Bread pudding is a bread-based dessert popular in many countries' cuisines. It is made with stale bread and milk or cream, generally containing eggs, a form of fat such as oil, butter or suet and, depending on whether the pudding is sweet or savory, a variety of other ingredients. Sweet bread puddings may use sugar, syrup, honey, dried fruit, nuts, as well as spices such as cinnamon, nutmeg, mace, or vanilla. The bread is soaked in the liquids, mixed with the other ingredients, and baked.
Pudding made with stale bread
"Wet Nelly" redirects here. For the James Bond submarine, see Wet Nellie.
Bread pudding
Type
Pudding
Main ingredients
Usually stale bread; combination of milk, eggs, suet, sugar or syrup, dried fruit, and spices
Austin Leslie's Creole bread pudding with vanilla whiskey sauce, from the late Pampy's Restaurant in New Orleans, LouisianaBread pudding served at QUARTER/quarter restaurant in Harmony, Minnesota
Savory puddings may be served as main courses, while sweet puddings are typically eaten as desserts.
In other languages, its name is a translation of "bread pudding" or even just "pudding", for example "pudín" or "budín".[1][2] In the Philippines, banana bread pudding is popular. In Mexico, there is a similar dish eaten during Lent called capirotada.[3][4] In the United Kingdom, a moist version of Nelson cake, itself a bread pudding, is nicknamed "Wet Nelly".[5][6]
History
The 18th-century English cookbook The Compleat Housewife contains two recipes for baked bread pudding. The first is identified as "A Bread and Butter Pudding for Fasting Days". To make the pudding a baking dish is lined with puff pastry, and slices of penny loaf with butter, raisins and currants, and pieces of butter are added in alternating layers. Over this is poured thickened, spiced cream and orange blossom water, and the dish is baked in the oven. There is another version of the dish that is simpler, omitting the spices and dried fruits.
Regional variations
In Belgium, particularly Brussels, bread pudding is baked with brown sugar, cinnamon, stale bread, and raisins or apple.[7]
In Canada, bread pudding is sometimes made with maple syrup.[8]
In Hong Kong, bread pudding is usually served with vanilla cream dressing.[9][bettersourceneeded]
In Hungary, it is called 'Máglyarakás' (literally, "bonfire") which is baked with whipped egg whites on top.[10]
In Malaysia, bread pudding is eaten with custard sauce.[citation needed]
In Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany, black bread is used to make "black bread pudding" (Schwarzbrotpudding).[citation needed]
In the Philippines, stale unsold bread are commonly used by bakeries to make the characteristically bright red filling of pan de regla.[11]
In Puerto Rico, there are many variations of bread pudding on the island. Cream cheese with lime zest and guava or coconut-sweet plantain with rum raisins is perhaps the most popular. Bread pudding is always made with a variety of spices. Puerto Rican bread pudding is cooked the same as crème caramel with caramel poured into a baking dish and then the pudding mix is poured on top. The baking dish is placed in a bain-marie and then in the oven.[12]
In the United States, especially Louisiana, bread puddings are typically sweet and served as dessert with a sweet sauce of some sort, such as whiskey sauce, rum sauce, or caramel sauce, but typically sprinkled with sugar and eaten warm in squares or slices. Sometimes, bread pudding is served warm topped with or alongside a dollop of whipped cream or a scoop of vanilla ice cream.[13]
In Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay, bread pudding is known as "budín de pan".[14][15]
In Brazil, bread pudding is known as "pudim de pão".[citation needed]
In Panama, bread pudding is known as "mamallena".[16]
In Aruba, bread pudding is known as "pan bolo".[citation needed]
In Cuba, bread pudding is known as "pudín de pan" and many serve it with a guava marmalade.[1]
In Chile, bread pudding is known as "colegial" or "budín de pan".[2]
Randelman, Mary Urrutia; Joan Schwartz (1992). Memories of a Cuban Kitchen: More than 200 Classic Recipes. New York: Macmillan. pp.290–201. ISBN0-02-860998-0.[page verification needed]
Villapol, Nitza; Martha Martínez (1956). Cocina al minuto. La Habana, Cuba: Roger A. Queralt – Artes Gráficas. p.254.
"Wet Nelly". National Trust. Retrieved 27 August 2018.
Tucker, Susan (2009). New Orleans cuisine: fourteen signature dishes and their histories. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi. ISBN9781604736458. OCLC690209593.
Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.
2019-2025 WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии