Peggy’s sister Donna’s “Molasses Raisin Pudding”
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- PlutoniumLounger
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Peggy’s sister Donna’s “Molasses Raisin Pudding”
Mix (1) ½ cup sugar
(2) 1 cup molasses
(3) 1 teaspoon all-spice
Dissolve (4) 1 teaspoon baking soda in
(5) ½ cup hot water
(6) Add this into mixture of sugar/molasses
Add in (7) 3 cups flour
(8) ½ cup melted butter
(9) ½ teaspoon salt
(10) ½ pound of raisins
Boil in a pudding bag for 2 to 2½ hours
I didn’t have a pudding bag, so I baked this in two small loaf baking tins for 2½ hours on the bottom shelf at 200F by the oven dial.
I ate half of one “cake”, gave the other half to Peggy, and kept the second cake to portion out amongst the various ladies in the stores along Church Street, to keep them sweet.
I am now down to my last seven cartons of molasses. I shall soon have to buy more or else move back to Toronto and regular cooking.
(four days later) Still having no pudding bag, I used my jam dixie, an inch of water in the bottom, a dessert bowl in the water, more water in the bowl, then a 1lb margarine tub with the dough, in the dessert bowl,
This pudding was less cake-like and more pudding-liked, but not cooked all the way through. I figure the 2 to 2 ½ hours refers to a cloth bag, and the plastic tub serves as a mild barrier to the transfer of heat.
Cheers
Chris
(2) 1 cup molasses
(3) 1 teaspoon all-spice
Dissolve (4) 1 teaspoon baking soda in
(5) ½ cup hot water
(6) Add this into mixture of sugar/molasses
Add in (7) 3 cups flour
(8) ½ cup melted butter
(9) ½ teaspoon salt
(10) ½ pound of raisins
Boil in a pudding bag for 2 to 2½ hours
I didn’t have a pudding bag, so I baked this in two small loaf baking tins for 2½ hours on the bottom shelf at 200F by the oven dial.
I ate half of one “cake”, gave the other half to Peggy, and kept the second cake to portion out amongst the various ladies in the stores along Church Street, to keep them sweet.
I am now down to my last seven cartons of molasses. I shall soon have to buy more or else move back to Toronto and regular cooking.
(four days later) Still having no pudding bag, I used my jam dixie, an inch of water in the bottom, a dessert bowl in the water, more water in the bowl, then a 1lb margarine tub with the dough, in the dessert bowl,
This pudding was less cake-like and more pudding-liked, but not cooked all the way through. I figure the 2 to 2 ½ hours refers to a cloth bag, and the plastic tub serves as a mild barrier to the transfer of heat.
Cheers
Chris
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- gamma jay
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Re: Peggy’s sister Donna’s “Molasses Raisin Pudding”
Sweet (in more ways than one!)
TX for the recipe.
TX for the recipe.
Regards,
Rudi
If your absence does not affect them, your presence didn't matter.
Rudi
If your absence does not affect them, your presence didn't matter.
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- PlutoniumLounger
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Re: Peggy’s sister Donna’s “Molasses Raisin Pudding”
You are welcome.Rudi wrote:Sweet (in more ways than one!) TX for the recipe.
Tonight I will have my third essay, this time using a handkerchief (I am still too cheap to BUY a real pudding bag).
I figure that if nothing else, using a handkerchief as a pudding bag will help me cut down on laundry.
Cheers
Chris
He who plants a seed, plants life.
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- PlutoniumLounger
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Re: Peggy’s sister Donna’s “Molasses Raisin Pudding”
I keep all my empty 375ml tomato paste tins and use them for tree seedlings. Why not use them as baking tins?
Above is my first batch of me-sized puddings. And above is a close up of a tin.
Two heaped tablespoons of mixture per tin seems about right; the cooked pudding is half-a-tin high, so say 200ml.
The tins are steam-cooked - an inch of water in my jam dixie and brought to the boil for 45-50 minutes does the trick.
I can scoop it out with a teaspoon while reading a Garrison Keillor novel, or use a bread knife to turn each pudding out of its tin to serve as a cake (late at night reading a Garrison Keillor novel in bed).
Naturally, if I ever get tired of washing out the tins, they will be headed to the tree-seedling area.
Cheers
Chris,
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- gamma jay
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Re: Peggy’s sister Donna’s “Molasses Raisin Pudding”
It looks rustically delicious.
I'd turn the pudding out of the tin, poke it a few times with a fork and then pour out a thin custard over them and top it off with a glazed cherry and some cinnamon.
Argh! Tonight I'll be dreaming of eating it!
I'd turn the pudding out of the tin, poke it a few times with a fork and then pour out a thin custard over them and top it off with a glazed cherry and some cinnamon.
Argh! Tonight I'll be dreaming of eating it!
Regards,
Rudi
If your absence does not affect them, your presence didn't matter.
Rudi
If your absence does not affect them, your presence didn't matter.
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- PlutoniumLounger
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Re: Peggy’s sister Donna’s “Molasses Raisin Pudding”
“Oh. Rustic? You want Rust-stick? Why didnaya say Rustic? I thort you meant Rusty”Rudi wrote:It looks rustically delicious.
Here you are, molasses raisin pudding in rustic colouring and rustic containers. There’s nothing quite like molasses raisin pudding for loosening hardened food stuffs.
At the left two spice jars (I’m working up a line about pudding-in-spice instead of the customary spice-in-pudding). A relish jar, a preserving jar, a weird sized tumbler and a weird-sized cup. The cup is about eight times the capacity of an espresso and far too small to hold more than two mouthfuls of tea. Finally a “Happy Birthday” cup that is closer to my choice of size for an espresso.
And yes, the pudding is a rusty sort of shade ...
And yes, those spice jars are a handy pocket-size when you go for a walk in the woods ...
Cheers
Chris
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- gamma jay
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Re: Peggy’s sister Donna’s “Molasses Raisin Pudding”
Sheesh. I don't think your ice cream diet will help any if you are going to consume all those Peggy’s sister Donna’s “Molasses Raisin Pudding”.
You may want to slow down a tad on the sugar, or increase your exercise to include a swim around the iceberg offshore.
BTW: I don't see any custard and cinnamon ANYWHERE.
You may want to slow down a tad on the sugar, or increase your exercise to include a swim around the iceberg offshore.
BTW: I don't see any custard and cinnamon ANYWHERE.
Regards,
Rudi
If your absence does not affect them, your presence didn't matter.
Rudi
If your absence does not affect them, your presence didn't matter.
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- PlutoniumLounger
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Re: Peggy’s sister Donna’s “Molasses Raisin Pudding”
Right, but making PSDMRP saves me money over ice-cream and that means I can pay off my mortgage faster!Rudi wrote:Sheesh. I don't think your ice cream diet will help any if you are going to consume all those Peggy’s sister Donna’s “Molasses Raisin Pudding”.
Correct. The custard powder is in a cardboard cylindrical can on the top shelf. These cardboard cannisters are useless for storage or baking, so there is no incentive for me to use up the custard.BTW: I don't see any custard and cinnamon ANYWHERE.
This will prompt the question "So why did you buy custard powder in the first place?", which prompts two answers:
(1) Probably purchased by my second wife, years ago.
(2) Possibly purchased by my first wife, many more years ago,
Cheers
Chris
He who plants a seed, plants life.
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- gamma jay
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Re: Peggy’s sister Donna’s “Molasses Raisin Pudding”
OK. Custard obviously does not excite you; so I'll take a shot at one more suggestion.
How about taking a walk to your local doctors office (or chemist) and purchasing a syringe.
On your way home from the doctor (or chemist), stop by the convenience store and buy some smooth apricot jam (unless you already have a generous stock of home made jam already in the cupboard next tot he custard.)
Then stick the syringe into the "smooth" jam and pull back hard on the plunger
With a generous dose of jam in the tube, stab the pudding so that the syringe nozzle reaches the center of the pudding
Now, hold it carefully in place and press down hard on the plunger to inject all of the contents of the tube into the pudding
Extract the syringe
Sprinkle with a bit of cinnamon
Take a glazed cherry and stick it into the hole left by the syringe
That's it!
Now you have an "Apricot Infused Cinnamon Sprinkled Cherry Plugged Peggy’s Sister Donna’s Molasses Raisin Pudding”.
How about taking a walk to your local doctors office (or chemist) and purchasing a syringe.
On your way home from the doctor (or chemist), stop by the convenience store and buy some smooth apricot jam (unless you already have a generous stock of home made jam already in the cupboard next tot he custard.)
Then stick the syringe into the "smooth" jam and pull back hard on the plunger
With a generous dose of jam in the tube, stab the pudding so that the syringe nozzle reaches the center of the pudding
Now, hold it carefully in place and press down hard on the plunger to inject all of the contents of the tube into the pudding
Extract the syringe
Sprinkle with a bit of cinnamon
Take a glazed cherry and stick it into the hole left by the syringe
That's it!
Now you have an "Apricot Infused Cinnamon Sprinkled Cherry Plugged Peggy’s Sister Donna’s Molasses Raisin Pudding”.
Regards,
Rudi
If your absence does not affect them, your presence didn't matter.
Rudi
If your absence does not affect them, your presence didn't matter.
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- PlutoniumLounger
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Re: Peggy’s sister Donna’s “Molasses Raisin Pudding”
I have nothing against custard' it's just that I haven't come up with a need for a lidded empty cardboard cannister yet, so can see no reason for emptying the same!Rudi wrote:OK. Custard obviously does not excite you; so I'll take a shot at one more suggestion.
I have purchased two of these, the one above by mistake. The other is in use, regular “glues anything” Epoxy. These syringes (no need to make an appointment to answer awkward questions about data in the WeightLoss workbook!) can be purchased for about $cdn10 down at Swyers. Swyers-the-hardware, not Swyers-the-supermarket.How about taking a walk to your local doctors office (or chemist) and purchasing a syringe.
Rinsed out and left to soak in the heavily-chlorinated town water for a week, I could load one tube with runny apricot jam and the other with stuff from the jars on the lower shelf labelled “multi-fruit”, of a reddish colour and only $2.99( Comes in a handy home-made-orange-marmalade sized glass jar; way better than a cardboard cannister. )
Cheers
Chris
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- gamma jay
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Re: Peggy’s sister Donna’s “Molasses Raisin Pudding”
That would work just as well.
When can I come over to sample the jam infused puddings?
When can I come over to sample the jam infused puddings?
Regards,
Rudi
If your absence does not affect them, your presence didn't matter.
Rudi
If your absence does not affect them, your presence didn't matter.
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- PlutoniumLounger
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Re: Peggy’s sister Donna’s “Molasses Raisin Pudding”
Well, Rudi, I'm busy today bottling Grapefruit marmalade; Thursday is peaches all day long.Rudi wrote:That would work just as well. When can I come over to sample the jam infused puddings?
I can fit you in over the weekend, then Monday is Trial Balance day, because Tuesday is Pension day, and then I'm usually busy flinging money left, right and centre.
Just aim at the two water towers and holler "CHRIS!!!".
Then head away from the sound of the gun shots.
Cheers
Chris
He who plants a seed, plants life.
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- gamma jay
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Re: Peggy’s sister Donna’s “Molasses Raisin Pudding”
ChrisGreaves wrote:Just aim at the two water towers and holler "CHRIS!!!".
Then head away from the sound of the gun shots.
TX for that important advice.
PS: I might just come Tuesday to catch and pocket some of that cash your flinging around.
Regards,
Rudi
If your absence does not affect them, your presence didn't matter.
Rudi
If your absence does not affect them, your presence didn't matter.
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- PlutoniumLounger
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Re: Peggy’s sister Donna’s “Molasses Raisin Pudding”
Take a number; but be quick; there's only $5,000 of it.Rudi wrote:PS: I might just come Tuesday to catch and pocket some of that cash your flinging around.
Cheers
Chris
He who plants a seed, plants life.
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- gamma jay
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Re: Peggy’s sister Donna’s “Molasses Raisin Pudding”
$1 ( and a tin of jam infused pudding, with custard!!!! )
Regards,
Rudi
If your absence does not affect them, your presence didn't matter.
Rudi
If your absence does not affect them, your presence didn't matter.