Originally posted by salymap
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"bread pudding"
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amateur51
Originally posted by mangerton View PostIt could be as long as a week, I fear, saly, with all the preservatives they put in these days. Leave it unwrapped, and out of the bread bin. That should speed things up a bit.
Mind you I did this once when I was sharing a flat, getting ready to make bread sauce for a roast chicken dinner the next day. My flatmates returned from the pub, feeling peckish, spotted this bread apparently just hanging around, toasted it & to add insult to injury grated my first-class cheddar cheese on top & had a hearty midnight snack.
Guess who was not a happy bunny next morning?
The flatmates being blokes, needless to say no-one was at all sympathetic to my plight
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Don Petter
Originally posted by mercia View PostI can see that the original idea was to use up old stale bread, but surely if you have fresher bread you simply let it soak for a shorter length of time ..............
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There may be a subtle difference, for the true Breddie, but I think in practice that works fairly well, and was suggested in my #4.
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Don't know if this is mentioned up-thread, but a delicious way to tart up the old BP is to sugar the top and give it a blast so it turns into a brûlée topping. Esp. if you've dunked the bread in some nice vanilla-y cream or crème anglaise"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Anna
Grandmother's pud used to have quite a thick topping of demerara sugar, which would catch nicely and be very crunchy. I would have thought with white Hovis there would be hardly any need to soak as it's basically all water!! It's a bit like white sliced toast, it evaporates to about a quarter of an inch thick. (Has mercia made his pudding yet?) Off-topic a bit, it seems Paul Hollywood (master baker and judge of GBBO) likes Warburtons thick sliced white
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... another solution is to throw it away and make (or buy... ) a nice pud instead...
Come off it - nothing wrong with a good BP, old sport!"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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