The Best Bread Pudding You’ll Never Make

I hope.

Step 1: Buy two banana bunches at Price Chopper when they go on sale for 39-cents a pound. Make sure each bunch has at least 9 bananas. Bring home and place in back of crisper drawer, behind the bag of red peppers and clamshell containers of baby spinach so you’re sure to forget about them for at least 3 weeks.

Step 2: Have your wife come down with a urinary tract infection. Go to Price Chopper and buy her the largest bottle of cranberry juice cocktail you can carry.*

Step 3: Buy red peppers and clamshell containers of baby spinach from Price Chopper to replace the ones you used in that stir-fry last week. Spot the now jet black banana bunches you forgot about in the crisper drawer.

Step 4: Forget about the bananas for another week.

Step 5: Remember the bananas.

Step 6: Squeeze the semi-liquid bananas out of their skin and into a bowl. Keep a fan on.

Step 7: Add stuff like flour, baking powder + soda, a few eggs, melted butter, and anything else you can think of off the top of your head that goes into banana bread. Do NOT look up a recipe. The thrill of this dish is in the uncertainty.

Step 8: Note with alarm that you are out of milk products just as the banana dough starts setting like concrete. In desperation grab the half empty jar of cranberry juice cocktail. She can scratch for a day or two til you buy more. It won’t kill her. Add it all.

Step 9: Pull out the massive caterer-sized Pullman loaf pan you bought 15 years ago to make “Terrine de Canard” for 70 people at your wedding reception and haven’t had a reason to use since but can’t bring yourself to get rid of, and pour in the 9 pounds of banana bread batter.

Step 10: Bake until bread.

Step 11: For the next 3 days eat banana bread either with, or for, breakfast, lunch, and dinner. When potassium poisoning becomes a real danger, wrap the remainder in foil and toss in the freezer.

Step 12: Go to Price Chopper and buy a half gallon tub of Butterscotch Swirl ice cream when your wife asks you to buy Caramel Swirl.

Step 13: Endure painful 25 minute long dissertation on the difference between “butterscotch” and “caramel”, and why one is dog shit and the other orgasmic.

Step 14: Go to Price Chopper and buy a half gallon tub of Caramel Swirl ice cream.

Step 15: Stare glumly at unloved, unwanted half gallon tub of Butterscotch Swirl ice cream in the freezer until inspiration strikes.

Step 16: Defrost frozen banana bread in microwave. Cut into cubes, spread on a half sheet, and pop it under the salamander (broiler) until they crisp up and lightly toast.

Step 17: Peel, core, and cube 2 or 3 Golden Delicious apples. Saute in butter over fairly high heat until just starting to caramelize, then flambe with Spanish solera brandy. Cook off alcohol and remove to cool.

Step 18: Put the unloved, unwanted Butterscotch Swirl ice cream in a saucepot and heat until melted. Remove from heat to cool.

Step 19: Whisk up, I dunno, 4? 6? 25? eggs. Enough that you think will thicken up a half gallon of melted Butterscotch Swirl ice cream.

Step 20: Whisk the half gallon of melted Butterscotch Swirl ice cream into the eggs. Add the bread cubes and apple chunks. Stir in a good pinch of salt and a glub of vanilla extract. And what the heck, might as well add the last of that bag of brown sugar that’s been taking up space on your shelf since last Thanksgiving. And some more white sugar too. This is America, after all.

Step 21: Drink some Spanish solera brandy. Accidentally drop a gill’s worth into the batter.

Step 22: Get out a Pyrex bowl that looks big enough to hold the batter. Smear a fistfull of butter around the inside, then fill ‘er up.

Step 23: When batter overflows the Pyrex bowl, curse your poor volume judging skills and get out the bigger Portuguese casserole dish. Butter that and pour in the batter from the Pyrex bowl, the remainder in the mixing bowl, and the overflow you’ve troweled off the counter.

Step 24: When batter overflows the bigger Portuguese casserole dish, curse your poor volume judging skills again and get out the double-loaf size Le Creuset stoneware loaf pan. You’re done fucking around. Butter that sucker up and start pouring. Any overflow eat raw.

Step 25: Remember that you forgot to pre-heat the oven.

Step 26: Pre-heat oven. 400(f)-ish should do it, right?

Step 28: Tap finger impatiently on counter to help oven pre-heat faster.

Step 29. Fuck it. Put loaf pan in the oven, ready or not. It’ll get up to temp eventually.

Step 30: Go watch an episode of “Jewel in the Palace”. Oh no, Jang Geum is in trouble with the head cooking lady!

Step 31: Stick a knife in the loaf. Stare in amazement when it comes out all sticky and wet. Is the oven on?? It is.

Step 32: Go watch an episode of “Jewel in the Palace”. Oh no, Jang Geum is in trouble with the Royal physician now!

Step 33: Stick a knife in the loaf. Stare in amazement when it comes out sticky and wet. Seriously, is this thing on? It’s been two fucking hours already!

Step 34: Go watch half an episode of “Jewel in the Palace”. Fucking Jang Geum. Is she gonna get in trouble with the goddam EMPEROR now? Geez. I can’t watch this. Go check the loaf.

Step 35: It’s done! IT’S DONE! Pull out of oven and let it cool on a rack.

Step 36: Go finish watching that “Jewel in the Palace” episode. Yep. Jang Geum’s in trouble with the Emperor alright. What’s wrong with that girl? Beyotch gonna get a bludgeoning of Korean historical proportions if she’s not careful.

Step 37: Explain to your wife that yes, sometimes bread pudding is cooked in a loaf pan. Weather her scorn.

Step 38. Cut a slice and serve it to her.

Step 39: Cut 8 more slices and serve them to her.

Step 40: Cut one for yourself. With sweetened sour cream on top. Because you’re out of heavy whipping cream, remember? Oh yeah, now I do.

Step 41: Blog about “Banana Bread/Butterscotch Ice Cream/Brandied Apple/Cranberry Juice Cocktail Bread Pudding“. With horrible picture of same.

Step 42: The end.

* Yes, I know cranberry juice has been shown to be an ineffective treatment for UTI’s. But YOU tell that to a woman who screams her head off every time she sits to pee.

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23 thoughts on “The Best Bread Pudding You’ll Never Make

  1. I swear to God we cook alike. I never would’ve thought to include cranberry juice in the recipe, but the rest? Totally something I’d do without blinking. (Except a different choice of television viewing.)

    And for the record, if you catch it early enough, cranberry juice does indeed help with, or even stop, a UTI. However, once you’re to the screaming point, it’s time to hike your unhappy ass to a doctor.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I love this classic recipe from the little-known country of Kyrgyzstan. It seems strange to me that you took all that trouble to make it, in the time-honoured way, and yet you didn’t have the patience to place it behind the nearest public urinal and wait the usual ten weeks for it to mature, thereby missing out on the distinctive flavour of the hairs which grow out of the apple, and the scrumptious (yes, scrumptious, truly, truly scrumptious) pink mould which develops on the bread. Call yourself a cook?
    But, other than that, I can’t fault the post.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. *I* wanted to wait the 10 weeks – even purchased a scrap public urinal intending for that purpose – but…wife. If there’s unattended food to be found, she’ll find and devour it. I can’t tell you how many batches of sourdough starter I’ve gone through over the years….

      Liked by 1 person

  3. (sings terribly) Some thing’s missing in my life, maybe it’s you (stops singing) actually it’s probably just the brandy. And the ice cream. You can keep the bananas. And I’m watching Outlander with my brandy and ice cream. Apart from that, sounds perfect!

    Liked by 1 person

        1. Thanks for asking. Got some mega anti-inflammatory pills from the doc a couple of days ago and they seem to be helping a bit. Enough that I’m not crying while typing or holding my banana, anyway. Fingers crossed that it takes hold permanently, otherwise it’s in for more tests and maybe knife work again.

          Time traveling men in kilts? Ohh baby. How, oh how, have I not….zzzzzzzzzz…..

          🙂

          Liked by 1 person

    1. Aren’t K-Dramas a hoot? I got dragged into them years ago when we first moved into DangerHouse and only had a little aerial antenna on the TV. The only thing we could pull in here out in the sticks was a little community UHF station run by a Korean mega-church. At night they ran K-Dramas and sageuks, and NewWifey(tm) and I quickly found ourselves hooked, starting with “The Infamous Chill Sisters”.

      I like sageuks, although frankly SO MANY of them follow the exact same plot – even down to the exact same sub-plot, side stories, and character backstories. But the ones that break from the mold – like “Jewel” here – can be as wildly entertaining as dramas set in the modern world. (One of my favorite ones was set in 1920’s – ’30’s Korea, when it was under Japanese rule. The plot revolved around the true-life leader of an underground insurgent leader.)

      Awwww, you like me for a lot more than that and you know it 🙂

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      1. That really is the problem with sagueks. The fusion ones add enough to make them worthwhile, though, as far as I’m concerned. The dramatic irony in most shows just gets to be too much for me. Is the 30s-set drama you’re talking about Gaksital (Bridal Mask)?! That’s on my list to watch! I’m about to start one recommended by a student right now, but that one’s up next.

        And you’re right. I have a veritable cornucopia of reasons.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Hmmm. No, it wasn’t Gaksital. I’ll try to remember the name, but it’s been a few years and they all kinda tend to blend together now when I think back. I’ll post it if I recall (by which I mean, if my wife recalls when I ask her). I think I’ll check out Gaksital myself, since I looked it up just now and it looks pretty awesome. Thanks for that!

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