Frank's Recipes
Free Recipes Archive
Free Counter
by Pliner.Net
dating
,
lasik
,
search
,
shopping
Visitors Since July 1, 1998
This location is no longer being supported or updated.
Please adjust your browser favorites to
http://www.franksrecipes.com
MENU
»
Cookbooks
»
Hints & Tips
»
Foodservice
»
Links
»
My Awards
»
My Guestbook
»
Recipe Archive
»
Software
»
Volume Cooking
»
Where Are You
»
About
Help support this site
Recipe Archives
This site is no longer being supported.
You will be redirected to www.franksrecipes.com in
seconds
French Bread Pudding with Clear Rum Sauce
1 cup Sugar
8 tablespoon Butter; softened
5 Egg; beaten
1 pint Heavy cream
1 dash Cinnamon
1 tablespoon Vanilla extract
1/4 cup Raisins
12 slice French bread, fresh or stale; 1" thick
CLEAR RUM SAUCE
1 cup Sugar
2 1/4 cup Water
1 Cinnamon stick; OR
1 tsp Cinnamon, ground
1 tablespoon Butter, sweet
1/2 tsp Cornstarch
1 tablespoon Rum, light or dark
Preheat oven to 350 F. In a large bowl cream together the sugar and butter. Add eggs, cream, cinnamon, vanilla, and raisins, mixing well. Pour into a 9-inch-square pan l 3/4 inches deep.
Arrange bread slices flat in the egg mixture and let stand for 5 minutes to soak up some of the liquid. Turn bread over and let stand for 10 minutes longer. Then push bread down so that most of it is covered by the egg mixture. Do not break the bread.
Set pan in a larger pan filled with water to 1/2 inch from top. Cover with aluminum foil. Bake for 45 to 50 minutes. uncovering pudding for the last 10 minutes to brown the top. When done. the custard should still be soft, not firm.
To make the sauce:
In a medium-size saucepan combine sugar, 2 cups water, cinnamon, and butter and bring to a boil. Stir in cornstarch blended with remaining 1/4 cup water and simmer. stirring, until sauce is clear. Remove from heat and add rum. Sauce will be thin.
To serve:
Spoon the pudding onto dessert plates and pass the sauce separately.
Originally devised as a way to use leftover stale French bread, bread pudding has become one of the most popular classic New Orleans desserts. Every cook has his own secret recipe. Commander's Palace's version is served hot from the oven with a thin rum sauce.
This page is maintained by
Chef Frank Fileccia, CCC, CEC, GOM
(
Frank's Recipes
)
Copyright
© Frank Fileccia 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004.