• 10Dec

    If really pressed to identify my favorite dessert, I’d probably have to go for bread pudding. I love the stuff, and have many wonderful childhood memories surrounding it. Bread%20pudding.JPG So, upon seeing Smitten Kitchen’s rendition of a Gourmet magazine recipe I’d been eyeing for Thanksgiving fare, an idea hatched. Then, speaking with a friend about the joys of properly spiked egg nog, the idea grew from a hatchling to … a whatever comes after hatchling … and then in the kitchen on Thanksgiving became a full-fledged recipe. Thanksgiving night, it died in the spectacular way that a really good dessert must: by becoming immortal, eternally embedded in thighs and love handles of diners.
    Here’s how it all went:
    1 ½ cups egg nog (you could probably use Lite, but then why bother?)
    3/4 cup canned pumpkin (the kind that says “Ingredients: Pumpkin” and nothing else)
    1/2 cup white sugar (you could experiment with brown or turbinado, but it might be a bit much)
    2 large eggs
    1 egg yolk
    1/2 teaspoon salt
    1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
    1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
    1/4 teaspoon ground allspice
    Pinch of ground cloves
    1 ½-or-so cups bourbon (optional but really important)
    5 cups day-old baguette or crusty bread, cut into 1-inch bits
    3/4 stick unsalted butter, melted
    1 cup raisins
    ½ cup toasted almond slivers
    Vanilla ice cream
    Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
    Put raisins and almonds and enough bourbon to cover them into a jar with a pretty good seal on the lid (can use plastic wrap). Set this aside. No, you may not have one yet. They’re not ready.
    Now, stir together your pumpkin, nog, sugar, eggs, egg yolk, spices, and about 2 tablespoons of bourbon in a mixing bowl. Coat your bread bits with the melted butter in another bowl, then add the pumpkin mix and toss it so it’s all covered. No, you still may not have any of the raisins. They’re not ready. Not the almonds either.
    Now, put your proto-pudding into a baking pan (preferably not too deep, maybe 2” tops) and bake until it looks done, about 20-30 minutes.
    When you’re ready to serve, drain your raisins and almonds – OK, fine, you can try a few on the way, just for quality control, sure – and spread them over top of the pudding. Challenge your guests to see who’ll drink the raisin-almond-flavored bourbon, or do so yourself if you’re in to that sort of thing. You could even share!
    Serve over vanilla ice cream for best effect, or eat by itself.

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