Butterscotch Pudding
-
Pudding can be a special thing when it’s not made from a box of questionable “pudding powder”.
(Not that there’s anything wrong with Jello Instant Pudding. My Mom served the butterscotch and chocolate flavors on a regular basis, two flavors I’d be hard-pressed to choose between. Strangely, I enjoyed coming across a spoonful with a little bit of unmixed pudding grit, pudding “mix” that wasn’t quite whisked well enough. Do you know what I mean?)
I must confess: I made this recipe a couple of months ago, then promptly froze it in a Ziploc bag. I finally got around to thawing it today, as I wanted something quick to give The Husband for lunch. (For his lunch dessert, I mean- he didn’t eat butterscotch pudding for lunch. That would be crazy.) Anyhoo, I let the bag thaw on the counter and realized an hour or so later that there was a small rip in the bag. Butterscotch pudding oozing on counter = gross. Anyhoo #2: the pudding thawed (in the bag that I then had to transfer to a bowl) all runny and non-puddingy. So I had to reheat it again and add a tad bit more tapioca starch to thicken it— all in the quest to serve a fast lunch dessert. There was nothing fast about this lunch dessert. Moral of the story: don’t freeze your butterscotch pudding.
Adapted from David Liebovitz’s recipe…
4 tablespoons butter
1 cup dark brown sugar, packed
3/4 teaspoon salt
3 tablespoons tapioca starch (or cornstarch)
2½ cups whole milk
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract- In a medium saucepan, melt butter over medium heat. Add the dark brown sugar and salt, stirring until the sugar is incorporated. Remove from heat.
- In a small bowl, whisk together the tapioca starch (or cornstarch) with about 1/4 cup of the milk until smooth, then whisk in the eggs.
- Gradually pour the remaining milk into the melted brown sugar/butter mixture (in the pan, but still off the heat), whisking constantly. Whisk in the starch mixture. Return the pan to the heat and bring the mixture to a boil, whisking frequently. Once the pudding begins to bubble, reduce the heat to a low simmer and continue to cook for one minute, whisking constantly, until the pudding thickens to the consistency of hot fudge sauce.
- Remove pan from the heat and stir in vanilla. Pour into 4-6 serving cups and chill thoroughly before serving.
Tips:
- No dark brown sugar? You can use light instead- it just won’t taste as butterscotchy. Maybe use a bit more vanilla for oomph.
- Tapioca starch can so be subbed with cornstarch, if you don’t have it. “They” say it imparts less of a flavor, but who knows. I find both starches work interchangeably.
- Whiskey was in the original recipe, and although it’s not unlike me to forego the booze (weird, I know), I did. You can stir in a tablespoon or two at the end with the vanilla if you’re so inclined.
- Cover the pudding with wrap while it’s chilling, unless you like the pudding skin. (Some do- it’s what makes the world go round- the fact that some like skin and some don’t.) Literally press the saran wrap into the pudding tops as they cool, okay?
- Enjoy!
Related Recipes & Posts: