


Ingredients l lb of
each:
raisins,
currants, golden
raisins,
breadcrumbs,
brown sugar 8oz Suet 4oz
each:
Mixed peel,
glace cherries chopped,
almonds chopped 1
each:
Lemon - grate
rind,
orange - grate
rind,
carrot - grated,
apple - grated
1 tbs Flour
1 tsp mixed spice
Pinch salt
6-8 Eggs
10oz stout (bottle) or dark beer
(Guiness is good)
OR 5 ozs each brandy &
milk.
Preparation
Mix dry ingredients first
then mix with lightly beaten eggs & liquid.
Grease the bottom of a bowl
large enough to hold pudding and press mixture into it.
Place wax paper over the top
and then foil over that, crimping it around
the edges to keep
firm.
Either cook for 2 hours in
pressure cooker with about 2 inches water
or put in pan with water on
stove for 4 hours.
Keep checking water in pan
to prevent burning.
Store well wrapped for as
long as possible for better flavor. Some people make them one year to eat the
next.
Donated by sister Margaret
Hawksley Serve with hot custard,
cream, or brandy sauce. Why steam
for so long? Christmas puddings are quite
dense because of all the
fruit, nuts, etc. they contain.
Steaming is the best method of
cooking because it allows
a slow cooking which ensures a
moist and palatable result
(cakes being less dense can cook
for less time and still remain moist,
so baking is the best method). If
you used a faster cooking method for a Christmas pudding
you would get a crusty
pudding. A pudding steamed for 2 hours,
rather than 4, would
probably still have some uncooked mixture in the center.
So, while the cooking time
obviously depends on the size of the pudding.
(This is when it is cooked on the
stove - not the pressure cooker)