Baked Indian Pudding with Maple Syrup
Submitted by Bradhadair
Baked Indian pudding with maple syrup is a colonial New England cornmeal dessert sweetened with maple, molasses, and brown sugar, spiced with ginger and cinnamon, baked low and slow into a quivering custard. Serve warm with ice cream.
YIELD
8 servingsPREP
30 minCOOK
2 hrsREADY
30 minBaked Indian pudding is one of the oldest desserts in American cooking, dating to colonial New England when wheat flour was scarce and locally ground cornmeal was the pantry staple. “Indian” referred to corn ("Indian meal") rather than the country. The dish is part custard, part porridge, sweet with maple syrup and molasses, and warm with ginger and cinnamon.
The technique is traditional and exact. Cooking the cornmeal in milk over a double boiler for 20 minutes at the start gelatinizes the starch and prevents grittiness in the finished pudding. Skip this step and the pudding stays sandy and underdone.
The ½ cup of cold milk poured over the top before baking (without stirring) is the most distinctive Indian pudding move. As the pudding bakes, that cold layer slowly sinks through the custard, creating a uniquely silky, layered texture between sweet, spiced, and almost cream-soaked.
Long, low baking is mandatory. Two hours at 300°F (150°C) gives the cornmeal time to fully soften and the eggs to set into a proper custard. Cranking the heat sets the eggs too fast and you get a curdled, weeping pudding instead of one that quivers.
Pro Tips
- Use stone-ground cornmeal, not fine instant. The coarser grind gives the pudding its proper texture and won’t go gluey.
- Use a true New England Grade A dark amber maple syrup. Pancake syrup (the corn-syrup-flavored kind) ruins this dish.
- Start whisking the cornmeal slowly into the hot milk to prevent lumps. Cornmeal added all at once clumps into hard pellets.
- Don’t overbake. The center should still tremble like Jell-O when you nudge the pan. It firms during the 30-minute rest.
- Serve warm with vanilla ice cream or a pour of light cream. The temperature contrast is what makes this dessert sing.
Variations
- Stir in ½ cup raisins or chopped dried apricots before baking for chewy fruit pockets.
- Add 1 teaspoon vanilla extract to the egg mixture for extra warmth.
- Top with whipped cream and a dusting of cinnamon for a slightly fancier presentation.
Ingredients
Directions
In top of double boiler, slowly stir cornmeal into hot milk. Cook over boiling water, stirring occasionally, 20 minutes.
Preheat oven to 300 F. Lightly grease 2-quart baking dish . (8 ½ inch round)
In small bowl, combine rest of ingredients, except cold milk; stir into cornmeal mixture; mix well. Turn into prepared dish; pour cold milk on top, without stirring.
Bake, uncovered, 2 hours, or just until set but quivery on top. Do not overbake.
Let stand 30 minutes before serving. Serve warm, with vanilla ice cream or light cream.
Comments




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