Yesterday Julia was talking about wanting to make something with me. Something to eat. I asked what she wanted to make, and she said, after a bit of thought, "pumpkin bread pie."
She also launched into a great long list of other things she'd like to make - various cakes, pies, cookies, and so forth. But this one, this first idea of hers, stuck in my head.
I thought about it for a while, and then said to her "how about pumpkin bread pudding?" and she agreed to add that to the list. But it was, in her mind, a separate thing from her original idea.
I toyed with the idea of making some sort of bread pudding in a pie shell deal, but even I, starch-addict-of-the-year, couldn't come to terms with the pie shell plus all the bread in one dish.
So I came up with this instead.
And since Julia, this morning, would rather try on all the jewelry I never wear, her vote no longer counts in the naming of this dish.
She was, however, most definitely the inspiration.
So here's what I used:
8 1/2 cups white bread cut into 3/4" cubes (I used a loaf I made a few days ago - you want a firm bread but you don't want a hard crust. Unless you trim the crust, in which case it doesn't matter.) (Oh, and you could use 8 cups. I had extra cubes so I just threw them in and that's what the measurement came to.)
1/4 cup maple syrup
4 large eggs
2 1/2 cups milk
1 15-oz can pumpkin puree
1 T vanilla
1 1/2 tsp pumpkin pie spice
1/4 tsp salt
and for the topping:
2 T sugar
2 T sparkling sugar (the big kind that doesn't melt in the oven)
1/2 tsp cinnamon
Ready?
Okay, preheat your oven to 325 degrees F and butter a 13 x 9" pyrex baking dish.
Stir together the two sugars and the cinnamon for the topping. Set them aside.
In a large bowl, combine the brown sugar, maple syrup, and eggs, and whisk together until well blended.
Add the milk, pumpkin, vanilla, pumpkin pie spice, and salt, and whisk until well combined.
Add the bread cubes to the liquid and stir so all the bread has a chance to soak up the pumpkiny custard mixture.
Pour all this into your buttered pyrex dish.
Sprinkle the cinnamon sugar mixture evenly over the top.
Place the pan in the oven and bake about 40-50 minutes. This bread pudding is perhaps less custardy than others. When knife inserted in the center comes out relatively clean, it's done.
Let the bread pudding cool until slightly warm or room temperature.
Serve as-is or with some whipped cream or good vanilla ice cream.
You can refrigerate it as well and serve either cold or warmed up a bit.
Wait - I'm not done yet.
First of all, this smelled FABULOUS while it was baking. Really. It brightened my day before I even had a taste.
When it was cool enough to sample, I called Julia into the kitchen and told her that she inspired this dessert and asked if she wanted to try it.
After much thought, Julia gave me a thumb's up and I handed her a spoon and scooped some pumpkin pie bread pudding out of the pan.
And we stopped, and looked at each other, eyes wide...
"This is GOOD!" Julia announced, and after that I had to fight her for the rest of what was on the plate.
Not satisfied with the puny serving I'd dished up, Julia pointed to the pan and then to her plate, suddenly struck uncharacteristically speechless.
"More?" She nodded. I dished some up and followed her into the dining room.
With my camera.
Have I told you about the impersonation she does? Probably not. It's hard to describe, and won't be nearly as funny when I describe it as it would be if you were in the room with her.
But here goes.
Julia becomes...an old man. A very old man. In fact, when she is doing her impersonation, I can see him...stooped, grumpy, and with little to no hair on that little head.
And she does this weird thing with her mouth, and shakes a finger at me, and says things like "That's GOOD EATIN', sonny!" or "Don't tell me to put on a clean shirt, woman!"
And I laugh and laugh and laugh.
And so does she, even though she tries to remain stern and crotchety.
"What are you lookin' at, sonny?"
But back to the bread pudding.
It's really, really, really yummy.
I think I may bring this to my mom's for Thanksgiving! Looks delicious!
Posted by: Susanna | November 20, 2009 at 08:04 PM
That looks fantastic. Makes me wish I had my side of the family here next week. Hmmm when can I try this?
Posted by: jomamma | November 21, 2009 at 10:36 AM
Try it now! Or you could always halve the recipe. Freeze the extra pumpkin puree....
Posted by: jayne | November 21, 2009 at 02:59 PM
Jayne, I've given you a blog award. PLease stop by www.arkonite.net to collect it!
Posted by: arkonitebabe | November 21, 2009 at 03:21 PM
Jayne, I'm going to make this for Thanksgiving with a whiskey-laced drizzle of icing. Thanks and props to you on my blog also. rubyjunecafe.blogspot.com
Posted by: RubyJune | November 25, 2009 at 05:26 PM
I made this yesterday morning and ohmygoodnessitsamazing!! My husband and I acted a lot piggier than normal last night after dinner when it was time for dessert and I busted it out of the fridge. Then, I promptly became useless due to sugar/bread coma and fell asleep on the couch. Thanks for posting a winning dessert recipe, it was wonderful!
Posted by: Erin Valerie | December 02, 2009 at 04:53 PM
This looks amazing. We have SO much pumpkin puree left over from our decorate Halloween pumpkins, and this bread pudding is going at the top of my list of pumpkiny things to make!
Posted by: Disfordelicate | December 06, 2009 at 04:29 PM