T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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78.12 | Standard Slow-Cooking Indian Pudding | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Mon Nov 17 1986 10:03 | 20 |
| 3 c milk
2/3 c dark molasses
2/3 c yellow cornmeal
1/3 c sugar
(1 t salt)
3/4 t cinnamon
3/4 t nutmeg
1/4 c butter
1 c milk
Heat oven to 300 oF.
Grease 2-qt casserole.
Heat 3 c milk and molasses.
Mix cornmeal, sugar, (salt,) cinnamon, and nutmeg.
Gradually stir into hot milk mixture.
Add butter.
Cook over low heat, stirring constantly, about ten minutes or until thickened.
Pour into casserole.
Pour 1 c milk over pudding; DO NOT STIR.
Bake three hours.
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78.1 | WANTED: EASY INDIAN PUDDING | DECLB5::REED | | Fri Sep 08 1989 16:01 | 8 |
| Indian pudding
I'm looking for a good recipe for indian pudding. I've tried the famous
version at Durgan park but the only recipe I've been able to find
takes about 4 hours to make.
If anybody has any good ideas please help!
Bob
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78.2 | FAST INDIAN PUDDING??? | IOWAIT::WILDE | Ask yourself..am I a happy cow? | Fri Sep 08 1989 16:26 | 5 |
| Bob....Bob....Bob....there ain't no "instant" Indian Pudding. The long cooking
time is required to bring up the flavor of a few simple ingredients...
Any recipe I have calls for at least 3.5 - 6 hours prep/cooking time. It's
sorta like baked beans - cook it long or cook something else...8^}
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78.3 | | RHODES::HACHE | Like Men Who Dreamed | Wed Sep 13 1989 09:06 | 9 |
|
That's right Bob, but most of the recipes are low maintenance, you
put it all together, and let it cook maybe stirring it once in a
while. A friend of the family's used to make it on Saturday, started
it in the morning, and puttered around the house, doing chores,
when we sat down to dinner it was done. I'll see if I can't find
her recipe.
dm
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78.4 | the "quick" version wasn't nearly as good | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Sep 14 1989 13:21 | 7 |
| In the traditional recipes for Indian pudding, you keep pouring more
milk over the cornmeal-molasses mush mixture as it slowly bakes. I
made a recipe for it one time that only baked for two hours (I really
LIKE this stuff!! - YUM!!), and it wasn't nearly as good. The slow
baking really mellows the texture of the pudding.
Yes, vanilla ice cream is just the stuff!
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78.5 | Try canned... | HOONOO::PESENTI | JP | Fri Sep 15 1989 08:44 | 5 |
| If you really want fast, buy canned Indian Pudding. It's not as good as home-
made, but some brands are not bad. Just doctor it up a bit (dash of cinnamon,
etc.), warm it a little in the microwave, and top it with your favorite ice
ice cream. As I said, it's not as good as homemade, but it's close, and very
fast.
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78.6 | Recipe for Indian Pudding (The Easy Way) | DISCVR::RUPRECHT | I'd rather be camping! | Fri Sep 15 1989 10:50 | 22 |
|
I've never had the REAL thing, but this recipe is very good:
Indian Pudding (The Easy Way)
-----------------------------
2 shredded wheat biscuits 1/4 cup sugar (opt.)
2 eggs,beaten 1 tsp cinnamon
2 cups milk 1/2 tsp salt (opt.)
1/2 cup molasses
Crumble shredded wheat biscuits in a baking dish. Beat eggs
slightly and add remaining ingredients. Dot with butter and
bake 45 minutes at 350 degrees. Serve warm with whipped cream
or Cool Whip.(vanilla ice cream as someone mentioned earlier)
Bill
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78.7 | Good Baked Indian Recipe! | PENUTS::VIVIEN | | Fri Sep 15 1989 12:59 | 32 |
| Hi!
Here's an Indian Pudding recipe I used to make and I remember it
being delicious. I don't think it was hard to make.
{ Baked Indian Pudding }
1/2 cup yellow cornmeal 1/3 cup brown sugar, packed
4 cups hot milk 1 tsp. salt
1/2 cup maple syrup or maple-flavored 1/4 tsp. cinnamon
syrup
1/4 cup light molasses 3/4 tsp. ginger
2 eggs, slightly beaten 1/2 cup cold milk
2 tbsp. butter or margerine, melted Vanilla Ice Cream, or Light
Cream
1. In top of double boiler, slowly stir cornmeal into hot milk.
Cook over boiling water, stirring occasionally, 20 minutes.
2. Preheat oven to 300F. Lightly grease 2-quart (8 1/2" round)
baking dish.
3. In small bowl, combine rest of ingredients, except cold milk;
stir into cornmeal mixture; mix well. Turn into prepared dish;
pour cold milk on top, without stirring.
4. Bake, uncovered, 2 hours, or just until set but quivery on top.
Do not overbake. Let stand 30 minutes before serving. Serve
warm, with vanilla ice cream or light cream. (Whipped cream is
nice too!)
Makes 8 servings.
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78.8 | An ancient recipe | LEDS::BLODGETT | Bringeb�r ingef�r �l | Tue Sep 19 1989 08:24 | 19 |
| I went looking through my "MAINE COOKERY Then and Now" cookbook and
found this recipe for Indian Pudding. I have never tried it, but it
sounds good and fairly easy. BTW, the submitter of the recipe noted
that it had been in her family for 150 years when she got it in 1930...
Indian Pudding
2 c. cubed bread (pressed down) 1 tsp. cinnamon
2 c. diced apples 1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 c. sugar 1 tsp. ginger
1/2 c. molasses 4 c. milk
Grease a bean pot or heavy casserole with a cover. Bake 3-4 hours at
325.
I assume you merely mix all ingredients and bake. Now that's easy. I
also found another recipe that is like reply .10, and Fanny Farmer has
a good one, too. Now that I've done all this research I guess I'll have
to make an Indian Pudding soon.
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78.9 | Stove Top Indian Pudding | SUPER::MACKONIS | | Thu Sep 21 1989 11:59 | 19 |
| This is a recipe I have used for years and I think is pretty good....
2 c. Milk
2 T. Cornmeal
1/4 c. Molasses
2 T. Sugar
3/4 t. Ginger
3/4 t. Cinnamon
1/4 t. Salt
2 Eggs
Scald milk in double boiler, add cornmeal stirring constantly. Cook
for 20 minutes, stirring occassionally. Add molasses, sugar, ginger,
cinnamon and salt. Pour over slightly beaten eggs, return to boiler
and cook for 2-3 minutes. Serve with cream or ice cream.
4 Servings
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78.10 | crockpot cooking | LEDS::BLODGETT | Bringeb�r ingef�r �l | Tue Sep 26 1989 08:54 | 5 |
| re: using a crockpot
I think it would have to cook for 8 hours, the temperature in a
crockpot is only about 200 degrees. Plus the fact, the longer it cooks
the better it gets.
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78.11 | crockpot makes it easy | MARX::TSOI | | Mon Oct 16 1989 13:11 | 7 |
| I experimented with Dugin Park's recipe, first cooking the pudding on
the stovetop in a stockpot, and when everything is combined, put the
whole mess into the crockpot and cooks on low for about 10 hours
(I left it that long quite unintentionally). Anyway, the result was
great. Quite easy except for heating up the milk part!
Stella
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