Guinness and Fruit Christmas Puddings

16 Nov

No dish speaks more of Christmas than a traditional Christmas pudding. Slow cooked for hours, the sugars in the pudding turn to dark caramel for a rich pudding that brings out the sweetness of the Guinness-infused fruits.


Ingredients

Guinness® and Fruit Christmas Puddings

  • 500g raisins
  • 500g mixed dried fruit (currants, oranges, dates etc.), roughly chopped
  • 200ml Guinness®
  • 250g butter
  • 280g caster sugar
  • 5 eggs
  • 1 cup plain flour
  • 1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
  • ½ tsp ground cinnamon
  • ½ tsp ground clove
  • ½ tsp ground nutmeg
  • 2 cups soft white breadcrumbs

Method

Mix the fruit and Guinness® together in a non-reactive bowl, cover with a tea towel and leave overnight to soak.

Cream together the butter and sugar, then beat in the eggs one at a time. Fold through the dry ingredients and fruit mixture, including any liquid collecting in the bottom of the bowl.

Grease and line the base of 2-3 pudding basins and divide the mixture between them. Cover tightly with more greaseproof paper and aluminium foil and leave overnight in the fridge.

Place a small rack, trivet or layer of tea towels in the base of a large saucepan big enough to fit your pudding basins. Fill the saucepan with boiling water three-quarters of the way up your pudding basins. Bring to a simmer and cover, continuing to simmer for 3½ hours, topping up the water every hour. Alternatively, steam the puddings for 7½ hours, topping up the steaming water every half hour.

Turn out the puddings, slice and serve with vanilla custard.

This Christmas, check out Merry Guinness® promos and parties throughout December in Malaysia at www.facebook.com/guinnessmalaysia

One Response to “Guinness and Fruit Christmas Puddings”

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. Merry Sid’s-Xmas!! « Kelly Siew Cooks - December 23, 2011

    [...] plate it’s time for the dessert. Guinness and Fruit Christmas Pudding is one of Masterchef Adam Liaw‘s recipe. Here it’s served with a scoop of ice cream and custard. Pudding swimming in [...]

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 210 other followers