoon and cook the custard on medium-low heat until it coats the back of the spoon, about 3 minutes. Strain the custard, cool it to room temperature, and then chill until ready to serve.