Join me on my delicious journey revisiting American home cooking in the era before convenience foods became popular (1919 to 1955), as I bake and cook from old cookbooks and recipe cards of home cooks purchased at estate sales in Akron, Ohio, and other exotic locations.
Pages
▼
Tuesday, August 9, 2011
Chocolate Pudding, Under the Influence
I had a little medical procedure yesterday that involved a lot of anesthesia and the last words I recall the doctor saying as I was leaving the clinic were: Don't use any kitchen appliances for the rest of the day.
But always one to defy authority, I turned on the stove to make old-fashioned chocolate pudding.
Chocolate pudding is one of those childhood favorites that is now appearing on upscale restaurant menus, a nod to retro after decades of dishing out its fancier cousins: pots de creme, chocolate mousse and the like.
I had my choice of two recipes; I chose the one with egg yolks, which add a lovely richness to almost everything. (Of course, perhaps I should have listened to the doctor as I had to toss my first batch -- I didn't see the "or" between chocolate and cocoa on the recipe card, so I added them both.)
This recipe calls for cooking the mixture over direct heat and then in a double boiler. If you don't have one, you can simply jerry rig one, as I did, using two saucepans.
This pudding is delicious -- and not too sweet at all. In fact, there's just 1/2 cup of sugar in the entire recipe. I used very high quality unsweetened chocolate (and not the cocoa powder, in the end).
The other wonderful thing about stove top desserts like puddings is that the entire kitchen doesn't get hot, like it does when the oven is on. And that's a good thing when you want homemade dessert and it's August in New York City.
and what, exactly, would have been wrong with having both the cocoa & chocolate in the finished product? :)
ReplyDeleteI guess it is possible for something to be too chocolatey ??
ReplyDeleteInteresting the way the recipe writer used quotation marks to indicate minutes. Is that common?
ReplyDelete@Peggy and Laurie: I thought twice before tossing the *very* chocolate-y mixture, but did when I realized that there wasn't enough sugar to sweeten all that chocolate.
ReplyDelete@Karen: I've never seen that symbol used for minutes and it too me a few " to figure out what it meant!
Sounds like a delicious recipe for creamy goodness and let us not forget a delicious pudding 'skin' !! (my favorite part)!
ReplyDeletePuddings and custards are heaven. Stirring in a dab of good butter and/or some coffee liquer in the end is a nice touch too.
ReplyDelete@SugarBeam: The world is divided into those who like pudding skin and those who don't! I myself put a layer of plastic wrap directly on the pudding to prevent the skin formation. But if you were here, I'd leave it off!
ReplyDelete@Mrs. Ed: Great idea. Butter improves just about everything and a little known fact is that coffee is the secret ingredient that brings out the chocolate flavor. And liquor never hurt either!
Yum, Im gonna have to try out your recipe.
ReplyDelete