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Ambrosia is a brand of food products in the United Kingdom. Its original product was a dried milk powder for infants, but it is now mostly known for its custard and rice pudding. The brand plays on the fact that it is made in Devon, England, (at a factory in Lifton), with their punning strapline "Devon knows how they make it so creamy". [1]
Okay, so technically, bread pudding is a custard not a pudding. But with the end result being so creamy and dreamy, we couldn't resist adding this one to the list.
Rice pudding is traditionally made with pudding rice, milk, cream and sugar and is sometimes flavoured with vanilla, nutmeg, jam and/or cinnamon. It can be made in two ways: in a saucepan or by baking in the oven. It can be made by gently simmering the milk and rice in a saucepan until tender, and then the sugar is carefully mixed in.
Kedgeree is thought to have originated with the Indian rice-and-bean or rice-and-lentil dish khichuṛī, traced back to 1340 or earlier. [5] Hobson-Jobson cites ibn Battuta (c. 1340) mentioning a dish of munj boiled with rice called kishrī and cites a recipe for khichdi from the Ain-i-Akbari (c. 1590).
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Tube rice pudding (Chinese: 筒仔米糕; pinyin: Tǒng zǐ mǐ gāo; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: tâng-á-bí-ko) is a Taiwanese dish consisting of a stir-fried glutinous rice mixture that is seasoned and steamed in a bamboo tube. Tube rice pudding is a cylindrical shape caused by the steaming process in a tube. [1]
Binakle is a type of steamed rice cake originating from the Ifugao province of the Philippines. It is made from glutinous rice (diket) that is pounded into a paste, wrapped in banana or rattan leaves, and steamed. Variants may also add sesame seeds or sweet potato. They are popularly eaten on special occasions or as a snack.
Engraving of cabinet pudding, 1882. One of the earliest recorded recipes can be found in John Mollard's 1836 work The Art of Cookery New edition. [5]Boil a pint of cream or milk, with a stick of cinnamon, and some lemon peel, for ten minutes, pour it over a quarter of a pound of Savoy cake, or of sponge biscuits, and, when cold, add two ounces of Jordan almonds scolded and chopped fine.