My daughter seems to have the plague we've all been harboring, so I gave her some trail mix with extra cashews and dark chocolate powder-coated almonds to tide her until I got something hot and comforting whipped up.
This is what I thought I'd make, the apple crisp bread pudding, but with blueberries as we have a big bag of frozen blueberries from the warehouse club. Here is the original recipe:
http://angelfoodcooking.blogspot.com/2009/11/apple-crisp-bread-pudding.html
But, as one should anticipate, I have a tendency not to read the entire recipe before cooking... I ended up improvising more than I thought and what should have been a nice 11 x 13 pan of pudding ended up filling a cake pan.
So, here goes:
In a large skillet, combine
- 3 cups blueberries
- 1/4 cup blue curacao
- 3 tablespoons butter
Now, I used a good 14 cups of bread chunks, because I started with a two-day old baguette from Wegmans, ran out, and used the remaining breadchunks I had in the freezer... the same ones I used for my homemade stuffing.
I buttered the bottom of my cake pan and sprinkled with about 1 tablespoon sugar. Then I added the bread hunks from the baguette. I poured most the blueberry mixture over this and spread it around as best I could.
Then I added the frozen bread to cover it and sprinkled about 1 cup of frozen blueberries on top.
Now, the custard:
My custard was...
- 7 eggs (it was what I had)
- 2/3 cup sugar
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 1 cup 2 percent milk
- almost 2 cups vanilla soy milk
Now, the oven should be preheated to 350 degrees. I layered a thin layer of brown sugar on top and then added about a cup of my mother-in-law's pie crumbs on the very top. She always makes extra when she makes a pie and usually throws them away, but I freeze them.
Bake for 40 minutes or until set.
I hope it works...
We had the first serving after 40 minutes in the oven and it was incredible! I put it back it for another 15 minutes because it didn't seem quite set enough...
More of an update:
Now what? I have made a ridiculous amount of bread pudding. This is where 'cheap' comes in. We each had about 1.5 cups for breakfast. It accounted for about 1/6 of this pan. I scooped an equal amount into a Tupperware container for tomorrow's breakfast.
There are several approaches for the rest...
- Eat until we are disgustingly full. (Wouldn't be cheap or healthy.)
- Share. (No one really to share with)
- Store.
Now, a dessert that required a lot of eggs, bread and blueberries will serve a family of three for six comfort food breakfasts. Serve with a side of vegetarian sausage and I think that's a great start for a winter day.
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