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Marmalade Bread and Butter Pudding

February 23, 2012 by Sarah Trivuncic 36 Comments

Marmalade bread and butter pudding isn’t just for Paddington, it’s an easy comforting winter pudding for the family and avoids food waste using up leftover stale bread crusts. 

Golden bread and butter pudding in glass dish and in soft focus background are shown a blue and white striped jug and some stacked pastel pink and blue bowls.

Wallowing in winter, we have grown somewhat addicted to a bread and butter pudding each Sunday.

When you’re not in the mood to do much, this comforting pudding is barely more difficult than making a round of sandwiches and lately I’ve been going on auto pilot each weekend to knock one up after our roast dinner that leaves us with enough pudding to enjoy for a few days during the week too.

home-made-butter

Helen recently told me about making home made butter in the food processor and I scooped up the next batch of reduced cream I spotted at the supermarket to make some myself. It’s astonishingly easy and whilst questionable whether it saves you money, certainly the home made butter is no more expensive than basics range if you buy your cream marked down. Using your own butter to bake is very satisfying if nothing else. Simply blitz it in the processor with usual blade until it “breaks” then pour off the buttermilk (for muffins!).

Home Made Marmalade

Making my own marmalade is not something I’ve managed yet. Probably the vast supply I have received from other people has rendered doing it myself fairly pointless. With a heaving store cupboard of jars, I vowed this year to use up things lurking at the back lest they sit there unloved another year.

Marmalade Bread and Butter Pudding

Marmalade takes the traditional bread and butter pudding up a gear. Paddington certainly knew what he was talking about. I think marmalade tastes much better on sandwiches than toast.

Marmalade Bread and Butter Pudding

These are all shoved in really. There’s no point worrying about how neat they are as the pudding puffs up in the oven anyway.

Marmalade Bread and Butter Pudding

The puffing up is my favourite part. The pudding looks done after 45 minutes but if you give it another ten the surface of the bread rises up and looks more impressive. It sinks back down afterwards anyway but I rather enjoy the moment and give mine extra time to rise.

So three or four weeks later, having mastered a fairly basic bread and butter pudding I am toying with more exotic versions.

Or would this, pun well and truly intended, be over egging the pudding?

Marmalade Bread and Butter Pudding

Marmalade Bread and Butter Pudding

Serves 6-8

Ingredients

8 slices of bread or 10 with crusts removed

3 tbsp butter

200g marmalade (shredless or with shred picked out)

500ml whole milk

100ml double cream (I use Elmlea reduced fat version)

3 large eggs

100g sugar

1 tsp vanilla extract

1 tsp nutmeg

demerara sugar for sprinkling

You will need a medium size oven proof dish.

Directions

1. Preheat the oven to 160c / Gas 3. Spread the bread as if making sandwiches with the butter and marmalade. I prefer mine with shred removed but you can leave it in if you like.

2. Sandwich slices together then cut vertically into three strips. Arrange the strips in the dish, first one direction then the other, piling on top of each other and fitting snuggly.

3. Beat the milk, cream, eggs, sugar , vanilla and nutmeg together in a jug and whisk until the yolks have been broken. Slowly and evenly pour over the breadstrips.

4. Sprinkle demerara sugar over the top and bake for 50-60 minutes until puffed up. This pudding is best served warm.

bread-butter-pudding-1.jpg

I am sending this post to Family Friendly Fridays at Ren’s Fabulicious Food.

Marmalade-bread-butter-pudding

What other variations on bread and butter pudding are there?

Naturally beyond marmalade you could mix this bread and butter pudding up with any flavour of jam or nutella.

And you can make bread and butter pudding using croissants – or better still try my slow cooker bread pudding with hot cross buns.

Filed Under: Baking and Desserts Tagged With: baking, puddings

About Sarah Trivuncic

Sarah Trivuncic has published recipes, restaurant and travel reviews on Maison Cupcake since 2009. She lives in Walthamstow, East London with her husband and teenager.
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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Vanessa Kimbell says

    February 26, 2012 at 12:12 am

    Lovely recipe.. I make one almost the same but I use Star anise in it.

    Reply
    • Sarah, Maison Cupcake says

      February 29, 2012 at 11:08 am

      Thank you, I hadn’t seen that until now. Not sure I agree with them being “almost the same” as yours has much higher ratio of cream to milk, addition of raisins, orange zest etc but thank you for sharing!

      Reply
  2. Arabella Bazley says

    February 26, 2012 at 7:27 am

    I love the idea of making your own butter but perhaps it’s one for after major holidays when for a few hours you can get cream at 10p a pot as the supermarkets have a clear out!

    Reply
    • Sarah, Maison Cupcake says

      February 27, 2012 at 2:17 pm

      Yes – good plan!

      Reply
  3. Working london mummy says

    February 27, 2012 at 12:15 pm

    So lovely, what a comforting treat! Send some this way please x

    Reply
    • Sarah, Maison Cupcake says

      February 29, 2012 at 11:09 am

      You definitely deserve it! Hope you and baby are doing well x

      Reply
  4. Ren Behan says

    March 2, 2012 at 2:54 pm

    Thanks again for linking this up Sarah, I’ve mentioned your entry in the round-up xxx

    Reply
  5. Sally - My Custard Pie says

    March 7, 2012 at 5:37 am

    So impressed you made your own butter. Bread and butter pudding is such a staple of my childhood – it was economical…we never threw away stale bread. Sadly my family have an aversion to dried fruit but marmalade is an idea….I’ll let you know how it fares (KP and teens increasingly resemble panel on Masterchef). It’s the puffing up and egg custard that clinches it for me (no surprise there). Great comfort food.

    Reply
    • Sarah, Maison Cupcake says

      March 8, 2012 at 12:55 pm

      He he, I have fuss pots aged 4 and 40. Hilariously it’s the 40 year old who is most hassle as he won’t eat anything “with bits in it”.

      Reply
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I’m Sarah, a recipe writer sharing thrifty everyday dinners with a touch of French inspiration. I founded Maison Cupcake in 2009 and love creating dishes that are affordable, comforting and achievable. Thanks for visiting!

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