On Christmas Eve, one of my two sisters was still in Brazil, and the other was with her in-laws. So my parents and I celebrated with some extended family. I got put in charge of roast and dessert.
There was also lemon and orange peal to be grated, eggs to beat...I found the recipe on Wikipedia. The Joy of Cooking, that fantastic Bible of a cookbook that could stand alone for recipes and reference, didn't have a word on figgy pudding. It was quite the roast. My dad picked it out. I used a recipe from Williams-Sonoma. It was lovely. And rare. But that's okay, because roast can be eaten rare.
As for the dessert, my first inclination was Christmas pudding. A little research, though, revealed Christmas pudding needs to be started weeks in advanced, and that half of its mass appears to consist of brandy--you have to keep feeding it brandy, like some strange holiday version of Audrey II.
So, thinking of "We Wish You a Merry Christmas," and realizing I had never in fact seen a figgy pudding, I decided that would be our dessert.
I spent about four hours working on it--and that includes the modern convenience of a food processor. (Four hours sounds impressive, but really I'm slow at just about everything. So it was probably max three hours at normal-person speed.) There are a lot of figs in figgy pudding, and all of them have to be chopped up--so do the nuts and the apples, after they've been pealed and cored.
The result? Figgy pudding tastes kind of like a fig newton dipped in orange juice. It tastes better with ice cream.
7 comments:
It was a delicious dinner and dessert! Thanks for taking the time to make it.
Thanks for the photo!
And the results were wonderful. I so appreciate you doing the cooking/baking that day, and am so impressed with what you came up with!! You are amazing Carrie!!
Hey, what happened to your lovely face?
Uhh...I decided I didn't want to show it to the world.
I'm pretty much alright with the fact that I didn't get to try figgy pudding (your description was quite vivid; I do feel like I tried some), but as you know Brad's new cause is to save antiquated desserts such as figgy pudding and mince meat pie. So I have to thank you on his behalf for not allowing yet another dessert fade into oblivion.
lol - so the next time I hang out with you, I think we should eat fig newtons dipped in orange juice!!! Enticing!
YOU. CRACK. ME. UP.
-nat
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