Nothing tastes more nostalgic than a proper Christmas pudding. All that dark boozy fruit and rich suet centre… They’re the pinnacle of the festive feast and one of the last of the old school recipes that still gets passed down through the generations.

Here's one we prepared earlier

My Nana’s sago plum pudding, served alight with brandy and gold coins buried at the bottom of the dish is a firm family staple. The only problem is that because she never wrote her recipes down, re-creating it without her has required a bit of imagination.

But that’s not always the case. Just yesterday a friend posted her grandmother’s 1966 Christmas pudding recipe on Facebook.

Close up you could see the crinkles and spills of more than 40 years worth of Christmas feasts and the scrawled blue handwriting of a generation who shopped, cooked and lived without swiping anything.

“No one writes like that anymore,” my friend posted.  But it’s the handwriting that makes these old recipes so wonderful. Sure it might seem messier to keep a tattered piece of paper covered in the remnants of last year’s pudding mix, but it’s hard to imagine passing down an iPad to your grandkids.

This year more of us than ever are opting for a retro Christmas menu. Syrie Wongkaew, the editor of taste.com.au told The Punch that their traditional Christmas pudding recipes have never been more popular, closely followed by rum balls, trifles, shortbread and gingerbread houses.

But a truly traditional Christmas menu, just like our grandparents made, requires a lot more time and planning than most of us probably gave them credit for.  In fact, as Valli Little, editor of Delicious Magazine said, by our grandmother’s standards this week is already far too late to get started on a proper Christmas pudding.

“Now we try and do things as quickly as possible, but the Christmas pudding is one thing you cannot rush,” she said.

Generations ago the Christmas pudding was started as early as November when the fruit was prepared and soaked in advance.

“It was called “stir up Sunday” and the whole family would get together to prepare the ingredients, to make sure they gave it enough time to mature before Christmas.
“Each family member was supposed to give the pudding a stir. Each family member was supposed to give the pudding a stir and make a wish,” Little said.

No surprise then that the key to a good pudding is time. A long steaming process; five hours on the first boil to develop the flavour, followed by another two hours on the stove before serving on Christmas day.

“The pudding can also be “fed” if made in advance meaning to add a of spoonful of brandy or rum each day for the week up to Christmas,” said Little.

No wonder it used to taste so good.

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15 comments

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    • Fed Up says:

      05:18am | 18/12/12

      Ahh yes the ol christmas puddin…as kids we would line up in hope to get a piece which contained a “zac”....then off to the lolly shop.

    • NESLIHAN KUROSAWA says:

      07:07am | 18/12/12

      Hi Lucy,

      Even though I am not from Christian background, I totally love Christmas Pudding.  I have never made it myself but my close friend makes best the Christmas Puddings.  The picture above is great by the way but the hardest part would be making it, right? It is a shame you couldn’t include the actual recipe in this article. May be next time!  I certainly would like to have a go at making one myself one day.  No need to rush things because surely “all good things take time”.  Kind regards.

    • patsy says:

      09:22am | 18/12/12

      Click on the link at the end of the article where it says RECIPE Traditional Christmas Pudding and try it next year.

    • Tatty_Anne says:

      07:14am | 18/12/12

      I think most people would have quite a bit of trouble finding suet these days.

    • Aghast says:

      08:03am | 18/12/12

      No sixpences (zacs) in our christmas pud but oodles of trays (Thruppences) And of course the annual drama and often heated family division of should the custard be hot or cold.The suggestion of having a choice of either was mysteriously and stubbornly out of question.
      The November start to the pud meant weekly childhood visits to Grandma’s dark always cool pantry to gaze in awe at the linen wrapped wonder hanging there.I can smell it now…..We had to hand the trays back to be polished up for next year.

    • Philosopher says:

      08:48am | 18/12/12

      I make my own suet by rendering pig kidneys over the stove. Hmm, the smell… takes me back to the good old days when I lived beside a tannery, and the gap-toothed local chilluns would jeer at me and poke me with sticks, shouting ‘pooh, stinky pooh’ and similar sayings of old.

    • ibast says:

      07:55am | 18/12/12

      It’s about this time of year I remember that I meant to make Christmas pudding this year.  Problem being it’s now December and I should have made it in October.

      Might do those ginger puddings, that I haven’t done for a while, instead.  with some vanilla bean custard.

    • Philosopher says:

      07:57am | 18/12/12

      Lucy paints a picture that is surely out of ‘Little Women’ or ‘Seven Little Australians’? The era where institutionalised children were preyed on like baby deer and the boozy police force brought Christmas pudding in to work wrapped in foil. Merry Christmas Lucy!

    • Michael S says:

      10:00am | 18/12/12

      If you’re still looking for a recipe, here’s a good one:

      Ingredients:
      4 bottles of Vodka
      1 cup of water
      1 tsp baking soda
      1 cup of sugar
      1 tsp salt
      1 cup of brown sugar
      lemon juice
      4 large eggs nuts
      2 cups of dried fruit

      Sample the vodka to check quality.
      Take a large bowl, check the vodka again.
      To be sure it is the highest quality, pour one level cup and drink.
      Repeat.
      Turn on the electric mixer.
      Beat one cup of butter in a large fluffy bowl.
      Add one teaspoon of sugar. Beat again.
      At this point it’s best to make sure the vodka is still OK.
      Try another cup .... just in case
      Turn off the mixerer.
      Break 2 leggs and add to the bowl and chuck in the cup of dried fruit.
      Pick fruit off floor. Mix on the turner. If the fried druit gets stuck
      in the beaterers pry it loose with a sdrewscriver.
      Sample the vodka to check for tonsisticity.
      Next, sift two cups of salt. Or something.
      Who giveshz a shoot
      Check the vodka.
      Now shift the lemon juice and strain your nuts.
      Add one table.
      Add a spoon of sugar. Whatever you can find.
      Greash the oven and pee in the fridge.
      Turn the cake tin 360 degrees and try not to fall over Don’t forget to beat
      off the turner.
      Finally, throw the bowl through the window, finish the vodka and kick the
      dog.
      Fall into bed.
      CHERRY MISTMAS!

    • Knemon says:

      01:06pm | 18/12/12

      Thanks for that Michael S…just what I needed, a damn good belly laugh grin Cheers.

    • Baloo says:

      02:01pm | 18/12/12

      Funniest thing I’ve read all day. smile

    • Ben C says:

      02:14pm | 18/12/12

      Haha, love it Michael S!

    • Louie the Fly says:

      11:18am | 18/12/12

      Oh - was going so well with this recipe, but had to stop midstream, my fridge is brand new, I just can’t bring myself to pee in it.

    • Louie the Fly says:

      12:03pm | 18/12/12

      That was supposed to be to Michael S - not Lucy.

    • stephen says:

      06:30pm | 18/12/12

      Forget the recipes ... Woolworths christmas pudding with cognac is a winner at $9 flat.
      Heston’s orange centre pudding is $14 ; might try it cause he’s a star, but whichever I buy - and I might even buy both - they will get double cream with brandy as accompaniment.

      Love Chrissy : too old for toys but the food and drink is great !

 

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