The chopped ginger goes in the bottom of the basin which of course, on turning out, will become the top:
The puddings can be cooked the day before required. Just keep in the pudding basins and reheat for 10-15 minutes before required at 160°C/fan oven 140°C/325°F/Gas mark 3.
Once the puds are cooked, I levelled the surface off just so they’d sit nicely on the plate when turned out:
I’ve tried to capture the lovely sponge texture. These are not heavy puddings that sit in your stomach like you’ve eaten a house brick!
Spooning over extra ginger syrup when served makes these juicy little delights and I love the contrast of warming ginger with cold ice cream.
Here’s the pudding cut open. The photo was taken hastily as I wanted to eat it!
Yummmmmm – pudding and ice cream!
Ingredients:
185g unsalted butter, at room temperature
3 preserved stem gingers in syrup, cut into small pieces
5 tablespoons ginger syrup (i.e. from the jar the stem ginger is in)
185g golden caster sugar
1 tablespoon black treacle
3 eggs
3 teaspoons ground ginger
185g self raising flour
To serve: custard or ice cream. Or both!
How to make:
- Preheat the oven to 180°C/fan oven 160°C/350°F/Gas mark 4.
- Grease 6 individual pudding basins with either butter or cake release.
- Place the chopped ginger in the bottom of the basin (which will become the top on serving) and drizzle 1 teaspoon of ginger syrup over the top. Put the rest of the syrup aside until you serve the puddings.
- Beat the butter and sugar together until creamy and pale, then beat in the black treacle.
- Gradually beat in the eggs and don’t worry if the mix curdles – it will correct as soon as you add the flour.
- Fold in the flour and ground ginger until well combined.
- Spoon the mixture into the basins, then place all the basins into a larger baking tin (I used a roasting tray).
- Pour boiling water into the tray until the water level comes halfway up the little basins.
- Cover the tray with foil and, while you need to wrap it tightly to keep the steam in, ensure that you’ve allowed space on top for the puddings to rise – tenting the foil is the best idea.
- Bake for 40-45 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean. I took the foil off after 35 minutes and gave them a further 15 minutes uncovered, but still standing in the water.
- Either serve straightaway, or allow to cool and reheat the next day.
- When turning the puddings out remember to spoon over the ginger syrup you set aside.
- Bask in glory at the wonderful thing you have made.
- Eat.
13 comments:
The first thing that came to my mind abt your pudding is it looks too heathy.....not like the usual ones I know sinfully drench in lots of syrup.
So thats how a pudding should look like. Lighter than my first attempt. I believe there is a Pudding event going on at a fellow UK'ers site. The art of steamed pudding making is dying .
Oh my goodness! That looks lovely. Will have to make that for the BF.
WoW! This looks so good! Steamed pudding is something I have not tried yet. . .hhhmm, actually I have a list of things that I still need to try but this looks very do-able =D.
Lovely pudding ..I love ginger and what could be lovelier than have your favorite spice in your pudding!!
Oh my what a great looking ginger pud!! Just what we need for comfort food here in the UK with this awful weather!
Rosie x
A great idea for this foul weather we're having at the moment!
It truly IS Pudding fever! After I saw the pudding on Rosie's site I raced over here! How about hers for dinner, yours for dessert? Or other way around...the point is, more pudding is good!
I'm with you - the word "pudding" by itself is delightful. These are delicious looking puddings and I am a ginger fan, so this is one to bookmark.
Really lovely cakes! xxGloria
Very lovely and goody ingredients in it.
Oh my - those look AMAZING!
Definitely with you on the ginger front - it's the pefect flavour for this kind of crappy weather.
Excellent looking & sounding pudding. Got here from Rosie's & am I glad I did! I love the idea of individual desserts. Ginger is a lovely flavour...YUMMY!!
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