tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24170237.post7173921760453404960..comments2024-03-06T09:43:09.476+10:00Comments on The Old Foodie: Pudding with Cheese.The Old Foodiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00766403052971301718noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24170237.post-61339191454698960112008-12-08T11:27:00.000+10:002008-12-08T11:27:00.000+10:00Greetings from Michigan...two things: First, do y...Greetings from Michigan...two things: First, do you know the Wallace and Gromit movies out of the UK that were done by animator Nick Park? Legend has it that he singlehandedly saved sales of Wensleydale cheese by mentioning it in several of his animated specials. Demand soared, the story goes. They're wonderful short films--later he had his moment of fame with "Curse of the Wererabbit," but if you get the chance to see them, they're wonderful.<BR/><BR/>Secondly, anyone want to recommend a good mail-order Christmas pudding? My family has no such tradition, preferring various cookies for the season. Email at izimbra@hotmail.com.<BR/><BR/>Thank you again, Old Foodie, for your lovely work!<BR/><BR/>M. in MIAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24170237.post-59441481853140954562008-12-06T06:43:00.000+10:002008-12-06T06:43:00.000+10:00speaking as an American, as the child of immigrant...speaking as an American, as the child of immigrants from the Third World, and as someone of fairly recent vintage, I must say that Christmas cake and Christmas pudding are both confusing desserts that I have read about many times but have never encountered for myself. I thank Nigel Slater for describing the annual mixing of the Christmas cake in his childhood home and finally giving me a sense of all the associations people have with the cake, not to mention a list of ingredients that allowed me to mentally recreate the taste. <BR/><BR/>with all the citrus peels, spices, preserved fruits and nuts and so on they seem like very old-fashioned foods. I remember an old Canadian woman telling me when I was very young how much she used to look forward to plum pudding at Christmas as a little girl; I was utterly baffled. why would any sensible six-year-old enjoy something studded with raisins -- raisins! horrors! -- and steamed -- and made with suet? we rarely had sweets after eating our meals in my house, but desserts to me meant chocolate cakes, cookies, ice cream, custards, pies. there was no cultural crossover between she and me. I thought the only possible reason she could have loved such a frightening sweet is that she grew up at a time when chocolate and ice cream were not in everyone's cupboard.<BR/><BR/>likewise with mincemeat pies, which while not uncommon in the US are still not something a lot of us ever encounter.<BR/><BR/>a few years back my mother suddenly began buying brandy-soaked, glazed, nut-covered fruitcakes at Christmastime because she and her brother remembered having eaten them with tea as children; I still remember how totally alien seemed the first thin slice she cut for me to taste. then after a few bites, very carefully considered, I began to understand.<BR/><BR/>cheese, though, with Christmas cakes or puddings, is an entirely new idea to me. I only learned a couple years ago that it used to be common to serve cheese with apple pie. and the idea of old-style "wedding cake" with citron and plums and nuts as was once made and understood to always be "wedding cake." never saw such a thing. how many of these long traditions will flicker out like Christmas candle flames as the years go by?<BR/><BR/>have really been enjoying your posts over the last month, Foodie, particularly the pie ones. am looking forward to the emergence of your book next year. happy holidays to you and yours!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com