What’s for dinner? There’s not much in the house. The refrigerator is almost empty. There are basic ingredients in the freezer, but well, there’re all frozen.
I have two-thirds of a loaf of homemade bread a day past its prime.
Thanks to the Gems, there are eggs.
There are a few apples left from our visit to an orchard three weeks ago.
I’ll make a bread pudding, which is a fall-back recipe that everyone should have in their repertoire. This is what to do:
Cut the bread into cubes. If I toast them until dry the bread will hold it’s shape while baking. But, I like a soft custardy-custard, so I’m not going to bother with that step.
I put the batter ingredients into a mixing bowl and whisk together. The basic proportions are: 3 cups of milk, 1/2 cup sweetener, 6 eggs, 1/2 teaspoon of salt.
I use 1% milk. I actually like bread pudding made with lowfat dairy – cream is too heavy for my taste. For sweetener I combined honey and brown sugar, but this is flexible depending on the fruits used. Other times I might use sugar and maple syrup, or all white sugar. For Apple Bread Pudding, I’ll stir in a half-teaspoon of vanilla, too.
I get out 4 apples. I use my nifty hand-cranked gadget that, in a few turns of the handle, peels, cores and slices. I toss the apples in with the bread and add a handful of plump organic raisins. It all goes into a ceramic casserole. I pour the custard on top and press down so that the bread cubes are immersed in the batter. Let this sit so that the bread absorbs the egg mixture. Preheat the oven to 350ºF while the pudding rests.
While waiting for the oven to warm up, I take the apple peels out to the goats. My gadget makes long strands, which the goats like to slurp like spaghetti. This might be the best part of making Apple Bread Pudding. Notice Caper’s tail wagging with happiness.
Dust the pudding with cinnamon. Bake for about 45 minutes until the top begins to brown a bit and the custard is set. Lowfat milk batters are a tad watery and will take longer than if you use whole milk or cream. When you press on the surface you shouldn’t see any liquid ooze out. It should feel bouncy.
I’ve been reading diaries kept by a New York state farm family back at the turn of the last century. Supper was often what we’d consider dessert. They sometimes ate cream and berries for their evening meal, or had shortcake, or pancakes. This recipe, filled with eggs, which were precious back then, would have been an extravagance. But, they did love their ice cream, so I’ll have some, too.
Leave out the sugar, add cheese, and you’ll have a savory dinner, sometimes called a “strata.” No doubt I’ll be scrounging around the in the kitchen soon, thinking there’s nothing in the house to make for supper, when I spy the eggs and the bread and know that something easy to make and delicious is right there in front of me.
I want to see a picture of your apple thingy.
I’ve added a link to this older post about apple pie which has a photo.
http://www.hencam.com/henblog/2009/09/apple-season/
We have a very old one from like the 60s or something that we use to prepare apples for home made apple sauce – ours clamps onto the edge of the table which I find more reliable when doing large batches. Oh and it works great for potatoes too!
Oh! How delicious that looks! Makes me want to go home and make one right now!
ok, I’m coming over right now! Save some for me. Yum!
That looks like snow in the background??
When I was a child. we had homemade biscuits with fresh strawberries for supper every year when strawberries came in season. We also had homemade sweet potato bisuits with slices of that delicious country store hoop cheddar cheese inside them.
Sweet potato biscuits and cheese sound heavenly!
Talking about in times past having dessert for supper, that may explain why when there were loads of strawberries in my Nan’s garden, she used to give me strawberries with bread and butter for supper. I always thought it odd to have fruit with bread and butter. I was a child then and my Nan has long since passed on but I still think of that when we have strawberries.
Congratulations on your piece in the magazine. Fame!
I imagine it was homemade bread, too, and that it was very good butter, which had flavor and consistency that the store-bought doesn’t.
I love your boots terry.i need to go get some more:)
Terry,
Congratulations on the article in Chickens! I love your webcam and your articles. I would like to know what book you are reading. I am interested in any book or videos on how they did things in the past if you can recommend. We watched the Frontier House and another one about a family who agreed to live in a house in England I think it was and the house was set up as the 1800’s way of life, it was great.
I have a collection of vintage chicken keeping books (pre-1940) that I’ve picked up on-line and at flea markets. I also read original diaries. You might like this on-line diary.
http://www.jai2.com/FARMSTART.HTM