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Easy Boiled Christmas Pudding
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A Christmas Pudding is something I’d deemed too hard to make myself, so I’d always left it to the professionals, like my mum. It’s not that I didn’t want to make a Christmas pudding, it just seemed like a lot of effort. Mum’s been making Christmas pudding for as long as I can remember, and I have fond memories of sneaking spoonfuls of the delicious fruit mixture before she spooned it into the calico ready to be boiled for what seemed like an eternity.
Years ago, so long ago I can’t remember exactly when, I bought a pudding steamer and thought it was the solution to my “not wanting to use calico” problems. I lovingly carried it home with big dreams of Christmas puddings, chocolate puddings, butterscotch puddings, puddings galore, and it’s lived with my cake tins ever since, completely unused. Well, it’s time to get excited! This is the year my many years old, but brand new pudding steamer got its first use!
After putting aside my trepidation about making a Christmas Pudding and finally giving it a shot, I can honestly say it’s all been worthwhile. It wasn’t at all difficult, there isn’t a lot of ingredients and there’s barely any washing up. Yes, it simmered on the stove for 4 hours but required so little effort that it’s given me the courage to finally branch out into chocolate puddings, butterscotch puddings and puddings galore – but not until after all the Christmas pudding has been eaten.
My family loves Christmas pudding served with custard and whipped cream, and since Christmas is a special occasion, why not serve it with a brown sugar glazed ham, potato salad and some pavlova.
Prep: 5 mins
Cook: 4.5 hrs
Serves: 8
Tips: Tie a piece of string to the pudding bowl to form a handle, this will make it easier to get the pudding bowl in and out of the boiling water. If you need to add more water during the cooking process, it is best to top it up using boiling water from the kettle so the temperature doesn’t drop.