This bread pudding is a soft custard even more tender than a flan, and all of the sugar is in sauce at the bottom of the double boiler, until you invert it.  This allows a rustic mix of flavors, as the ingredients are layered into the pot, and cooked gently for a couple of hours, and then allowed to rest before being turned out.  The recipe is so simple, but I have fancied it up with Cognac, vanilla bean, and freshly grated cinnamon and nutmeg if you like.  You could do many variations: almond extract, ginger, different types of bread, bourbon instead of Cognac, dried fruits– I have been thinking about this while it simmers away. I would swoon with adjectives telling you how it tasted, but I feel like the pictures speak for themselves.  If you have ever had a good custard, or a good hard sauce, well, this is lot of flavors you may have had– but all together in layers. I had made it twice, and will be making it many more times.

This was our Christmas dinner dessert that followed an epic fresh ham roasted in the oven.  The ham came from North Carolina, and the bain marie came from Tucson.  Fresh ham is not the pink smoked/ cured things you see in the store.  Ham merely refers to a cut of meat, not the salty flavor of cold cuts after curing and smoking the meat. A fresh ham is like a big pork roast that cooks slow, has lots of healthy fat, and the most wonderful pan drippings (especially when braised with white wine). We brined the ham in fresh rosemary, garlic, onion, celery, cloves, salt and sugar. Then we roasted it for about 6 hours.

But back to the pudding.  It was quite the encore.  It is very simple.

The night before, or the morning before, take the raisins and put them in a jar with the Cognac with the lid on. Let them plump. When you are ready to make the pudding, begin to layer the ingredients into a double boiler.

brown sugar

place bread and raisin mixture on top of brown sugar– do not mix

place the bottom of the bain marie on the stove, fill with about 3 inches of water

place the insert filled with sugar and bread into the bottom of bain marie

pour the custard mixture of egg, milk, salt, vanilla bean over the bread– do not mix

pulling away from the sides

Bain Marie Custard Bread Pudding

Ingredients

                    • 3/4 cup brown sugar
                    • 1/2 cup raisins
                    • 1/4 cup Cognac
                    • 3-4 slices of bread (such as cracked wheat sourdough) cut into 1 inch squares or torn
                    • zest of half an orange
                    • 1 tsp cinnamon
                    • 1/4 tsp nutmeg
                    • 3 eggs
                    • 2 cups whole milk
                    • 1/2 vanilla bean, scraped
                    • 1/4 tsp salt

Procedure

  1. Plump raisins in Cognac for several hours.
  2. Spread brown sugar evenly into bain marie insert pan.
  3. Toss bread with raisins, Cognac, orange zest, cinnamon, nutmeg.  Layer the bread over the brown sugar, DO NOT MIX with the sugar.
  4. Whisk the eggs, milk, and scraped vanilla bean seeds and salt together until creamy and pale yellow.  Set aside.
  5. Add water to the bottom pan of the double boiler/ bain marie– about 3 inches, and place it on the stove.  Place the insert pan (with sugar and bread layers inside) into the bottom pan.
  6. Pour the custard (milk and egg) mixture over the bread.  DO NOT MIX. Cover with a lid, leaving at least a couple of inches of space from the top of the pot for the custard to rise.
  7. Heat on medium-high until water is boiling, then reduce to medium. Cook for 1 1/2 to 2 hours, checking after 45 minutes to add more water to the bottom pan.  I added water twice, and cooked for 2 hours.
  8. When the pudding is done it will be very soft like a flan, but pull away from the sides of the pot slightly when gently pressed.  Turn the heat off.  Leave the lid on, and let the pudding rest for one hour.  It will still be warm.  Turn the pudding out onto a platter with enough room/ depth for the sauce to pool around it.  Slice and serve warm, spooning the sauce over each piece.  Refrigerate any remaining pudding at this point.