jeezypetes:

I’m on season 4 of the great british baking show and i still have nooo idea what british people think “pudding” is

Sometimes its a moist cake? Or its a pastry with meat inside? Is pudding just a slang term for “food” like in general

  1. queerlyfloating reblogged this from iwilleatyourenglish
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  4. chokkilissa-nahollos said: I was always taught that an easy rule of thumb is that a “pudding” involves thickening as the main or a qualifying technique in the dish- Yorkshire pudding is a thickened batter baked in an oven, Christmas and suet etc sweet puddings are baked/inner sauces thickened by steam heat, and blood pudding is also thickened blood and spices stuffed and cooked in intestines. There could be outliers but my chefs & culinary teachers laid that one on me at some point
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  7. jeezypetes reblogged this from iwilleatyourenglish and added:
    Listen I hate to quibble over something so trivial but 1) “dessert course (and occasionally a savory thing like sausage)...
  8. kidhedera said: ‘pudding’ is usually used like we’d use the term 'dessert’ I think
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