Bread and butter pudding

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Bread and butter pudding and Custard
Bread and butter pudding and Custard

Bread and butter pudding is a traditional dessert popular in British cuisine. It is essentially a baked form of French toast.

It is made by layering slices of buttered bread scattered with raisins in an oven dish into which an egg and milk mixture, commonly seasoned with nutmeg (and sometimes vanilla or other spices), is poured. It is then baked in an oven and served. Some people may serve it with custard or cream, but often the pudding under the crust is moist enough to enjoy without sauce.

Although the pudding is most often associated with childhood and school dinners, in some recipes a measure of beer may be added for a more grown-up touch of luxury. Other modern variations include scattering fresh or dried grapes between the layers of bread, melting apples into the egg-milk mixture, and using unusual types of breads — such as brioche — to make it.

Bread and butter pudding should not be confused with bread pudding.

A very similar sweet pudding, but using bone marrow instead of butter, was made in seventeenth century England and called whitepot or marrow pudding[1].

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